Refactor some connection handling to reduce code duplication and to
unify the TCP and UDP codepaths a bit more. This will make some future
changes easier to make.
This also does some structure renaming to better conform with current
standards:
- `struct server_state` -> `ares_server_t`
- `struct server_connection` -> `ares_conn_t`
- `struct query` -> `ares_query_t`
Authored-by: Brad House (@bradh352)
DNS cookies are a simple form of learned mutual authentication supported
by most DNS server implementations these days and can help prevent DNS
Cache Poisoning attacks for clients and DNS amplification attacks for
servers.
Fixes#620
Fix By: Brad House (@bradh352)
We've been using a lot of time on Cirrus-CI and our credits run out
quickly. MacOS costs 15 compute credits vs 3 compute
credits for Linux. Move MacOS testing to GitHub Actions.
Fix By: Brad House (@bradh352)
We've had reports of user-after-free type crashes in Windows cleanup
code for the Event Thread. In evaluating the code, it appeared there
were some memory leaks on per-connection handles that may have remained
open during shutdown, while trying to resolve that it became apparent
the methodology chosen may not have been the right one for interfacing
with the Windows AFD system as stability issues were seen during this
debugging process.
Since this system is completely undocumented, there was no clear
resolution path other than to switch to the *other* methodology which
involves directly opening `\Device\Afd`, rather than spawning a "peer
socket" to use to queue AFD operations.
The original methodology chosen more closely resembled what is employed
by [libuv](https://github.com/libuv/libuv) and given its widespread use
was the reason it was used. The new methodology more closely resembles
[wepoll](https://github.com/piscisaureus/wepoll).
Its not clear if there are any scalability or performance advantages or
disadvantages for either method. They both seem like different ways to
do the same thing, but this current way does seem more stable.
Fixes#798
Fix By: Brad House (@bradh352)
AppVeyor has gotten progressively slower over the last year or so. Move
some Windows builds to GitHub actions which is considerably faster.
Fix By: Brad House (@bradh352)