The Windows support has been completely removed from the source tree
and BIND 9 now no longer supports native compilation on Windows.
We might consider reviewing mingw-w64 port if contributed by external
party, but no development efforts will be put into making BIND 9 compile
and run on Windows again.
Previously, netmgr, taskmgr, timermgr and socketmgr all had their own
isc_<*>mgr_create() and isc_<*>mgr_destroy() functions. The new
isc_managers_create() and isc_managers_destroy() fold all four into a
single function and makes sure the objects are created and destroy in
correct order.
Especially now, when taskmgr runs on top of netmgr, the correct order is
important and when the code was duplicated at many places it's easy to
make mistake.
The former isc_<*>mgr_create() and isc_<*>mgr_destroy() functions were
made private and a single call to isc_managers_create() and
isc_managers_destroy() is required at the program startup / shutdown.
This commit changes the taskmgr to run the individual tasks on the
netmgr internal workers. While an effort has been put into keeping the
taskmgr interface intact, couple of changes have been made:
* The taskmgr has no concept of universal privileged mode - rather the
tasks are either privileged or unprivileged (normal). The privileged
tasks are run as a first thing when the netmgr is unpaused. There
are now four different queues in in the netmgr:
1. priority queue - netievent on the priority queue are run even when
the taskmgr enter exclusive mode and netmgr is paused. This is
needed to properly start listening on the interfaces, free
resources and resume.
2. privileged task queue - only privileged tasks are queued here and
this is the first queue that gets processed when network manager
is unpaused using isc_nm_resume(). All netmgr workers need to
clean the privileged task queue before they all proceed normal
operation. Both task queues are processed when the workers are
finished.
3. task queue - only (traditional) task are scheduled here and this
queue along with privileged task queues are process when the
netmgr workers are finishing. This is needed to process the task
shutdown events.
4. normal queue - this is the queue with netmgr events, e.g. reading,
sending, callbacks and pretty much everything is processed here.
* The isc_taskmgr_create() now requires initialized netmgr (isc_nm_t)
object.
* The isc_nm_destroy() function now waits for indefinite time, but it
will print out the active objects when in tracing mode
(-DNETMGR_TRACE=1 and -DNETMGR_TRACE_VERBOSE=1), the netmgr has been
made a little bit more asynchronous and it might take longer time to
shutdown all the active networking connections.
* Previously, the isc_nm_stoplistening() was a synchronous operation.
This has been changed and the isc_nm_stoplistening() just schedules
the child sockets to stop listening and exits. This was needed to
prevent a deadlock as the the (traditional) tasks are now executed on
the netmgr threads.
* The socket selection logic in isc__nm_udp_send() was flawed, but
fortunatelly, it was broken, so we never hit the problem where we
created uvreq_t on a socket from nmhandle_t, but then a different
socket could be picked up and then we were trying to run the send
callback on a socket that had different threadid than currently
running.
The draft says that the NSEC(3) TTL must have the same TTL value
as the minimum of the SOA MINIMUM field and the SOA TTL. This was
always the intended behaviour.
Update the zone structure to also track the SOA TTL. Whenever we
use the MINIMUM value to determine the NSEC(3) TTL, use the minimum
of MINIMUM and SOA TTL instead.
There is no specific test for this, however two tests need adjusting
because otherwise they failed: They were testing for NSEC3 records
including the TTL. Update these checks to use 600 (the SOA TTL),
rather than 3600 (the SOA MINIMUM).
Configure "none" as a builtin policy. Change the 'cfg_kasp_fromconfig'
api so that the 'name' will determine what policy needs to be
configured.
When transitioning a zone from secure to insecure, there will be
cases when a zone with no DNSSEC policy (dnssec-policy none) should
be using KASP. When there are key state files available, this is an
indication that the zone once was DNSSEC signed but is reconfigured
to become insecure.
If we would not run the keymgr, named would abruptly remove the
DNSSEC records from the zone, making the zone bogus. Therefore,
change the code such that a zone will use kasp if there is a valid
dnssec-policy configured, or if there are state files available.
When using the `unixtime` or `date` method to update the SOA serial,
`named` and `dnssec-signzone` would silently fallback to `increment`
method to prevent the new serial number to be smaller than the old
serial number (using the serial number arithmetics). Add a warning
message when such fallback happens.
cppcheck is not aware that the bin/dnssec/dnssectool.c:fatal() function
does not return. This triggers certain cppcheck 2.2 false positives,
for example:
bin/dnssec/dnssec-signzone.c:3471:13: warning: Either the condition 'ndskeys==8' is redundant or the array 'dskeyfile[8]' is accessed at index 8, which is out of bounds. [arrayIndexOutOfBoundsCond]
dskeyfile[ndskeys++] = isc_commandline_argument;
^
bin/dnssec/dnssec-signzone.c:3468:16: note: Assuming that condition 'ndskeys==8' is not redundant
if (ndskeys == MAXDSKEYS) {
^
bin/dnssec/dnssec-signzone.c:3471:13: note: Array index out of bounds
dskeyfile[ndskeys++] = isc_commandline_argument;
^
bin/dnssec/dnssec-signzone.c:772:20: warning: Either the condition 'l->hashbuf==NULL' is redundant or there is pointer arithmetic with NULL pointer. [nullPointerArithmeticRedundantCheck]
memset(l->hashbuf + l->entries * l->length, 0, l->length);
^
bin/dnssec/dnssec-signzone.c:768:18: note: Assuming that condition 'l->hashbuf==NULL' is not redundant
if (l->hashbuf == NULL) {
^
bin/dnssec/dnssec-signzone.c:772:20: note: Null pointer addition
memset(l->hashbuf + l->entries * l->length, 0, l->length);
^
Instead of suppressing all such warnings individually, conditionally
define a preprocessor macro which prevents them from being triggered.
This commit extends the perl Configure script to also check for libssl
in addition to libcrypto and change the vcxproj source files to link
with both libcrypto and libssl.
The handling of . (dot) characted at the beginning of the line has
changed between the sphinx-doc versions, and it was constantly giving us
trouble when generating man pages when using different sphinx-doc. This
commit just changes the source rst file, so there's no more . (dot) the
beginning of the line.
Add two more arguments to the dnssec-settime tool. '-P ds' sets the
time that the DS was published in the parent, '-D ds' sets the time
that the DS was removed from the parent (these times are not accurate,
but rely on the user to use them appropriately, and as long as the
time is not before actual publication/withdrawal, it is fine).
These new arguments are needed for the kasp system test. We want to
test when the next key event is once a DS is published, and now
that 'parent-registration-delay' is obsoleted, we need a different
approach to reliable test the timings.
Move BIND binaries which are neither daemons nor administrative programs
to $bindir. This results in only the following binaries being left in
$sbindir:
- ddns-confgen
- named
- rndc
- rndc-confgen
- tsig-confgen
For testing purposes mainly, we want to allow set keytimings on
generated keys, such that we don't have to "keygen/settime" which
can result in one second off times.
The ARM and the manpages have been converted into Sphinx documentation
format.
Sphinx uses reStructuredText as its markup language, and many of its
strengths come from the power and straightforwardness of
reStructuredText and its parsing and translating suite, the Docutils.
The rewrite of BIND 9 build system is a large work and cannot be reasonable
split into separate merge requests. Addition of the automake has a positive
effect on the readability and maintainability of the build system as it is more
declarative, it allows conditional and we are able to drop all of the custom
make code that BIND 9 developed over the years to overcome the deficiencies of
autoconf + custom Makefile.in files.
This squashed commit contains following changes:
- conversion (or rather fresh rewrite) of all Makefile.in files to Makefile.am
by using automake
- the libtool is now properly integrated with automake (the way we used it
was rather hackish as the only official way how to use libtool is via
automake
- the dynamic module loading was rewritten from a custom patchwork to libtool's
libltdl (which includes the patchwork to support module loading on different
systems internally)
- conversion of the unit test executor from kyua to automake parallel driver
- conversion of the system test executor from custom make/shell to automake
parallel driver
- The GSSAPI has been refactored, the custom SPNEGO on the basis that
all major KRB5/GSSAPI (mit-krb5, heimdal and Windows) implementations
support SPNEGO mechanism.
- The various defunct tests from bin/tests have been removed:
bin/tests/optional and bin/tests/pkcs11
- The text files generated from the MD files have been removed, the
MarkDown has been designed to be readable by both humans and computers
- The xsl header is now generated by a simple sed command instead of
perl helper
- The <irs/platform.h> header has been removed
- cleanups of configure.ac script to make it more simpler, addition of multiple
macros (there's still work to be done though)
- the tarball can now be prepared with `make dist`
- the system tests are partially able to run in oot build
Here's a list of unfinished work that needs to be completed in subsequent merge
requests:
- `make distcheck` doesn't yet work (because of system tests oot run is not yet
finished)
- documentation is not yet built, there's a different merge request with docbook
to sphinx-build rst conversion that needs to be rebased and adapted on top of
the automake
- msvc build is non functional yet and we need to decide whether we will just
cross-compile bind9 using mingw-w64 or fix the msvc build
- contributed dlz modules are not included neither in the autoconf nor automake
With the introduction of dnssec-policy, the aforementioned tools were
either rendered obsolete, or they will be replaced with dnssec-policy
based tools. Remove the tools and the requirement to have Python
installed. Python 3 is still being used for tests, so keep the autoconf
test, but make it much simpler.
All our MSVS Project files share the same intermediate directory. We
know that this doesn't cause any problems, so we can just disable the
detection in the project files.
Example of the warning:
warning MSB8028: The intermediate directory (.\Release\) contains files shared from another project (dnssectool.vcxproj). This can lead to incorrect clean and rebuild behavior.
Our vcxproj files set the WarningLevel to Level3, which is too verbose
for a code that needs to be portable. That basically leads to ignoring
all the errors that MSVC produces. This commits downgrades the
WarningLevel to Level1 and enables treating warnings as errors for
Release builds. For the Debug builds the WarningLevel got upgraded to
Level4, and treating warnings as errors is explicitly disabled.
We should eventually make the code clean of all MSVC warnings, but it's
a long way to go for Level4, so it's more reasonable to start at Level1.
For reference[1], these are the warning levels as described by MSVC
documentation:
* /W0 suppresses all warnings. It's equivalent to /w.
* /W1 displays level 1 (severe) warnings. /W1 is the default setting
in the command-line compiler.
* /W2 displays level 1 and level 2 (significant) warnings.
* /W3 displays level 1, level 2, and level 3 (production quality)
warnings. /W3 is the default setting in the IDE.
* /W4 displays level 1, level 2, and level 3 warnings, and all level 4
(informational) warnings that aren't off by default. We recommend
that you use this option to provide lint-like warnings. For a new
project, it may be best to use /W4 in all compilations. This option
helps ensure the fewest possible hard-to-find code defects.
* /Wall displays all warnings displayed by /W4 and all other warnings
that /W4 doesn't include — for example, warnings that are off by
default.
* /WX treats all compiler warnings as errors. For a new project, it
may be best to use /WX in all compilations; resolving all warnings
ensures the fewest possible hard-to-find code defects.
1. https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/reference/compiler-option-warning-level?view=vs-2019
These are mostly false positives, the clang-analyzer FAQ[1] specifies
why and how to fix it:
> The reason the analyzer often thinks that a pointer can be null is
> because the preceding code checked compared it against null. So if you
> are absolutely sure that it cannot be null, remove the preceding check
> and, preferably, add an assertion as well.
The 4 warnings reported are:
dnssec-cds.c:781:4: warning: Access to field 'base' results in a dereference of a null pointer (loaded from variable 'buf')
isc_buffer_availableregion(buf, &r);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/builds/isc-projects/bind9/lib/isc/include/isc/buffer.h:996:36: note: expanded from macro 'isc_buffer_availableregion'
^
/builds/isc-projects/bind9/lib/isc/include/isc/buffer.h:821:16: note: expanded from macro 'ISC__BUFFER_AVAILABLEREGION'
(_r)->base = isc_buffer_used(_b); \
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/builds/isc-projects/bind9/lib/isc/include/isc/buffer.h:152:29: note: expanded from macro 'isc_buffer_used'
((void *)((unsigned char *)(b)->base + (b)->used)) /*d*/
^~~~~~~~~
1 warning generated.
--
byname_test.c:308:34: warning: Access to field 'fwdtable' results in a dereference of a null pointer (loaded from variable 'view')
RUNTIME_CHECK(dns_fwdtable_add(view->fwdtable, dns_rootname,
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~
/builds/isc-projects/bind9/lib/isc/include/isc/util.h:318:52: note: expanded from macro 'RUNTIME_CHECK'
^~~~
/builds/isc-projects/bind9/lib/isc/include/isc/error.h:50:21: note: expanded from macro 'ISC_ERROR_RUNTIMECHECK'
((void)(ISC_LIKELY(cond) || \
^~~~
/builds/isc-projects/bind9/lib/isc/include/isc/likely.h:23:43: note: expanded from macro 'ISC_LIKELY'
^
1 warning generated.
--
./rndc.c:255:6: warning: Dereference of null pointer (loaded from variable 'host')
if (*host == '/') {
^~~~~
1 warning generated.
--
./main.c:1254:9: warning: Access to field 'sctx' results in a dereference of a null pointer (loaded from variable 'named_g_server')
sctx = named_g_server->sctx;
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1 warning generated.
References:
1. https://clang-analyzer.llvm.org/faq.html#null_pointer
The isc_mem API now crashes on memory allocation failure, and this is
the next commit in series to cleanup the code that could fail before,
but cannot fail now, e.g. isc_result_t return type has been changed to
void for the isc_log API functions that could only return ISC_R_SUCCESS.
On Windows, C11 localtime_r() and gmtime_r() functions are not
available. While localtime() and gmtime() functions are already thread
safe because they use Thread Local Storage, it's quite ugly to #ifdef
around every localtime_r() and gmtime_r() usage to make the usage also
thread-safe on POSIX platforms.
The commit adds wrappers around Windows localtime_s() and gmtime_s()
functions.
NOTE: The implementation of localtime_s and gmtime_s in Microsoft CRT
are incompatible with the C standard since it has reversed parameter
order and errno_t return type.
When --with-zlib is passed to ./configure (or when the latter
autodetects zlib's presence), libisc uses certain zlib functions and
thus libisc's users should be linked against zlib in that case. Adjust
Makefile variables appropriately to prevent shared build failures caused
by underlinking.