These options and zone type were created to address the
SiteFinder controversy, in which certain TLD's redirected queries
rather than returning NXDOMAIN. since TLD's are now DNSSEC-signed,
this is no longer likely to be a problem.
The deprecation message for 'type delegation-only' is issued from
the configuration checker rather than the parser. therefore,
isccfg_check_namedconf() has been modified to take a 'nodeprecate'
parameter to suppress the warning when named-checkconf is used with
the command-line option to ignore warnings on deprecated options (-i).
When resquery_response() was called with ISC_R_SHUTTINDOWN, the region
argument would be NULL, but rctx_respinit() would try to pass
region->base and region->len to the isc_buffer_init() leading to
a NULL pointer dereference. Properly handle non-ISC_R_SUCCESS by
ignoring the provided region.
This should delay the catalog zone from being destroyed during
shutdown, if the update process is still running.
Doing this should not introduce significant shutdown delays, as
the update function constantly checks the 'shuttingdown' flag
and cancels the process if it is set.
stop and restart the server in the 'tsiggss' test, in order
to confirm that GSS negotiated TSIG keys are saved and restored
when named loads.
added logging to dns_tsigkey_createfromkey() to indicate whether
a key has been statically configured, generated via GSS negotiation,
or restored from a file.
If the zone already has existing NSEC/NSEC3 chains then zone_sign
needs to continue to use them. If there are no chains then use
kasp setting otherwise generate an NSEC chain.
BIND needs a collection of standard lock-free data structures,
which we can find in liburcu, along with its RCU safe memory
reclamation machinery. We will use liburcu's QSBR variant instead
of the home-grown isc_qsbr.
ISC_REFCOUNT_TRACE_IMPL uses isc_tid(), but the corresponding header
file is not included, which breaks, for example, compiling BIND with
DNS_CATZ_TRACE defined in lib/dns/include/dns/catz.h.
Add '#include <isc/tid.h>' in lib/isc/include/isc/refcount.h.
In base32_decode_char the GCC 12 static analyser fails to determine
that ctx->val[1], ctx->val[3], ctx->val[4] and ctx->val[6] are
assigned values by the previous call to base32_decode_char. Initialise
ctx->val to zeros when initalising the rest of ctx to silence the
false positive.
REQUIRE that rdata->type is dns_rdatatype_svcb to detect when
dns_rdata_checksvcb is called with the wrong rdata type. There are
no code paths that currently pass the wrong rdata to dns_rdata_checksvcb.
This was found by GCC 12 static analysis.
Rename and simplify dst__openssl_compare_keypair() to
dst__openssl_keypair_compare(), and introduce two additional functions
dst__openssl_keypair_isprivate and dst__openssl_keypair_destroy.
Use those to de-duplicated openssl{rsa,ecdsa}_isprivate, and
openssl{rsa,ecdsa}_destroy.
without diffie-hellman TKEY negotiation, some other code is
now effectively dead or unnecessary, and can be cleaned up:
- the rndc tsig-list and tsig-delete commands.
- a nonoperational command-line option to dnssec-keygen that
was documented as being specific to DH.
- the section of the ARM that discussed TKEY/DH.
- the functions dns_tkey_builddeletequery(), processdeleteresponse(),
and tkey_processgssresponse(), which are unused.
Completely remove the TKEY Mode 2 (Diffie-Hellman Exchanged Keying) from
BIND 9 (from named, named.conf and all the tools). The TKEY usage is
fringe at best and in all known cases, GSSAPI is being used as it should.
The draft-eastlake-dnsop-rfc2930bis-tkey specifies that:
4.2 Diffie-Hellman Exchanged Keying (Deprecated)
The use of this mode (#2) is NOT RECOMMENDED for the following two
reasons but the specification is still included in Appendix A in case
an implementation is needed for compatibility with old TKEY
implementations. See Section 4.6 on ECDH Exchanged Keying.
The mixing function used does not meet current cryptographic
standards because it uses MD5 [RFC6151].
RSA keys must be excessively long to achieve levels of security
required by current standards.
We might optionally implement Elliptic Curve Diffie-Hellman (ECDH) key
exchange mode 6 if the draft ever reaches the RFC status. Meanwhile the
insecure DH mode needs to be removed.
As it is done in the RPZ module, use 'db' and 'dbversion' for the
database we are going to update to, and 'updb' and 'updbversion' for
the database we are working on.
Doing this should avoid a race between the 'dns__catz_update_cb()' and
'dns_catz_dbupdate_callback()' functions.
In !7538, the shutdown procedure was simplified, but the ordering was
wrong, we need to shutdown the resolver, adb and requestmgr before
detaching those objects from the view, because there are cross
dependencies between at least the resolver and the adb.
Execute the shutdown(s) first, only when all three shutdowns have been
executed, detach those objects from the view.
There are leftovers from the previous refactoring effort, which left
some function declarations and comments in the header file unchanged.
Finish the renaming.
This implements node reference tracing that passes all the internal
layers from dns_db API (and friends) to increment_reference() and
decrement_reference().
It can be enabled by #defining DNS_DB_NODETRACE in <dns/trace.h> header.
The output then looks like this:
incr:node:check_address_records:rootns.c:409:0x7f67f5a55a40->references = 1
decr:node:check_address_records:rootns.c:449:0x7f67f5a55a40->references = 0
incr:nodelock:check_address_records:rootns.c:409:0x7f67f5a55a40:0x7f68304d7040->references = 1
decr:nodelock:check_address_records:rootns.c:449:0x7f67f5a55a40:0x7f68304d7040->references = 0
There's associated python script to find the missing detach located at:
https://gitlab.isc.org/isc-projects/bind9/-/snippets/1038
Now that we can configure a different digest type, update the code
to honor the configuration. Update 'dns_dnssec_syncupdate' so that
the correct CDS record is published, and also when deleting CDS records,
ensure that all possible CDS records are removed from the zone.
Commits ffa4757c79 and
77e7eac54c inadvertently broke
DNSRPS-enabled builds:
- the new member of struct dns_db that holds a reference count for the
database is called 'references', not 'refcount',
- a syntax error was introduced in the designated initializer for
'rpsdb_rdataset_methods',
- rpsdb_destroy() no longer takes a 'dbp' argument.
Address all of the above issues to make DNSRPS-enabled builds work
again.
In general, it's better to do one thorough compaction when a batch of
work is complete, which is the way that `update` transactions work.
Conversely, `write` transactions are designed so that lots of little
transactions are not too inefficient, but they need explicit
compaction. This changes `dns_qp_compact()` so that it is easier to
compact any time that makes sense, if there isn't a better way to
schedule compaction. And `dns_qpmulti_commit()` only recycles garbage
when there is enough to make it worthwhile.
Add some qp-trie tracing macros which can be enabled by a
developer. These print a message when a leaf is attached or
detached, indicating which part of the qp-trie implementation
did so. The refcount methods must now return the refcount value
so it can be printed by the trace macros.
The first working multi-threaded qp-trie was stuck with an unpleasant
trade-off:
* Use `isc_rwlock`, which has acceptable write performance, but
terrible read scalability because the qp-trie made all accesses
through a single lock.
* Use `liburcu`, which has great read scalability, but terrible
write performance, because I was relying on `rcu_synchronize()`
which is rather slow. And `liburcu` is LGPL.
To get the best of both worlds, we need our own scalable read side,
which we now have with `isc_qsbr`. And we need to modify the write
side so that it is not blocked by readers.
Better write performance requires an async cleanup function like
`call_rcu()`, instead of the blocking `rcu_synchronize()`. (There
is no blocking cleanup in `isc_qsbr`, because I have concluded
that it would be an attractive nuisance.)
Until now, all my multithreading qp-trie designs have been based
around two versions, read-only and mutable. This is too few to
work with asynchronous cleanup. The bare minimum (as in epoch
based reclamation) is three, but it makes more sense to support an
arbitrary number. Doing multi-version support "properly" makes
fewer assumptions about how safe memory reclamation works, and it
makes snapshots and rollbacks simpler.
To avoid making the memory management even more complicated, I
have introduced a new kind of "packed reader node" to anchor the
root of a version of the trie. This is simpler because it re-uses
the existing chunk lifetime logic - see the discussion under
"packed reader nodes" in `qp_p.h`.
I have also made the chunk lifetime logic simpler. The idea of a
"generation" is gone; instead, chunks are either mutable or
immutable. And the QSBR phase number is used to indicate when a
chunk can be reclaimed.
Instead of the `shared_base` flag (which was basically a one-bit
reference count, with a two version limit) the base array now has a
refcount, which replaces the confusing ad-hoc lifetime logic with
something more familiar and systematic.
Adjust the dns_qp_memusage() and dns_qp_compact() functions
to be more informative and flexible about handling fragmentation.
Avoid wasting space in runt chunks.
Switch from twigs_mutable() to cells_immutable() because that is the
sense we usually want.
Drop the redundant evacuate() function and rename evacuate_twigs() to
evacuate(). Move some chunk test functions closer to their point of
use.
Clarify compact_recursive(). Some small cleanups to comments.
Use isc_time_monotonic() for qp-trie timing stats.
Use #define constants to control debug logging.
Set up DNS name label offsets in dns_qpkey_fromname() so it is easier
to use in cases where the name is not fully hydrated.