For UDP queries, after calling dns_adb_beginudpfetch() in fctx_query(),
make sure that dns_adb_endudpfetch() is also called on error path, in
order to adjust the quota back.
(cherry picked from commit 5da79e2be0)
This commit fixes a startup issue on Solaris systems with
many (reportedly > 510) CPUs by bumping RLIMIT_NOFILE. This appears to
be a regression from 9.11.
(cherry picked from commit fff01fe7eb)
Add a test ensuring that the amount of work fctx_getaddresses() performs
for any encountered delegation is limited: delegate example.net to a set
of 1,000 name servers in the redirect.com zone, the names of which all
resolve to IP addresses that nothing listens on, and query for a name in
the example.net domain, checking the number of times the findname()
function gets executed in the process; fail if that count is excessively
large.
Since the size of the referral response sent by ans3 is about 20 kB, it
cannot be sent back over UDP (EMSGSIZE) on some operating systems in
their default configuration (e.g. FreeBSD - see the
net.inet.udp.maxdgram sysctl). To enable reliable reproduction of
CVE-2022-2795 (retry patterns vary across BIND 9 versions) and avoid
false positives at the same time (thread scheduling - and therefore the
number of fetch context restarts - vary across operating systems and
across test runs), extend bin/tests/system/resolver/ans3/ans.pl so that
it also listens on TCP and make "ns1" in the "resolver" system test
always use TCP when communicating with "ans3".
Also add a test (foo.bar.sub.tld1/TXT) that ensures the new limitations
imposed on the resolution process by the mitigation for CVE-2022-2795 do
not prevent valid, glueless delegation chains from working properly.
(cherry picked from commit 604d8f0b96)
RPZ rewrites called dns_db_findext() without passing through the
client database options; as as result, if the client set CD=1,
DNS_DBFIND_PENDINGOK was not used as it should have been, and
cache lookups failed, resulting in failure of the rewrite.
(cherry picked from commit 305a50dbe1)
The controls.conf file shouldn't be used directly without templating it
first. Remove this no longer used hard-coded file to avoid confusion.
(cherry picked from commit cbd0355328)
Speed up the test from 20 minutes to 2.5 minutes and make it part of the
default test suite executed in CI.
- decrease number of records to sign from 2000 to 500
- decrease the signing interval by a factor of 6
- shorten the final part of the test after last signing (since nothing
new happens there)
Finally, clarify misleading comments about (in)sufficient time for zone
re-signing. The time used in the test is in fact sufficient for the
re-signing to happen. If it wasn't, the previous ZSK would end up being
deleted while its signatures would still be present, which is a
situation where duplicate signatures can still happen.
(cherry picked from commit cb0a2ae1dd)
Ensure the port numbers are dynamically filled in with copy_setports.
Clarify test fail condition.
Make the stress test part of the default test suite since it doesn't
seem to run too long or interfere with other tests any more (the
original note claiming so is more than 20 years old).
Related !6883
(cherry picked from commit 7495deea3e)
Properly template the port number in config files with copy_setports.
The test takes two minutes on my machine which doesn't seem like a
proper justification to exclude it from the test suite, especially
considering we run these tests in parallel nowadays. The resource usage
doesn't seems significantly increased so it shouldn't interfere with
other system tests.
There also exists a precedent for longer running system tests that are
already part of the default system test suite (e.g. serve-stale takes
almost three minutes on the same machine).
(cherry picked from commit 235ae5f344)
This log happens when BIND checks the parental-agents if the DS has
been published. But if you don't have parental-agents set up, the list
of keys to check will be empty and the result will be ISC_R_NOTFOUND.
This is not an error, so change the log level to debug in this case.
(cherry picked from commit a1d57fc8cb)
Purpose of this is to guard against tests which rely on querytrace or
other optional features enabled by --enable-developer switch.
(cherry picked from commit d6db5c5335)
Instead of having "arbitrary" (void *)-1 to define non-linked, add a
ISC_LINK_TOMBSTONE(type) macro that replaces the "magic" value with a
define.
(cherry picked from commit 5e20c2ccfb)
Since we are using designated initializers, we were missing initializers
for ISC_LIST and ISC_LINK, add them, so you can do
*foo = (foo_t){ .list = ISC_LIST_INITIALIZER };
Instead of:
*foo = (foo_t){ 0 };
ISC_LIST_INIT(foo->list);
(cherry picked from commit cb3c36b8bf)
The incrementing and decrementing of 'ns_statscounter_recursclients'
were not properly balanced: for example, it would be incremented for
a prefetch query but not decremented if the query failed.
This commit ensures that the recursion quota and the recursive clients
counter are always in sync with each other.
(cherry picked from commit 82991451b4)
The duration_fromtext() function is truncating large numbers
to 32 bits instead of capping or rejecting them, i.e. 64424509445,
which is 0xf00000005, gets parsed as 32-bit value 5 (0x00000005).
Fail parsing a duration if any of its components is bigger than
32 bits. Using those kind of big numbers has no practical use case
for a duration.
The cfg_obj_asduration() function can overflow the 32 bit
seconds variable when calculating the duration from its component
parts.
To avoid that, use 64-bit calculation and return UINT32_MAX if the
calculated value is bigger than UINT32_MAX. Again, a number this big
has no practical use case anyway.
The buffer for the generated duration string is limited to 64 bytes,
which, in theory, is smaller than the longest possible generated
duration string.
Use 80 bytes instead, calculated by the '7 x (10 + 1) + 3' formula,
where '7' is the count of the duration's parts (year, month, etc.), '10'
is their maximum length when printed as a decimal number, '1' is their
indicator character (Y, M, etc.), and 3 is two more indicators (P and T)
and the terminating NUL character.
(cherry picked from commit fddaebb285)
The cfg_print_duration() checks added previously in the 'duration_test'
unit test uncovered a bug in cfg_print_duration().
When calculating the current 'str' pointer of the generated text in the
buffer 'buf', it erroneously adds 1 byte to compensate for that part's
indicator character. For example, to add 12 minutes, it needs to add
2 + 1 = 3 characters, where 2 is the length of "12", and 1 is the length
of "M" (for minute). The mistake was that the length of the indicator
is already included in 'durationlen[i]', so there is no need to
calculate it again.
In the result of this mistake the current pointer can advance further
than needed and end up after the zero-byte instead of right on it, which
essentially cuts off any further generated text. For example, for a
5 minutes and 30 seconds duration, instead of having this:
'P', 'T', '5', 'M', '3', '0', 'S', '\0'
The function generates this:
'P', 'T', '5', 'M', '\0', '3', '0', 'S', '\0'
Fix the bug by adding to 'str' just 'durationlen[i]' instead of
'durationlen[i] + 1'.
(cherry picked from commit dc55f1ebb9)
Currently the 'duration_test' unit test checks only the
cfg_obj_asduration() function.
Extend the test so it checks also the reverse operation using the
cfg_print_duration() function, which is used in named-checkconf.
(cherry picked from commit 39290bb7cd)
The cfg_print_duration() function prints a ISO 8601 duration value
converted from an array of integers, where the parts of the date and
time are stored.
durationlen[6], which holds the "seconds" part of the duration, has
a special case in cfg_print_duration() to ensure that when there are
no values in the duration, the result still can be printed as "PT0S",
instead of just "P", so it can be a valid ISO 8601 duration value.
There is a logical error in one of the two special case code paths,
when it checks that no value from the "date" part is defined, and no
"hour" or "minute" from the "time" part are defined.
Because of the error, durationlen[6] can be used uninitialized, in
which case the second parameter passed to snprintf() (which is the
maximum allowed length) can contain a garbage value.
This can not be exploited because the buffer is still big enough to
hold the maximum possible amount of characters generated by the "%u%c"
format string.
Fix the logical bug, and initialize the 'durationlen' array to zeros
to be a little safer from other similar errors.
(cherry picked from commit 9440910187)
GNU Grep 3.8 reports the following warnings:
egrep: warning: egrep is obsolescent; using grep -E
fgrep: warning: fgrep is obsolescent; using grep -F
(cherry picked from commit 212c4de043)
GNU Grep 3.8 reports several instances of stray backslashes in matching
patterns:
grep: warning: stray \ before /
grep: warning: stray \ before :
(cherry picked from commit 65e91ef5e6)
There are multiple reasons to remove this test as obsolete:
- The test may not possibly work for over 2.5 years, since
98b3b93791 removed the rndc.py python
tool on which this test relies.
- It isn't part of the test suite either in CI or locally unless it is
explicitly enabled. As a result, there are many issues which prevent
the test from being executed caused by various refactoring efforts
accumulated over time.
- Even if the test could be executed, it has no clear failure condition.
If the python script(s) fail, the test still passes.
(cherry picked from commit 05180154d9)
The bin/tests/system/start.pl script waits until a "running" message is
logged by a given name server instance before attempting to send a
version.bind/CH/TXT query to it. The idea behind this was to make the
script wait until named loads all the zones it is configured to serve
before telling the system test framework that a given server is ready to
use; this prevents the need to add boilerplate code that waits for a
specific zone to be loaded to each test expecting that.
The problem is that when it looks for "running" messages, the
bin/tests/system/start.pl script assumes that the existence of any such
message in the named.run file indicates that a given named instance has
already finished loading all zones. Meanwhile, some system tests
restart all the named instances they use throughout their lifetime (some
even do that a few times), for example to run Python-based tests. The
bin/tests/system/start.pl script handles such a scenario incorrectly: as
soon as it finds any "running" message in the named.run file it inspects
and it gets a response to a version.bind/CH/TXT query, it tells the
system test framework that a given server is ready to use, which might
not be true - it is possible that only the "version.bind" zone is loaded
at that point and the "running" message found was logged by a
previously-shutdown named instance. This triggers intermittent failures
for Python-based tests.
Fix by improving the logic that the bin/tests/system/start.pl script
uses to detect server startup: check how many "running" lines are
present in a given named.run file before attempting to start a named
instance and only proceed with version.bind/CH/TXT queries when the
number of "running" lines found in that named.run file increases after
the server is started.
(cherry picked from commit 18e20f95f6)
In the "rrsetorder" system test, the ns2 named instance is restarted
without passing the --restart option to bin/tests/system/start.pl. This
causes the log file for that named instance to be needlessly truncated.
Prevent this from happening by restarting the affected named instance
in the same way as all the other named instances used in system tests.
(cherry picked from commit 9146b956ae)