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168 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
168 lines
7.2 KiB
Plaintext
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2013/10/10 - possibilities for setting source and destination addresses
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When establishing a connection to a remote device, this device is designated
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as a target, which designates an entity defined in the configuration. A same
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target appears only once in a configuration, and multiple targets may share
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the same settings if needed.
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The following types of targets are currently supported :
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- listener : all connections with this type of target come from clients ;
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- server : connections to such targets are for "server" lines ;
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- peer : connections to such target address "peer" lines in "peers"
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sections ;
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- proxy : these targets are used by "dispatch", "option transparent"
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or "option http_proxy" statements.
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A connection might not be reused between two different targets, even if all
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parameters seem similar. One of the reason is that some parameters are specific
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to the target and are not easy or not cheap to compare (eg: bind to interface,
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mss, ...).
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A number of source and destination addresses may be set for a given target.
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- listener :
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- the "from" address:port is set by accept()
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- the "to" address:port is set if conn_get_to_addr() is called
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- peer :
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- the "from" address:port is not set
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- the "to" address:port is static and dependent only on the peer
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- server :
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- the "from" address may be set alone when "source" is used with
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a forced IP address, or when "usesrc clientip" is used.
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- the "from" port may be set only combined with the address when
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"source" is used with IP:port, IP:port-range or "usesrc client" is
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used. Note that in this case, both the address and the port may be
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0, meaning that the kernel will pick the address or port and that
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the final value might not match the one explicitly set (eg:
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important for logging).
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- the "from" address may be forced from a header which implies it
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may change between two consecutive requests on the same connection.
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- the "to" address and port are set together when connecting to a
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regular server, or by copying the client's IP address when
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"server 0.0.0.0" is used. Note that the destination port may be
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an offset applied to the original destination port.
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- proxy :
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- the "from" address may be set alone when "source" is used with a
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forced IP address or when "usesrc clientip" is used.
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- the "from" port may be set only combined with the address when
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"source" is used with IP:port or with "usesrc client". There is
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no ip:port range for a proxy as of now. Same comment applies as
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above when port and/or address are 0.
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- the "from" address may be forced from a header which implies it
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may change between two consecutive requests on the same connection.
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- the "to" address and port are set together, either by configuration
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when "dispatch" is used, or dynamically when "transparent" is used
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(1:1 with client connection) or "option http_proxy" is used, where
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each client request may lead to a different destination address.
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At the moment, there are some limits in what might happen between multiple
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concurrent requests to a same target.
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- peers parameter do not change, so no problem.
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- server parameters may change in this way :
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- a connection may require a source bound to an IP address found in a
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header, which will fall back to the "source" settings if the address
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is not found in this header. This means that the source address may
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switch between a dynamically forced IP address and another forced
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IP and/or port range.
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- if the element is not found (eg: header), the remaining "forced"
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source address might very well be empty (unset), so the connection
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reuse is acceptable when switching in that direction.
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- it is not possible to switch between client and clientip or any of
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these and hdr_ip() because they're exclusive.
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- using a source address/port belonging to a port range is compatible
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with connection reuse because there is a single range per target, so
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switching from a range to another range means we remain in the same
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range.
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- destination address may currently not change since the only possible
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case for dynamic destination address setting is the transparent mode,
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reproducing the client's destination address.
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- proxy parameters may change in this way :
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- a connection may require a source bound to an IP address found in a
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header, which will fall back to the "source" settings if the address
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is not found in this header. This means that the source address may
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switch between a dynamically forced IP address and another forced
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IP and/or port range.
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- if the element is not found (eg: header), the remaining "forced"
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source address might very well be empty (unset), so the connection
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reuse is acceptable when switching in that direction.
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- it is not possible to switch between client and clientip or any of
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these and hdr_ip() because they're exclusive.
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- proxies do not support port ranges at the moment.
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- destination address might change in the case where "option http_proxy"
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is used.
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So, for each source element (IP, port), we want to know :
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- if the element was assigned by static configuration (eg: ":80")
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- if the element was assigned from a connection-specific value (eg: usesrc clientip)
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- if the element was assigned from a configuration-specific range (eg: 1024-65535)
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- if the element was assigned from a request-specific value (eg: hdr_ip(xff))
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- if the element was not assigned at all
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For the destination, we want to know :
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- if the element was assigned by static configuration (eg: ":80")
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- if the element was assigned from a connection-specific value (eg: transparent)
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- if the element was assigned from a request-specific value (eg: http_proxy)
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We don't need to store the information about the origin of the dynamic value
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since we have the value itself. So in practice we have :
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- default value, unknown (not yet checked with getsockname/getpeername)
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- default value, known (check done)
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- forced value (known)
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- forced range (known)
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We can't do that on an ip:port basis because the port may be fixed regardless
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of the address and conversely.
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So that means :
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enum {
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CO_ADDR_NONE = 0, /* not set, unknown value */
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CO_ADDR_KNOWN = 1, /* not set, known value */
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CO_ADDR_FIXED = 2, /* fixed value, known */
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CO_ADDR_RANGE = 3, /* from assigned range, known */
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} conn_addr_values;
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unsigned int new_l3_src_status:2;
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unsigned int new_l4_src_status:2;
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unsigned int new_l3_dst_status:2;
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unsigned int new_l4_dst_status:2;
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unsigned int cur_l3_src_status:2;
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unsigned int cur_l4_src_status:2;
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unsigned int cur_l3_dsp_status:2;
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unsigned int cur_l4_dst_status:2;
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unsigned int new_family:2;
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unsigned int cur_family:2;
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Note: this obsoletes CO_FL_ADDR_FROM_SET and CO_FL_ADDR_TO_SET. These flags
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must be changed to individual l3+l4 checks ORed between old and new values,
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or better, set to cur only which will inherit new.
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In the connection, these values may be merged in the same word as err_code.
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