Systemd/src/resolve/resolved-dns-stub.c

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/* SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.1+ */
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
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#include <net/if_arp.h>
#include "errno-util.h"
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
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#include "fd-util.h"
#include "missing_network.h"
#include "missing_socket.h"
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
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#include "resolved-dns-stub.h"
#include "socket-netlink.h"
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
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#include "socket-util.h"
#include "string-table.h"
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
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/* The MTU of the loopback device is 64K on Linux, advertise that as maximum datagram size, but subtract the Ethernet,
* IP and UDP header sizes */
#define ADVERTISE_DATAGRAM_SIZE_MAX (65536U-14U-20U-8U)
static int manager_dns_stub_fd_extra(Manager *m, DnsStubListenerExtra *l, int type);
static void dns_stub_listener_extra_hash_func(const DnsStubListenerExtra *a, struct siphash *state) {
assert(a);
siphash24_compress(&a->mode, sizeof(a->mode), state);
siphash24_compress(&a->family, sizeof(a->family), state);
siphash24_compress(&a->address, FAMILY_ADDRESS_SIZE(a->family), state);
siphash24_compress(&a->port, sizeof(a->port), state);
}
static int dns_stub_listener_extra_compare_func(const DnsStubListenerExtra *a, const DnsStubListenerExtra *b) {
int r;
assert(a);
assert(b);
r = CMP(a->mode, b->mode);
if (r != 0)
return r;
r = CMP(a->family, b->family);
if (r != 0)
return r;
r = memcmp(&a->address, &b->address, FAMILY_ADDRESS_SIZE(a->family));
if (r != 0)
return r;
return CMP(a->port, b->port);
}
DEFINE_HASH_OPS_WITH_KEY_DESTRUCTOR(
dns_stub_listener_extra_hash_ops,
DnsStubListenerExtra,
dns_stub_listener_extra_hash_func,
dns_stub_listener_extra_compare_func,
dns_stub_listener_extra_free);
int dns_stub_listener_extra_new(
Manager *m,
DnsStubListenerExtra **ret) {
DnsStubListenerExtra *l;
l = new(DnsStubListenerExtra, 1);
if (!l)
return -ENOMEM;
*l = (DnsStubListenerExtra) {
.manager = m,
};
*ret = TAKE_PTR(l);
return 0;
}
DnsStubListenerExtra *dns_stub_listener_extra_free(DnsStubListenerExtra *p) {
if (!p)
return NULL;
p->udp_event_source = sd_event_source_unref(p->udp_event_source);
p->tcp_event_source = sd_event_source_unref(p->tcp_event_source);
return mfree(p);
}
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
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static int dns_stub_make_reply_packet(
DnsPacket **p,
size_t max_size,
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
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DnsQuestion *q,
DnsAnswer *answer,
bool *ret_truncated) {
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
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bool truncated = false;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
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DnsResourceRecord *rr;
unsigned c = 0;
int r;
assert(p);
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
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/* Note that we don't bother with any additional RRs, as this is stub is for local lookups only, and hence
* roundtrips aren't expensive. */
if (!*p) {
r = dns_packet_new(p, DNS_PROTOCOL_DNS, 0, max_size);
if (r < 0)
return r;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
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r = dns_packet_append_question(*p, q);
if (r < 0)
return r;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
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DNS_PACKET_HEADER(*p)->qdcount = htobe16(dns_question_size(q));
}
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
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DNS_ANSWER_FOREACH(rr, answer) {
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
r = dns_question_matches_rr(q, rr, NULL);
if (r < 0)
return r;
if (r > 0)
goto add;
r = dns_question_matches_cname_or_dname(q, rr, NULL);
if (r < 0)
return r;
if (r > 0)
goto add;
continue;
add:
r = dns_packet_append_rr(*p, rr, 0, NULL, NULL);
if (r == -EMSGSIZE) {
truncated = true;
break;
}
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
if (r < 0)
return r;
c++;
}
if (ret_truncated)
*ret_truncated = truncated;
else if (truncated)
return -EMSGSIZE;
DNS_PACKET_HEADER(*p)->ancount = htobe16(be16toh(DNS_PACKET_HEADER(*p)->ancount) + c);
return 0;
}
static int dns_stub_finish_reply_packet(
DnsPacket *p,
uint16_t id,
int rcode,
bool tc, /* set the Truncated bit? */
bool add_opt, /* add an OPT RR to this packet? */
bool edns0_do, /* set the EDNS0 DNSSEC OK bit? */
bool ad) { /* set the DNSSEC authenticated data bit? */
int r;
assert(p);
if (add_opt) {
r = dns_packet_append_opt(p, ADVERTISE_DATAGRAM_SIZE_MAX, edns0_do, rcode, NULL);
if (r == -EMSGSIZE) /* Hit the size limit? then indicate truncation */
tc = true;
else if (r < 0)
return r;
} else {
/* If the client can't to EDNS0, don't do DO either */
edns0_do = false;
/* If the client didn't do EDNS, clamp the rcode to 4 bit */
if (rcode > 0xF)
rcode = DNS_RCODE_SERVFAIL;
}
/* Don't set the AD bit unless DO is on, too */
if (!edns0_do)
ad = false;
DNS_PACKET_HEADER(p)->id = id;
DNS_PACKET_HEADER(p)->flags = htobe16(DNS_PACKET_MAKE_FLAGS(
1 /* qr */,
0 /* opcode */,
0 /* aa */,
tc /* tc */,
1 /* rd */,
1 /* ra */,
ad /* ad */,
0 /* cd */,
rcode));
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
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return 0;
}
static int dns_stub_send(
Manager *m,
DnsStubListenerExtra *l,
DnsStream *s,
DnsPacket *p,
DnsPacket *reply) {
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
int r;
assert(m);
assert(p);
assert(reply);
if (s)
r = dns_stream_write_packet(s, reply);
else
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
/* Note that it is essential here that we explicitly choose the source IP address for this packet. This
* is because otherwise the kernel will choose it automatically based on the routing table and will
* thus pick 127.0.0.1 rather than 127.0.0.53. */
r = manager_send(m,
manager_dns_stub_fd_extra(m, l, SOCK_DGRAM),
l ? p->ifindex : LOOPBACK_IFINDEX, /* force loopback iface if this is the main listener stub */
p->family, &p->sender, p->sender_port, &p->destination,
reply);
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
if (r < 0)
return log_debug_errno(r, "Failed to send reply packet: %m");
return 0;
}
static int dns_stub_send_failure(
Manager *m,
DnsStubListenerExtra *l,
DnsStream *s,
DnsPacket *p,
int rcode,
bool authenticated) {
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
_cleanup_(dns_packet_unrefp) DnsPacket *reply = NULL;
int r;
assert(m);
assert(p);
r = dns_stub_make_reply_packet(&reply, DNS_PACKET_PAYLOAD_SIZE_MAX(p), p->question, NULL, NULL);
if (r < 0)
return log_debug_errno(r, "Failed to make failure packet: %m");
r = dns_stub_finish_reply_packet(reply, DNS_PACKET_ID(p), rcode, false, !!p->opt, DNS_PACKET_DO(p), authenticated);
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
if (r < 0)
return log_debug_errno(r, "Failed to build failure packet: %m");
return dns_stub_send(m, l, s, p, reply);
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
}
static void dns_stub_query_complete(DnsQuery *q) {
int r;
assert(q);
assert(q->request_dns_packet);
switch (q->state) {
case DNS_TRANSACTION_SUCCESS: {
bool truncated;
r = dns_stub_make_reply_packet(&q->reply_dns_packet, DNS_PACKET_PAYLOAD_SIZE_MAX(q->request_dns_packet), q->question_idna, q->answer, &truncated);
if (r < 0) {
log_debug_errno(r, "Failed to build reply packet: %m");
break;
}
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
if (!truncated) {
r = dns_query_process_cname(q);
if (r == -ELOOP) {
(void) dns_stub_send_failure(q->manager, q->stub_listener_extra, q->request_dns_stream, q->request_dns_packet, DNS_RCODE_SERVFAIL, false);
break;
}
if (r < 0) {
log_debug_errno(r, "Failed to process CNAME: %m");
break;
}
if (r == DNS_QUERY_RESTARTED)
return;
}
r = dns_stub_finish_reply_packet(
q->reply_dns_packet,
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
DNS_PACKET_ID(q->request_dns_packet),
q->answer_rcode,
truncated,
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
!!q->request_dns_packet->opt,
DNS_PACKET_DO(q->request_dns_packet),
dns_query_fully_authenticated(q));
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
if (r < 0) {
log_debug_errno(r, "Failed to finish reply packet: %m");
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
break;
}
(void) dns_stub_send(q->manager, q->stub_listener_extra, q->request_dns_stream, q->request_dns_packet, q->reply_dns_packet);
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
break;
}
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
case DNS_TRANSACTION_RCODE_FAILURE:
(void) dns_stub_send_failure(q->manager, q->stub_listener_extra, q->request_dns_stream, q->request_dns_packet, q->answer_rcode, dns_query_fully_authenticated(q));
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
break;
case DNS_TRANSACTION_NOT_FOUND:
(void) dns_stub_send_failure(q->manager, q->stub_listener_extra, q->request_dns_stream, q->request_dns_packet, DNS_RCODE_NXDOMAIN, dns_query_fully_authenticated(q));
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
break;
case DNS_TRANSACTION_TIMEOUT:
case DNS_TRANSACTION_ATTEMPTS_MAX_REACHED:
/* Propagate a timeout as a no packet, i.e. that the client also gets a timeout */
break;
case DNS_TRANSACTION_NO_SERVERS:
case DNS_TRANSACTION_INVALID_REPLY:
case DNS_TRANSACTION_ERRNO:
case DNS_TRANSACTION_ABORTED:
case DNS_TRANSACTION_DNSSEC_FAILED:
case DNS_TRANSACTION_NO_TRUST_ANCHOR:
case DNS_TRANSACTION_RR_TYPE_UNSUPPORTED:
case DNS_TRANSACTION_NETWORK_DOWN:
(void) dns_stub_send_failure(q->manager, q->stub_listener_extra, q->request_dns_stream, q->request_dns_packet, DNS_RCODE_SERVFAIL, false);
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
break;
case DNS_TRANSACTION_NULL:
case DNS_TRANSACTION_PENDING:
case DNS_TRANSACTION_VALIDATING:
default:
assert_not_reached("Impossible state");
}
dns_query_free(q);
}
static int dns_stub_stream_complete(DnsStream *s, int error) {
assert(s);
log_debug_errno(error, "DNS TCP connection terminated, destroying queries: %m");
for (;;) {
DnsQuery *q;
q = set_first(s->queries);
if (!q)
break;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
dns_query_free(q);
}
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
/* This drops the implicit ref we keep around since it was allocated, as incoming stub connections
* should be kept as long as the client wants to. */
dns_stream_unref(s);
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
return 0;
}
static void dns_stub_process_query(Manager *m, DnsStubListenerExtra *l, DnsStream *s, DnsPacket *p) {
_cleanup_(dns_query_freep) DnsQuery *q = NULL;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
int r;
assert(m);
assert(p);
assert(p->protocol == DNS_PROTOCOL_DNS);
if (!l && /* l == NULL if this is the main stub */
(in_addr_is_localhost(p->family, &p->sender) <= 0 ||
in_addr_is_localhost(p->family, &p->destination) <= 0)) {
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
log_error("Got packet on unexpected IP range, refusing.");
dns_stub_send_failure(m, l, s, p, DNS_RCODE_SERVFAIL, false);
return;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
}
r = dns_packet_extract(p);
if (r < 0) {
log_debug_errno(r, "Failed to extract resources from incoming packet, ignoring packet: %m");
dns_stub_send_failure(m, l, s, p, DNS_RCODE_FORMERR, false);
return;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
}
if (!DNS_PACKET_VERSION_SUPPORTED(p)) {
log_debug("Got EDNS OPT field with unsupported version number.");
dns_stub_send_failure(m, l, s, p, DNS_RCODE_BADVERS, false);
return;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
}
if (dns_type_is_obsolete(p->question->keys[0]->type)) {
log_debug("Got message with obsolete key type, refusing.");
dns_stub_send_failure(m, l, s, p, DNS_RCODE_NOTIMP, false);
return;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
}
if (dns_type_is_zone_transer(p->question->keys[0]->type)) {
log_debug("Got request for zone transfer, refusing.");
dns_stub_send_failure(m, l, s, p, DNS_RCODE_NOTIMP, false);
return;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
}
if (!DNS_PACKET_RD(p)) {
/* If the "rd" bit is off (i.e. recursion was not requested), then refuse operation */
log_debug("Got request with recursion disabled, refusing.");
dns_stub_send_failure(m, l, s, p, DNS_RCODE_REFUSED, false);
return;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
}
if (DNS_PACKET_DO(p) && DNS_PACKET_CD(p)) {
log_debug("Got request with DNSSEC CD bit set, refusing.");
dns_stub_send_failure(m, l, s, p, DNS_RCODE_NOTIMP, false);
return;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
}
r = dns_query_new(m, &q, p->question, p->question, 0, SD_RESOLVED_PROTOCOLS_ALL|SD_RESOLVED_NO_SEARCH);
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
if (r < 0) {
log_error_errno(r, "Failed to generate query object: %m");
dns_stub_send_failure(m, l, s, p, DNS_RCODE_SERVFAIL, false);
return;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
}
/* Request that the TTL is corrected by the cached time for this lookup, so that we return vaguely useful TTLs */
q->clamp_ttl = true;
q->request_dns_packet = dns_packet_ref(p);
q->request_dns_stream = dns_stream_ref(s); /* make sure the stream stays around until we can send a reply through it */
q->stub_listener_extra = l;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
q->complete = dns_stub_query_complete;
if (s) {
/* Remember which queries belong to this stream, so that we can cancel them when the stream
* is disconnected early */
r = set_ensure_put(&s->queries, NULL, q);
if (r < 0) {
log_oom();
return;
}
assert(r > 0);
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
}
r = dns_query_go(q);
if (r < 0) {
log_error_errno(r, "Failed to start query: %m");
dns_stub_send_failure(m, l, s, p, DNS_RCODE_SERVFAIL, false);
return;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
}
log_debug("Processing query...");
TAKE_PTR(q);
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
}
static int on_dns_stub_packet_internal(sd_event_source *s, int fd, uint32_t revents, Manager *m, DnsStubListenerExtra *l) {
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
_cleanup_(dns_packet_unrefp) DnsPacket *p = NULL;
int r;
r = manager_recv(m, fd, DNS_PROTOCOL_DNS, &p);
if (r <= 0)
return r;
if (dns_packet_validate_query(p) > 0) {
log_debug("Got DNS stub UDP query packet for id %u", DNS_PACKET_ID(p));
dns_stub_process_query(m, l, NULL, p);
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
} else
log_debug("Invalid DNS stub UDP packet, ignoring.");
return 0;
}
static int on_dns_stub_packet(sd_event_source *s, int fd, uint32_t revents, void *userdata) {
return on_dns_stub_packet_internal(s, fd, revents, userdata, NULL);
}
static int on_dns_stub_packet_extra(sd_event_source *s, int fd, uint32_t revents, void *userdata) {
DnsStubListenerExtra *l = userdata;
assert(l);
return on_dns_stub_packet_internal(s, fd, revents, l->manager, l);
}
static int on_dns_stub_stream_packet(DnsStream *s) {
_cleanup_(dns_packet_unrefp) DnsPacket *p = NULL;
assert(s);
p = dns_stream_take_read_packet(s);
assert(p);
if (dns_packet_validate_query(p) > 0) {
log_debug("Got DNS stub TCP query packet for id %u", DNS_PACKET_ID(p));
dns_stub_process_query(s->manager, s->stub_listener_extra, s, p);
} else
log_debug("Invalid DNS stub TCP packet, ignoring.");
return 0;
}
static int on_dns_stub_stream_internal(sd_event_source *s, int fd, uint32_t revents, Manager *m, DnsStubListenerExtra *l) {
DnsStream *stream;
int cfd, r;
cfd = accept4(fd, NULL, NULL, SOCK_NONBLOCK|SOCK_CLOEXEC);
if (cfd < 0) {
if (ERRNO_IS_ACCEPT_AGAIN(errno))
return 0;
return -errno;
}
r = dns_stream_new(m, &stream, DNS_STREAM_STUB, DNS_PROTOCOL_DNS, cfd, NULL);
if (r < 0) {
safe_close(cfd);
return r;
}
stream->stub_listener_extra = l;
stream->on_packet = on_dns_stub_stream_packet;
stream->complete = dns_stub_stream_complete;
/* We let the reference to the stream dangle here, it will be dropped later by the complete callback. */
return 0;
}
static int on_dns_stub_stream(sd_event_source *s, int fd, uint32_t revents, void *userdata) {
return on_dns_stub_stream_internal(s, fd, revents, userdata, NULL);
}
static int on_dns_stub_stream_extra(sd_event_source *s, int fd, uint32_t revents, void *userdata) {
DnsStubListenerExtra *l = userdata;
assert(l);
return on_dns_stub_stream_internal(s, fd, revents, l->manager, l);
}
static int set_dns_stub_common_socket_options(int fd, int family) {
int r;
assert(fd >= 0);
assert(IN_SET(family, AF_INET, AF_INET6));
r = setsockopt_int(fd, SOL_SOCKET, SO_REUSEADDR, true);
if (r < 0)
return r;
r = socket_set_recvpktinfo(fd, family, true);
if (r < 0)
return r;
r = socket_set_recvttl(fd, family, true);
if (r < 0)
return r;
return 0;
}
static int manager_dns_stub_fd(Manager *m, int type) {
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
union sockaddr_union sa = {
.in.sin_family = AF_INET,
.in.sin_addr.s_addr = htobe32(INADDR_DNS_STUB),
.in.sin_port = htobe16(53),
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
};
_cleanup_close_ int fd = -1;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
int r;
assert(IN_SET(type, SOCK_DGRAM, SOCK_STREAM));
sd_event_source **event_source = type == SOCK_DGRAM ? &m->dns_stub_udp_event_source : &m->dns_stub_tcp_event_source;
if (*event_source)
return sd_event_source_get_io_fd(*event_source);
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
fd = socket(AF_INET, type | SOCK_CLOEXEC | SOCK_NONBLOCK, 0);
if (fd < 0)
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
return -errno;
r = set_dns_stub_common_socket_options(fd, AF_INET);
if (r < 0)
return r;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
/* Make sure no traffic from outside the local host can leak to onto this socket */
r = socket_bind_to_ifindex(fd, LOOPBACK_IFINDEX);
if (r < 0)
return r;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
r = setsockopt_int(fd, IPPROTO_IP, IP_TTL, 1);
if (r < 0)
return r;
if (bind(fd, &sa.sa, sizeof(sa.in)) < 0)
return -errno;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
if (type == SOCK_STREAM &&
listen(fd, SOMAXCONN) < 0)
return -errno;
r = sd_event_add_io(m->event, event_source, fd, EPOLLIN,
type == SOCK_DGRAM ? on_dns_stub_packet : on_dns_stub_stream,
m);
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
if (r < 0)
return r;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
r = sd_event_source_set_io_fd_own(*event_source, true);
if (r < 0)
return r;
(void) sd_event_source_set_description(*event_source,
type == SOCK_DGRAM ? "dns-stub-udp" : "dns-stub-tcp");
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
return TAKE_FD(fd);
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
}
static int manager_dns_stub_fd_extra(Manager *m, DnsStubListenerExtra *l, int type) {
_cleanup_free_ char *pretty = NULL;
_cleanup_close_ int fd = -1;
union sockaddr_union sa;
int r;
assert(m);
assert(IN_SET(type, SOCK_DGRAM, SOCK_STREAM));
if (!l)
return manager_dns_stub_fd(m, type);
sd_event_source **event_source = type == SOCK_DGRAM ? &l->udp_event_source : &l->tcp_event_source;
if (*event_source)
return sd_event_source_get_io_fd(*event_source);
if (l->family == AF_INET)
sa = (union sockaddr_union) {
.in.sin_family = l->family,
.in.sin_port = htobe16(l->port != 0 ? l->port : 53U),
.in.sin_addr = l->address.in,
};
else
sa = (union sockaddr_union) {
.in6.sin6_family = l->family,
.in6.sin6_port = htobe16(l->port != 0 ? l->port : 53U),
.in6.sin6_addr = l->address.in6,
};
fd = socket(l->family, type | SOCK_CLOEXEC | SOCK_NONBLOCK, 0);
if (fd < 0) {
r = -errno;
goto fail;
}
r = set_dns_stub_common_socket_options(fd, l->family);
if (r < 0)
goto fail;
/* Do not set IP_TTL for extra DNS stub listeners, as the address may not be local and in that case
* people may want ttl > 1. */
r = socket_set_freebind(fd, l->family, true);
if (r < 0)
goto fail;
if (bind(fd, &sa.sa, SOCKADDR_LEN(sa)) < 0) {
r = -errno;
goto fail;
}
if (type == SOCK_STREAM &&
listen(fd, SOMAXCONN) < 0) {
r = -errno;
goto fail;
}
r = sd_event_add_io(m->event, event_source, fd, EPOLLIN,
type == SOCK_DGRAM ? on_dns_stub_packet_extra : on_dns_stub_stream_extra,
l);
if (r < 0)
goto fail;
r = sd_event_source_set_io_fd_own(*event_source, true);
if (r < 0)
goto fail;
(void) sd_event_source_set_description(*event_source,
type == SOCK_DGRAM ? "dns-stub-udp-extra" : "dns-stub-tcp-extra");
if (DEBUG_LOGGING) {
(void) in_addr_port_to_string(l->family, &l->address, l->port, &pretty);
log_debug("Listening on %s socket %s.",
type == SOCK_DGRAM ? "UDP" : "TCP",
strnull(pretty));
}
return TAKE_FD(fd);
2020-09-04 07:54:03 +02:00
fail:
2020-09-04 09:26:17 +02:00
assert(r < 0);
(void) in_addr_port_to_string(l->family, &l->address, l->port, &pretty);
return log_warning_errno(r,
r == -EADDRINUSE ? "Another process is already listening on %s socket %s: %m" :
"Failed to listen on %s socket %s: %m",
type == SOCK_DGRAM ? "UDP" : "TCP",
strnull(pretty));
}
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
int manager_dns_stub_start(Manager *m) {
const char *t = "UDP";
int r = 0;
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
assert(m);
if (m->dns_stub_listener_mode == DNS_STUB_LISTENER_NO)
log_debug("Not creating stub listener.");
else
log_debug("Creating stub listener using %s.",
m->dns_stub_listener_mode == DNS_STUB_LISTENER_UDP ? "UDP" :
m->dns_stub_listener_mode == DNS_STUB_LISTENER_TCP ? "TCP" :
"UDP/TCP");
if (FLAGS_SET(m->dns_stub_listener_mode, DNS_STUB_LISTENER_UDP))
r = manager_dns_stub_fd(m, SOCK_DGRAM);
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
if (r >= 0 &&
FLAGS_SET(m->dns_stub_listener_mode, DNS_STUB_LISTENER_TCP)) {
t = "TCP";
r = manager_dns_stub_fd(m, SOCK_STREAM);
}
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
if (IN_SET(r, -EADDRINUSE, -EPERM)) {
log_warning_errno(r,
r == -EADDRINUSE ? "Another process is already listening on %s socket 127.0.0.53:53.\n"
"Turning off local DNS stub support." :
"Failed to listen on %s socket 127.0.0.53:53: %m.\n"
"Turning off local DNS stub support.",
t);
manager_dns_stub_stop(m);
} else if (r < 0)
return log_error_errno(r, "Failed to listen on %s socket 127.0.0.53:53: %m", t);
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
if (!ordered_set_isempty(m->dns_extra_stub_listeners)) {
DnsStubListenerExtra *l;
log_debug("Creating extra stub listeners.");
ORDERED_SET_FOREACH(l, m->dns_extra_stub_listeners) {
if (FLAGS_SET(l->mode, DNS_STUB_LISTENER_UDP))
(void) manager_dns_stub_fd_extra(m, l, SOCK_DGRAM);
if (FLAGS_SET(l->mode, DNS_STUB_LISTENER_TCP))
(void) manager_dns_stub_fd_extra(m, l, SOCK_STREAM);
}
}
resolved: respond to local resolver requests on 127.0.0.53:53 In order to improve compatibility with local clients that speak DNS directly (and do not use NSS or our bus API) listen locally on 127.0.0.53:53 and process any queries made that way. Note that resolved does not implement a full DNS server on this port, but simply enough to allow normal, local clients to resolve RRs through resolved. Specifically it does not implement queries without the RD bit set (these are requests where recursive lookups are explicitly disabled), and neither queries with DNSSEC DO set in combination with DNSSEC CD (i.e. DNSSEC lookups with validation turned off). It also refuses zone transfers and obsolete RR types. All lookups done this way will be rejected with a clean error code, so that the client side can repeat the query with a reduced feature set. The code will set the DNSSEC AD flag however, depending on whether the data resolved has been validated (or comes from a local, trusted source). Lookups made via this mechanisms are propagated to LLMNR and mDNS as necessary, but this is only partially useful as DNS packets cannot carry IP scope data (i.e. the ifindex), and hence link-local addresses returned cannot be used properly (and given that LLMNR/mDNS are mostly about link-local communication this is quite a limitation). Also, given that DNS tends to use IDNA for non-ASCII names, while LLMNR/mDNS uses UTF-8 lookups cannot be mapped 1:1. In general this should improve compatibility with clients bypassing NSS but it is highly recommended for clients to instead use NSS or our native bus API. This patch also beefs up the DnsStream logic, as it reuses the code for local TCP listening. DnsStream now provides proper reference counting for its objects. In order to avoid feedback loops resolved will no silently ignore 127.0.0.53 specified as DNS server when reading configuration. resolved listens on 127.0.0.53:53 instead of 127.0.0.1:53 in order to leave the latter free for local, external DNS servers or forwarders. This also changes the "etc.conf" tmpfiles snippet to create a symlink from /etc/resolv.conf to /usr/lib/systemd/resolv.conf by default, thus making this stub the default mode of operation if /etc is not populated.
2016-06-21 00:58:47 +02:00
return 0;
}
void manager_dns_stub_stop(Manager *m) {
assert(m);
m->dns_stub_udp_event_source = sd_event_source_unref(m->dns_stub_udp_event_source);
m->dns_stub_tcp_event_source = sd_event_source_unref(m->dns_stub_tcp_event_source);
}
static const char* const dns_stub_listener_mode_table[_DNS_STUB_LISTENER_MODE_MAX] = {
[DNS_STUB_LISTENER_NO] = "no",
[DNS_STUB_LISTENER_UDP] = "udp",
[DNS_STUB_LISTENER_TCP] = "tcp",
[DNS_STUB_LISTENER_YES] = "yes",
};
DEFINE_STRING_TABLE_LOOKUP_WITH_BOOLEAN(dns_stub_listener_mode, DnsStubListenerMode, DNS_STUB_LISTENER_YES);