2021-03-10 15:11:42 +00:00
|
|
|
#include "client.hpp"
|
QUIC lokinet integration refactor
Refactors how quic packets get handled: the actual tunnels now live in
tunnel.hpp's TunnelManager which holds and manages all the quic<->tcp
tunnelling. service::Endpoint now holds a TunnelManager rather than a
quic::Server. We only need one quic server, but we need a separate quic
client instance per outgoing quic tunnel, and TunnelManager handles all
that glue now.
Adds QUIC packet handling to get to the right tunnel code. This
required multiplexing incoming quic packets, as follows:
Adds a very small quic tunnel packet header of 4 bytes:
[1, SPORT, ECN] for client->server packets, where SPORT is our
source "port" (really: just a uint16_t unique quic instance
identifier)
or
[2, DPORT, ECN] for server->client packets where the DPORT is the SPORT
from above.
(This also reworks ECN bits to get properly carried over lokinet.)
We don't need a destination/source port for the server-side because
there is only ever one quic server (and we know we're going to it when
the first byte of the header is 1).
Removes the config option for quic exposing ports; a full lokinet will
simply accept anything incoming on quic and tunnel it to the requested
port on the the local endpoint IP (this handler will come in a following
commit).
Replace ConvoTags with full addresses: we need to carry the port, as
well, which the ConvoTag can't give us, so change those to more general
SockAddrs from which we can extract both the ConvoTag *and* the port.
Add a pending connection queue along with new quic-side handlers to call
when a stream becomes available (TunnelManager uses this to wire up
pending incoming conns with quic streams as streams open up).
Completely get rid of tunnel_server/tunnel_client.cpp code; it is now
moved to tunnel.hpp.
Add listen()/forget() methods in TunnelManager for setting up quic
listening sockets (for liblokinet usage).
Add open()/close() methods in TunnelManager for spinning up new quic
clients for outgoing quic connections.
2021-03-23 19:26:32 +00:00
|
|
|
#include "tunnel.hpp"
|
2021-03-11 01:00:57 +00:00
|
|
|
#include <llarp/util/logging/buffer.hpp>
|
|
|
|
#include <llarp/util/logging/logger.hpp>
|
2021-03-10 15:11:42 +00:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#include <oxenmq/variant.h>
|
2021-03-12 13:50:21 +00:00
|
|
|
#include <llarp/service/address.hpp>
|
|
|
|
#include <llarp/service/endpoint.hpp>
|
|
|
|
#include <llarp/ev/ev_libuv.hpp>
|
2021-03-10 15:11:42 +00:00
|
|
|
|
QUIC lokinet integration refactor
Refactors how quic packets get handled: the actual tunnels now live in
tunnel.hpp's TunnelManager which holds and manages all the quic<->tcp
tunnelling. service::Endpoint now holds a TunnelManager rather than a
quic::Server. We only need one quic server, but we need a separate quic
client instance per outgoing quic tunnel, and TunnelManager handles all
that glue now.
Adds QUIC packet handling to get to the right tunnel code. This
required multiplexing incoming quic packets, as follows:
Adds a very small quic tunnel packet header of 4 bytes:
[1, SPORT, ECN] for client->server packets, where SPORT is our
source "port" (really: just a uint16_t unique quic instance
identifier)
or
[2, DPORT, ECN] for server->client packets where the DPORT is the SPORT
from above.
(This also reworks ECN bits to get properly carried over lokinet.)
We don't need a destination/source port for the server-side because
there is only ever one quic server (and we know we're going to it when
the first byte of the header is 1).
Removes the config option for quic exposing ports; a full lokinet will
simply accept anything incoming on quic and tunnel it to the requested
port on the the local endpoint IP (this handler will come in a following
commit).
Replace ConvoTags with full addresses: we need to carry the port, as
well, which the ConvoTag can't give us, so change those to more general
SockAddrs from which we can extract both the ConvoTag *and* the port.
Add a pending connection queue along with new quic-side handlers to call
when a stream becomes available (TunnelManager uses this to wire up
pending incoming conns with quic streams as streams open up).
Completely get rid of tunnel_server/tunnel_client.cpp code; it is now
moved to tunnel.hpp.
Add listen()/forget() methods in TunnelManager for setting up quic
listening sockets (for liblokinet usage).
Add open()/close() methods in TunnelManager for spinning up new quic
clients for outgoing quic connections.
2021-03-23 19:26:32 +00:00
|
|
|
#include <variant>
|
|
|
|
|
2021-03-10 15:11:42 +00:00
|
|
|
namespace llarp::quic
|
|
|
|
{
|
2021-03-26 13:16:43 +00:00
|
|
|
Client::Client(EndpointBase& ep, const SockAddr& remote, uint16_t pseudo_port) : Endpoint{ep}
|
2021-03-10 15:11:42 +00:00
|
|
|
{
|
QUIC lokinet integration refactor
Refactors how quic packets get handled: the actual tunnels now live in
tunnel.hpp's TunnelManager which holds and manages all the quic<->tcp
tunnelling. service::Endpoint now holds a TunnelManager rather than a
quic::Server. We only need one quic server, but we need a separate quic
client instance per outgoing quic tunnel, and TunnelManager handles all
that glue now.
Adds QUIC packet handling to get to the right tunnel code. This
required multiplexing incoming quic packets, as follows:
Adds a very small quic tunnel packet header of 4 bytes:
[1, SPORT, ECN] for client->server packets, where SPORT is our
source "port" (really: just a uint16_t unique quic instance
identifier)
or
[2, DPORT, ECN] for server->client packets where the DPORT is the SPORT
from above.
(This also reworks ECN bits to get properly carried over lokinet.)
We don't need a destination/source port for the server-side because
there is only ever one quic server (and we know we're going to it when
the first byte of the header is 1).
Removes the config option for quic exposing ports; a full lokinet will
simply accept anything incoming on quic and tunnel it to the requested
port on the the local endpoint IP (this handler will come in a following
commit).
Replace ConvoTags with full addresses: we need to carry the port, as
well, which the ConvoTag can't give us, so change those to more general
SockAddrs from which we can extract both the ConvoTag *and* the port.
Add a pending connection queue along with new quic-side handlers to call
when a stream becomes available (TunnelManager uses this to wire up
pending incoming conns with quic streams as streams open up).
Completely get rid of tunnel_server/tunnel_client.cpp code; it is now
moved to tunnel.hpp.
Add listen()/forget() methods in TunnelManager for setting up quic
listening sockets (for liblokinet usage).
Add open()/close() methods in TunnelManager for spinning up new quic
clients for outgoing quic connections.
2021-03-23 19:26:32 +00:00
|
|
|
default_stream_buffer_size =
|
|
|
|
0; // We steal uvw's provided buffers so don't need an outgoing data buffer
|
2021-03-12 13:50:21 +00:00
|
|
|
|
QUIC lokinet integration refactor
Refactors how quic packets get handled: the actual tunnels now live in
tunnel.hpp's TunnelManager which holds and manages all the quic<->tcp
tunnelling. service::Endpoint now holds a TunnelManager rather than a
quic::Server. We only need one quic server, but we need a separate quic
client instance per outgoing quic tunnel, and TunnelManager handles all
that glue now.
Adds QUIC packet handling to get to the right tunnel code. This
required multiplexing incoming quic packets, as follows:
Adds a very small quic tunnel packet header of 4 bytes:
[1, SPORT, ECN] for client->server packets, where SPORT is our
source "port" (really: just a uint16_t unique quic instance
identifier)
or
[2, DPORT, ECN] for server->client packets where the DPORT is the SPORT
from above.
(This also reworks ECN bits to get properly carried over lokinet.)
We don't need a destination/source port for the server-side because
there is only ever one quic server (and we know we're going to it when
the first byte of the header is 1).
Removes the config option for quic exposing ports; a full lokinet will
simply accept anything incoming on quic and tunnel it to the requested
port on the the local endpoint IP (this handler will come in a following
commit).
Replace ConvoTags with full addresses: we need to carry the port, as
well, which the ConvoTag can't give us, so change those to more general
SockAddrs from which we can extract both the ConvoTag *and* the port.
Add a pending connection queue along with new quic-side handlers to call
when a stream becomes available (TunnelManager uses this to wire up
pending incoming conns with quic streams as streams open up).
Completely get rid of tunnel_server/tunnel_client.cpp code; it is now
moved to tunnel.hpp.
Add listen()/forget() methods in TunnelManager for setting up quic
listening sockets (for liblokinet usage).
Add open()/close() methods in TunnelManager for spinning up new quic
clients for outgoing quic connections.
2021-03-23 19:26:32 +00:00
|
|
|
// *Our* port; we stuff this in the llarp quic header so it knows how to target quic packets
|
|
|
|
// back to *this* client.
|
|
|
|
local_addr.port(ToNet(huint16_t{pseudo_port}));
|
2021-03-10 15:11:42 +00:00
|
|
|
|
QUIC lokinet integration refactor
Refactors how quic packets get handled: the actual tunnels now live in
tunnel.hpp's TunnelManager which holds and manages all the quic<->tcp
tunnelling. service::Endpoint now holds a TunnelManager rather than a
quic::Server. We only need one quic server, but we need a separate quic
client instance per outgoing quic tunnel, and TunnelManager handles all
that glue now.
Adds QUIC packet handling to get to the right tunnel code. This
required multiplexing incoming quic packets, as follows:
Adds a very small quic tunnel packet header of 4 bytes:
[1, SPORT, ECN] for client->server packets, where SPORT is our
source "port" (really: just a uint16_t unique quic instance
identifier)
or
[2, DPORT, ECN] for server->client packets where the DPORT is the SPORT
from above.
(This also reworks ECN bits to get properly carried over lokinet.)
We don't need a destination/source port for the server-side because
there is only ever one quic server (and we know we're going to it when
the first byte of the header is 1).
Removes the config option for quic exposing ports; a full lokinet will
simply accept anything incoming on quic and tunnel it to the requested
port on the the local endpoint IP (this handler will come in a following
commit).
Replace ConvoTags with full addresses: we need to carry the port, as
well, which the ConvoTag can't give us, so change those to more general
SockAddrs from which we can extract both the ConvoTag *and* the port.
Add a pending connection queue along with new quic-side handlers to call
when a stream becomes available (TunnelManager uses this to wire up
pending incoming conns with quic streams as streams open up).
Completely get rid of tunnel_server/tunnel_client.cpp code; it is now
moved to tunnel.hpp.
Add listen()/forget() methods in TunnelManager for setting up quic
listening sockets (for liblokinet usage).
Add open()/close() methods in TunnelManager for spinning up new quic
clients for outgoing quic connections.
2021-03-23 19:26:32 +00:00
|
|
|
uint16_t tunnel_port = remote.getPort();
|
2021-03-10 15:11:42 +00:00
|
|
|
if (tunnel_port == 0)
|
|
|
|
throw std::logic_error{"Cannot tunnel to port 0"};
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// TODO: need timers for:
|
|
|
|
//
|
QUIC lokinet integration refactor
Refactors how quic packets get handled: the actual tunnels now live in
tunnel.hpp's TunnelManager which holds and manages all the quic<->tcp
tunnelling. service::Endpoint now holds a TunnelManager rather than a
quic::Server. We only need one quic server, but we need a separate quic
client instance per outgoing quic tunnel, and TunnelManager handles all
that glue now.
Adds QUIC packet handling to get to the right tunnel code. This
required multiplexing incoming quic packets, as follows:
Adds a very small quic tunnel packet header of 4 bytes:
[1, SPORT, ECN] for client->server packets, where SPORT is our
source "port" (really: just a uint16_t unique quic instance
identifier)
or
[2, DPORT, ECN] for server->client packets where the DPORT is the SPORT
from above.
(This also reworks ECN bits to get properly carried over lokinet.)
We don't need a destination/source port for the server-side because
there is only ever one quic server (and we know we're going to it when
the first byte of the header is 1).
Removes the config option for quic exposing ports; a full lokinet will
simply accept anything incoming on quic and tunnel it to the requested
port on the the local endpoint IP (this handler will come in a following
commit).
Replace ConvoTags with full addresses: we need to carry the port, as
well, which the ConvoTag can't give us, so change those to more general
SockAddrs from which we can extract both the ConvoTag *and* the port.
Add a pending connection queue along with new quic-side handlers to call
when a stream becomes available (TunnelManager uses this to wire up
pending incoming conns with quic streams as streams open up).
Completely get rid of tunnel_server/tunnel_client.cpp code; it is now
moved to tunnel.hpp.
Add listen()/forget() methods in TunnelManager for setting up quic
listening sockets (for liblokinet usage).
Add open()/close() methods in TunnelManager for spinning up new quic
clients for outgoing quic connections.
2021-03-23 19:26:32 +00:00
|
|
|
// - timeout (to disconnect if idle for too long)
|
2021-03-10 15:11:42 +00:00
|
|
|
//
|
|
|
|
// - probably don't need for lokinet tunnel: change local addr -- attempts to re-bind the local
|
|
|
|
// socket
|
|
|
|
//
|
|
|
|
// - key_update_timer
|
|
|
|
|
QUIC lokinet integration refactor
Refactors how quic packets get handled: the actual tunnels now live in
tunnel.hpp's TunnelManager which holds and manages all the quic<->tcp
tunnelling. service::Endpoint now holds a TunnelManager rather than a
quic::Server. We only need one quic server, but we need a separate quic
client instance per outgoing quic tunnel, and TunnelManager handles all
that glue now.
Adds QUIC packet handling to get to the right tunnel code. This
required multiplexing incoming quic packets, as follows:
Adds a very small quic tunnel packet header of 4 bytes:
[1, SPORT, ECN] for client->server packets, where SPORT is our
source "port" (really: just a uint16_t unique quic instance
identifier)
or
[2, DPORT, ECN] for server->client packets where the DPORT is the SPORT
from above.
(This also reworks ECN bits to get properly carried over lokinet.)
We don't need a destination/source port for the server-side because
there is only ever one quic server (and we know we're going to it when
the first byte of the header is 1).
Removes the config option for quic exposing ports; a full lokinet will
simply accept anything incoming on quic and tunnel it to the requested
port on the the local endpoint IP (this handler will come in a following
commit).
Replace ConvoTags with full addresses: we need to carry the port, as
well, which the ConvoTag can't give us, so change those to more general
SockAddrs from which we can extract both the ConvoTag *and* the port.
Add a pending connection queue along with new quic-side handlers to call
when a stream becomes available (TunnelManager uses this to wire up
pending incoming conns with quic streams as streams open up).
Completely get rid of tunnel_server/tunnel_client.cpp code; it is now
moved to tunnel.hpp.
Add listen()/forget() methods in TunnelManager for setting up quic
listening sockets (for liblokinet usage).
Add open()/close() methods in TunnelManager for spinning up new quic
clients for outgoing quic connections.
2021-03-23 19:26:32 +00:00
|
|
|
Path path{local_addr, remote};
|
|
|
|
llarp::LogDebug("Connecting to ", remote);
|
2021-03-10 15:11:42 +00:00
|
|
|
|
QUIC lokinet integration refactor
Refactors how quic packets get handled: the actual tunnels now live in
tunnel.hpp's TunnelManager which holds and manages all the quic<->tcp
tunnelling. service::Endpoint now holds a TunnelManager rather than a
quic::Server. We only need one quic server, but we need a separate quic
client instance per outgoing quic tunnel, and TunnelManager handles all
that glue now.
Adds QUIC packet handling to get to the right tunnel code. This
required multiplexing incoming quic packets, as follows:
Adds a very small quic tunnel packet header of 4 bytes:
[1, SPORT, ECN] for client->server packets, where SPORT is our
source "port" (really: just a uint16_t unique quic instance
identifier)
or
[2, DPORT, ECN] for server->client packets where the DPORT is the SPORT
from above.
(This also reworks ECN bits to get properly carried over lokinet.)
We don't need a destination/source port for the server-side because
there is only ever one quic server (and we know we're going to it when
the first byte of the header is 1).
Removes the config option for quic exposing ports; a full lokinet will
simply accept anything incoming on quic and tunnel it to the requested
port on the the local endpoint IP (this handler will come in a following
commit).
Replace ConvoTags with full addresses: we need to carry the port, as
well, which the ConvoTag can't give us, so change those to more general
SockAddrs from which we can extract both the ConvoTag *and* the port.
Add a pending connection queue along with new quic-side handlers to call
when a stream becomes available (TunnelManager uses this to wire up
pending incoming conns with quic streams as streams open up).
Completely get rid of tunnel_server/tunnel_client.cpp code; it is now
moved to tunnel.hpp.
Add listen()/forget() methods in TunnelManager for setting up quic
listening sockets (for liblokinet usage).
Add open()/close() methods in TunnelManager for spinning up new quic
clients for outgoing quic connections.
2021-03-23 19:26:32 +00:00
|
|
|
auto conn = std::make_shared<Connection>(*this, ConnectionID::random(), path, tunnel_port);
|
|
|
|
conn->io_ready();
|
|
|
|
conns.emplace(conn->base_cid, std::move(conn));
|
2021-03-10 15:11:42 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
std::shared_ptr<Connection>
|
|
|
|
Client::get_connection()
|
|
|
|
{
|
|
|
|
// A client only has one outgoing connection, so everything in conns should either be a
|
|
|
|
// shared_ptr or weak_ptr to that same outgoing connection so we can just use the first one.
|
|
|
|
auto it = conns.begin();
|
|
|
|
if (it == conns.end())
|
|
|
|
return nullptr;
|
|
|
|
if (auto* wptr = std::get_if<alias_conn_ptr>(&it->second))
|
|
|
|
return wptr->lock();
|
2021-04-20 13:44:52 +00:00
|
|
|
return var::get<primary_conn_ptr>(it->second);
|
2021-03-10 15:11:42 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
QUIC lokinet integration refactor
Refactors how quic packets get handled: the actual tunnels now live in
tunnel.hpp's TunnelManager which holds and manages all the quic<->tcp
tunnelling. service::Endpoint now holds a TunnelManager rather than a
quic::Server. We only need one quic server, but we need a separate quic
client instance per outgoing quic tunnel, and TunnelManager handles all
that glue now.
Adds QUIC packet handling to get to the right tunnel code. This
required multiplexing incoming quic packets, as follows:
Adds a very small quic tunnel packet header of 4 bytes:
[1, SPORT, ECN] for client->server packets, where SPORT is our
source "port" (really: just a uint16_t unique quic instance
identifier)
or
[2, DPORT, ECN] for server->client packets where the DPORT is the SPORT
from above.
(This also reworks ECN bits to get properly carried over lokinet.)
We don't need a destination/source port for the server-side because
there is only ever one quic server (and we know we're going to it when
the first byte of the header is 1).
Removes the config option for quic exposing ports; a full lokinet will
simply accept anything incoming on quic and tunnel it to the requested
port on the the local endpoint IP (this handler will come in a following
commit).
Replace ConvoTags with full addresses: we need to carry the port, as
well, which the ConvoTag can't give us, so change those to more general
SockAddrs from which we can extract both the ConvoTag *and* the port.
Add a pending connection queue along with new quic-side handlers to call
when a stream becomes available (TunnelManager uses this to wire up
pending incoming conns with quic streams as streams open up).
Completely get rid of tunnel_server/tunnel_client.cpp code; it is now
moved to tunnel.hpp.
Add listen()/forget() methods in TunnelManager for setting up quic
listening sockets (for liblokinet usage).
Add open()/close() methods in TunnelManager for spinning up new quic
clients for outgoing quic connections.
2021-03-23 19:26:32 +00:00
|
|
|
size_t
|
|
|
|
Client::write_packet_header(nuint16_t, uint8_t ecn)
|
2021-03-10 15:11:42 +00:00
|
|
|
{
|
QUIC lokinet integration refactor
Refactors how quic packets get handled: the actual tunnels now live in
tunnel.hpp's TunnelManager which holds and manages all the quic<->tcp
tunnelling. service::Endpoint now holds a TunnelManager rather than a
quic::Server. We only need one quic server, but we need a separate quic
client instance per outgoing quic tunnel, and TunnelManager handles all
that glue now.
Adds QUIC packet handling to get to the right tunnel code. This
required multiplexing incoming quic packets, as follows:
Adds a very small quic tunnel packet header of 4 bytes:
[1, SPORT, ECN] for client->server packets, where SPORT is our
source "port" (really: just a uint16_t unique quic instance
identifier)
or
[2, DPORT, ECN] for server->client packets where the DPORT is the SPORT
from above.
(This also reworks ECN bits to get properly carried over lokinet.)
We don't need a destination/source port for the server-side because
there is only ever one quic server (and we know we're going to it when
the first byte of the header is 1).
Removes the config option for quic exposing ports; a full lokinet will
simply accept anything incoming on quic and tunnel it to the requested
port on the the local endpoint IP (this handler will come in a following
commit).
Replace ConvoTags with full addresses: we need to carry the port, as
well, which the ConvoTag can't give us, so change those to more general
SockAddrs from which we can extract both the ConvoTag *and* the port.
Add a pending connection queue along with new quic-side handlers to call
when a stream becomes available (TunnelManager uses this to wire up
pending incoming conns with quic streams as streams open up).
Completely get rid of tunnel_server/tunnel_client.cpp code; it is now
moved to tunnel.hpp.
Add listen()/forget() methods in TunnelManager for setting up quic
listening sockets (for liblokinet usage).
Add open()/close() methods in TunnelManager for spinning up new quic
clients for outgoing quic connections.
2021-03-23 19:26:32 +00:00
|
|
|
buf_[0] = CLIENT_TO_SERVER;
|
|
|
|
auto pseudo_port = local_addr.port();
|
|
|
|
std::memcpy(&buf_[1], &pseudo_port.n, 2); // remote quic pseudo-port (network order u16)
|
|
|
|
buf_[3] = std::byte{ecn};
|
|
|
|
return 4;
|
2021-03-10 15:11:42 +00:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
} // namespace llarp::quic
|