* WIP smoke test freebsd
* fix bitrot
We now test that the firewall blocks inbound on host3 from host2
* WIP ipv6 test
* cleanup
* rename to make clear
* fix filename
* restore
* no sudo docker
* WIP
* WIP
* WIP
* WIP
* extra smoke tests
* WIP
* WIP
* add over improvements made in smoke.sh
* more tests
* use generic/freebsd14
* cleanup from test
* smoke test openbsd-amd64
* add netbsd-amd64
* try to fix vagrant
* update to go1.21
Since the first minor version update has already been released, we can
probably feel comfortable updating to go1.21. This version now enforces
that the go version on the system is compatible with the version
specified in go.mod, so we can remove the old logic around checking the
minimum version in the Makefile.
- https://go.dev/doc/go1.21#tools
> To improve forwards compatibility, Go 1.21 now reads the go line in a go.work or go.mod file as a strict minimum requirement: go 1.21.0 means that the workspace or module cannot be used with Go 1.20 or with Go 1.21rc1. This allows projects that depend on fixes made in later versions of Go to ensure that they are not used with earlier versions. It also gives better error reporting for projects that make use of new Go features: when the problem is that a newer Go version is needed, that problem is reported clearly, instead of attempting to build the code and printing errors about unresolved imports or syntax errors.
* update to go1.22
* bump gvisor
* fix merge conflicts
* use latest gvisor `go` branch
Need to use the latest commit on the `go` branch, see:
- https://github.com/google/gvisor?tab=readme-ov-file#using-go-get
* mod tidy
* more fixes
* give smoketest more time
Is this why it is failing?
* also a little more sleep here
---------
Co-authored-by: Jack Doan <me@jackdoan.com>
Ensure that we don't break the build for mobile by doing a `go build`
for all of the non-main modules in the repo. Should hopefully catch
issues like #1035 sooner.
* add test for GOEXPERIMENT=boringcrypto
* fix NebulaCertificate.Sign
Set the PublicKey field in a more compatible way for the tests. The
current method grabs the public key from the certificate, but the
correct thing to do is to derive it from the private key. Either way
doesn't really matter as I don't think the Sign method actually even
uses the PublicKey field.
* assert boring
* cleanup tests
* Support NIST curve P256
This change adds support for NIST curve P256. When you use `nebula-cert ca`
or `nebula-cert keygen`, you can specify `-curve P256` to enable it. The
curve to use is based on the curve defined in your CA certificate.
Internally, we use ECDSA P256 to sign certificates, and ECDH P256 to do
Noise handshakes. P256 is not supported natively in Noise Protocol, so
we define `DHP256` in the `noiseutil` package to implement support for
it.
You cannot have a mixed network of Curve25519 and P256 certificates,
since the Noise protocol will only attempt to parse using the Curve
defined in the host's certificate.
* verify the curves match in VerifyPrivateKey
This would have failed anyways once we tried to actually use the bytes
in the private key, but its better to detect the issue up front with
a better error message.
* add cert.Curve argument to Sign method
* fix mismerge
* use crypto/ecdh
This is the preferred method for doing ECDH functions now, and also has
a boringcrypto specific codepath.
* remove other ecdh uses of crypto/elliptic
use crypto/ecdh instead
* build with go1.20
This has been out for a bit and is up to go1.20.4. We have been using
go1.20 for the Slack builds and have seen no issues.
* need the quotes
* use go install
* firewall: add option to send REJECT replies
This change allows you to configure the firewall to send REJECT packets
when a packet is denied.
firewall:
# Action to take when a packet is not allowed by the firewall rules.
# Can be one of:
# `drop` (default): silently drop the packet.
# `reject`: send a reject reply.
# - For TCP, this will be a RST "Connection Reset" packet.
# - For other protocols, this will be an ICMP port unreachable packet.
outbound_action: drop
inbound_action: drop
These packets are only sent to established tunnels, and only on the
overlay network (currently IPv4 only).
$ ping -c1 192.168.100.3
PING 192.168.100.3 (192.168.100.3) 56(84) bytes of data.
From 192.168.100.3 icmp_seq=2 Destination Port Unreachable
--- 192.168.100.3 ping statistics ---
2 packets transmitted, 0 received, +1 errors, 100% packet loss, time 31ms
$ nc -nzv 192.168.100.3 22
(UNKNOWN) [192.168.100.3] 22 (?) : Connection refused
This change also modifies the smoke test to capture tcpdump pcaps from
both the inside and outside to inspect what is going on over the wire.
It also now does TCP and UDP packet tests using the Nmap version of
ncat.
* calculate seq and ack the same was as the kernel
The logic a bit confusing, so we copy it straight from how the kernel
does iptables `--reject-with tcp-reset`:
- https://github.com/torvalds/linux/blob/v5.19/net/ipv4/netfilter/nf_reject_ipv4.c#L193-L221
* cleanup
These new helpers make the code a lot cleaner. I confirmed that the
simple helpers like `atomic.Int64` don't add any extra overhead as they
get inlined by the compiler. `atomic.Pointer` adds an extra method call
as it no longer gets inlined, but we aren't using these on the hot path
so it is probably okay.
This makes it easier to use the docker container smoke test that
GitHub actions runs. There is also `make smoke-docker-race` that runs the
smoke test with `-race` enabled.
* enforce the use of goimports
Instead of enforcing `gofmt`, enforce `goimports`, which also asserts
a separate section for non-builtin packages.
* run `goimports` everywhere
* exclude generated .pb.go files
Test that basic inbound / outbound firewall rules work during the smoke
test. This change sets an inbound firewall rule on host3, and a new
host4 with outbound firewall rules. It also tests that conntrack allows
packets once the connection has been established.
This makes GOARM more generic and does GOMIPS in a similar way to
support mips-softfloat. We also set `-ldflags "-s -w"` for
mips-softfloat to give the best chance of the binary working on these
small devices.
Add support for freebsd. You have to set `tun.dev` in your config. The second pass of this would be to remove the exec calls and use ioctl(2) and route(4) instead, but we can do that in a second PR.
Co-authored-by: Wade Simmons <wade@wades.im>
* Better config test
Previously, when using the config test option `-test`, we quit fairly
earlier in the process and would not catch a variety of additional
parsing errors (such as lighthouse IP addresses, local_range, the new
check to make sure static hosts are in the certificate's subnet, etc).
* run config test as part of smoke test
* don't need privileges for configtest
Co-authored-by: Nathan Brown <nate@slack-corp.com>
This PR does two things:
- Only run the tests when relevant files change.
- Cache the Go Modules directory between runs, so they don't have to redownload everything everytime (go.sum is the cache key). Pretty much straight from the examples: https://github.com/actions/cache/blob/master/examples.md#go---modules
This script will be triggered by any tag starting with `v[0-9]+.[0-9]+.[0-9]+` (i.e.
v1.1.0). It will create all of the .tar.gz files (or .zip for windows). The amd64 binaries will be
compiled on their target systems, the rest of the Linux architecures
will be cross compiled from the Linux amd64 host.
A SHASUM256.txt will also be generated and attached to the release.
This change adds a new Github Action, a 3 node smoke test. It starts
three docker containers (one lighthouse and two standard nodes) and
tests that they can all ping each other. This should hopefully detect
any basic runtime failures in PRs.