The shutdown test sends 'rdnc status' commands in parallel with
'rndc stop' A new rndc connection arriving will reference the ACL
environment to see whether the client is allowed to connect.
Commit c0995bc380 added a mutex lock to ns_interfacemgr_getaclenv(),
but if the new connection arrives while the interfaces are being
purged during shutdown, that lock is already being held. If the
the connection event slips in ahead of one of the netmgr's "stop
listening" events on a worker thread, a deadlock can occur.
The fix is not to hold the interfacemgr lock while shutting down
interfaces; only while actually traversing the interface list to
identify interfaces needing shutdown.
previously fctx_done() detached the fctx but did not clear the pointer
passed into it from the caller. in some conditions, when rctx_done()
was reached while waiting for a validator to complete, fctx_done()
could be called twice on the same fetch, causing a double detach.
fctx_done() now clears the fctx pointer, to reduce the chances of
such mistakes.
There is a possibility for `udp_recv()` to be called with `eresult`
being `ISC_R_SUCCESS`, but nevertheless with already deactivated `resp`,
which can happen when the request has been canceled in the meantime.
This commit ensures that write callbacks are getting called only after
the data has been sent via the network.
Without this fix, a situation could appear when a write callback could
get called before the actual encrypted data would have been sent to
the network. Instead, it would get called right after it would have
been passed to the OpenSSL (i.e. encrypted).
Most likely, the issue does not reveal itself often because the
callback call was asynchronous, so in most cases it should have been
called after the data has been sent, but that was not guaranteed by
the code logic.
Also, this commit removes one memory allocation (netievent) from a hot
path, as there is no need to call this callback asynchronously
anymore.
There was a query_detach() call missing in dig, which could lead to
dig hanging on TLS context creation errors. This commit fixes.
The error was introduced because the Strict TLS implementation was
initially made over an older version of the code, where this extra
query_detach() call was not needed.
This seems to be most appropriate way to ensure consistency between
release tarballs and public presentation on ReadTheDocs.
Previous attempt with removing docutils constraint, which relied on pip
depedency solver to pick the same packages as in CI was flawed. RTD
installs a bit different set of packages so it was inherently
unreliable.
As a result RTD pulled in sphinx-rtd-theme==0.4.3 while CI
had 1.0.0, and this inconsistency caused Table of Contents in Release
Notes to render incorrectly. Previous solution was to downgrade
docutils to < 0.17, but I think we should rather pin exact versions.
For the long history of messing with versions read also
isc-projects/bind9@2a8eda0084isc-projects/images@d4435b97beisc-projects/bind9@6a2daddf5b
There was an error in AX_PROG_CC_FOR_BUILD macro that cached literal
name of the cache variable `saved_ac_cv_c_compiler_gnu` instead of the
value of said variable breaking the consecutive runs of ./configure
script with caching enabled.
Currently our CI images we use to build docs (which subsequently get
into release tarballs) are using docutils 0.17.1, which is latest version
which fulfills Sphinx 4.5.0 requirement for docutils < 0.18.
The old requirement for docutils < 0.17 was causing discrepancy between
the way we build release artifacts and the docs on ReadTheDocs.org which
uses doc/arm/requirements.txt from our repo.
Remove the limit for RDT with hope that it will pull latest permissible
version of docutils.
For the long history of messing with docutils version read also
isc-projects/images@d4435b97beisc-projects/bind9@6a2daddf5b
In dns_adb_cancelfind(), we need to release the find lock and
then acquire the bucket and find locks in that order, for
consistency with locking hierarchy elsehwere. Previously we
were only acquiring the bucket lock.
Also rewrote the function for better readability.
Man pages for dig/mdig/delv used `.. option:: +[no]bla` to describe two
options at once, and very old Sphinx does not support that [] in option
names.
Solution is to split negative and positive options into `+bla, +nobla`
form. In the end it improves readability because it transforms hard to
read strings with double brackets from
`+[no]subnet=addr[/prefix-length]` to
`+subnet=addr[/prefix-length], +nosubnet`.
As a side-effect it also allows easier linking to dig/mdig/delv options
using their name directly instead of always overriding the link target
to `+[no]bla` form.
Transformation was done using regex:
s/:: +\[no\]\(.*\)/:: +\1, +no\1
... and manual review around occurences matching regex
+no.*=
Fixes: #3301
The connect()ed UDP socket provides feedback on a variety of ICMP
errors (eg port unreachable) which bind can then use to decide what to
do with errors (report them to the client, try again with a different
nameserver etc). However, Linux's implementation does not report what
it considers "transient" conditions, which is defined as Destination
host Unreachable, Destination network unreachable, Source Route Failed
and Message Too Big.
Explicitly enable IP_RECVERR / IPV6_RECVERR (via libuv uv_udp_bind()
flag) to learn about ICMP destination network/host unreachable.
When we compile with libuv that has some capabilities via flags passed
to f.e. uv_udp_listen() or uv_udp_bind(), the call with such flags would
fail with invalid arguments when older libuv version is linked at the
runtime that doesn't understand the flag that was available at the
compile time.
Enforce minimal libuv version when flags have been available at the
compile time, but are not available at the runtime. This check is less
strict than enforcing the runtime libuv version to be same or higher
than compile time libuv version.
The interfacemgr and the .route was being detached while the network
manager had pending read from the socket. Instead of detaching from the
socket, we need to cancel the read which in turn will detach the route
socket and the associated interfacemgr.
Sphinx "standard domain" provides directive types ".. program::" and
".. option::" to create link anchor for a program name + option combination.
These can be referenced using :ref:`program option` syntax.
The problem is that Sphinx 1.8.5 (e.g. in Ubuntu 18.04) generates
conflicting link targets if a page contains two option directives
starting with the same word, e.g.:
.. program:: dnssec-settime
.. option:: -P date
.. option:: -P ds date
The reason is that option directive consumes only first word as "option
name" (-P) and all the rest is considered "option argument" (date, ds
date). Newer versions of Sphinx (e.g. 4.5.0) handle this by creating
numbered link anchors, but older versions warn and BIND build system
turns the warning into a hard error.
To handle that we use method recommended by Sphinx maintainer:
https://github.com/sphinx-doc/sphinx/issues/10218#issuecomment-1059925508
As a bonus it provides more accurate link anchors for sub-options.
Alternatives considered:
- Replacing standard domain definition of .. option - causes more
problems, see BIND issue #3294.
- Removing hyperlinks for options - that would be a step back.
Fixes: #3295