This was the source of a large number of #ifdefs, originally
included for use with old embedded libc versions. I'm
sure no-one wants or needs IPv6-free code these days, so this
is a move towards more maintainable code.
If we're talking to upstream servers from a fixed port, specified by query-port
we create the fds to do this once, before dropping root, so that ports <1024 can be used.
But we call check_servers() before reading /etc/resolv.conf, so if the only servers
are in resolv.conf, at that point there will be no servers, and the fds get garbage
collected away, only to be recreated (but without root) after we read /etc/resolv.conf
Make pre-allocated server fds immortal, to avoid this problem.
If query-port is set, we create sockets bound to the wildcard address and the query port for
IPv4 and IPv6, but the IPv6 one fails, because is covers IPv4 as well, and an IPv4 socket
already exists (it gets created first). Set V6ONLY to avoid this.
dnsmasq allows to specify a interface for each name server passed with
the -S option or pushed through D-Bus; when an interface is set,
queries to the server will be forced via that interface.
Currently dnsmasq uses SO_BINDTODEVICE to enforce that traffic goes
through the given interface; SO_BINDTODEVICE also guarantees that any
response coming from other interfaces is ignored.
This can cause problems in some scenarios: consider the case where
eth0 and eth1 are in the same subnet and eth0 has a name server ns0
associated. There is no guarantee that the response to a query sent
via eth0 to ns0 will be received on eth0 because the local router may
have in the ARP table the MAC address of eth1 for the IP of eth0. This
can happen because Linux sends ARP responses for all the IPs of the
machine through all interfaces. The response packet on the wrong
interface will be dropped because of SO_BINDTODEVICE and the
resolution will fail.
To avoid this situation, dnsmasq should only restrict queries, but not
responses, to the given interface. A way to do this on Linux is with
the IP_UNICAST_IF and IPV6_UNICAST_IF socket options which were added
in kernel 3.4 and, respectively, glibc versions 2.16 and 2.26.
Reported-by: Hector Martin <marcan@marcan.st>
Signed-off-by: Beniamino Galvani <bgalvani@redhat.com>
By default 30 first servers are listed individually to system log, and
then a count of the remaining items. With e.g. a NXDOMAIN based adblock
service, dnsmasq lists 30 unnecessary ad sites every time when dnsmasq
evaluates the list. But the actual nameservers in use are evaluated last
and are not displayed as they get included in the "remaining items" total.
Handle the "local addresses only" separately and list only a few of them.
Remove the "local addresses only" from the general count.