view contrib/geo2nginx.pl @ 8913:40445fc7c403 quic

QUIC: fixed migration during NAT rebinding. The RFC 9000 allows a packet from known CID arrive from unknown path: These requirements regarding connection ID reuse apply only to the sending of packets, as unintentional changes in path without a change in connection ID are possible. For example, after a period of network inactivity, NAT rebinding might cause packets to be sent on a new path when the client resumes sending. Before the patch, such packets were rejected with an error in the ngx_quic_check_migration() function. Removing the check makes the separate function excessive - remaining checks are early migration check and "disable_active_migration" check. The latter is a transport parameter sent to client and it should not be used by server. The server should send "disable_active_migration" "if the endpoint does not support active connection migration" (18.2). The support status depends on nginx configuration: to have migration working with multiple workers, you need bpf helper, available on recent Linux systems. The patch does not set "disable_active_migration" automatically and leaves it for the administrator. By default, active migration is enabled. RFC 900 says that it is ok to migrate if the peer violates "disable_active_migration" flag requirements: If the peer violates this requirement, the endpoint MUST either drop the incoming packets on that path without generating a Stateless Reset OR proceed with path validation and allow the peer to migrate. Generating a Stateless Reset or closing the connection would allow third parties in the network to cause connections to close by spoofing or otherwise manipulating observed traffic. So, nginx adheres to the second option and proceeds to path validation. Note: The ngtcp2 may be used for testing both active migration and NAT rebinding: ngtcp2/client --change-local-addr=200ms --delay-stream=500ms <ip> <port> <url> ngtcp2/client --change-local-addr=200ms --delay-stream=500ms --nat-rebinding \ <ip> <port> <url>
author Vladimir Homutov <vl@nginx.com>
date Mon, 29 Nov 2021 11:51:14 +0300
parents c9ad0d9c7d59
children
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#!/usr/bin/perl -w

# (c) Andrei Nigmatulin, 2005
#
# this script provided "as is", without any warranties. use it at your own risk.
#
# special thanx to Andrew Sitnikov for perl port
#
# this script converts CSV geoip database (free download at http://www.maxmind.com/app/geoip_country)
# to format, suitable for use with nginx_http_geo module (http://sysoev.ru/nginx)
#
# for example, line with ip range
#
#   "62.16.68.0","62.16.127.255","1041253376","1041268735","RU","Russian Federation"
#
# will be converted to four subnetworks:
#
#   62.16.68.0/22 RU;
#   62.16.72.0/21 RU;
#   62.16.80.0/20 RU;
#   62.16.96.0/19 RU;


use warnings;
use strict;

while( <STDIN> ){
	if (/"[^"]+","[^"]+","([^"]+)","([^"]+)","([^"]+)"/){
		print_subnets($1, $2, $3);
	}
}

sub  print_subnets {
	my ($a1, $a2, $c) = @_;
	my $l;
    while ($a1 <= $a2) {
		for ($l = 0; ($a1 & (1 << $l)) == 0 && ($a1 + ((1 << ($l + 1)) - 1)) <= $a2; $l++){};
		print long2ip($a1) . "/" . (32 - $l) . " " . $c . ";\n";
    	$a1 += (1 << $l);
	}
}

sub long2ip {
	my $ip = shift;

	my $str = 0;

	$str = ($ip & 255);

	$ip >>= 8;
	$str = ($ip & 255).".$str";

	$ip >>= 8;
	$str = ($ip & 255).".$str";

	$ip >>= 8;
	$str = ($ip & 255).".$str";
}