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== | == Overview == | ||
=== | Name resolution topics: | ||
* [[/DNS]] | |||
* [[/DNSSEC]] | |||
Host and services are often called by names which need to be translated to IP addresses and port numbers. | |||
Input arguments: | |||
* node | |||
* service | |||
* filters (address family, socktype, protocol) | |||
* flags | |||
On output, we expect a list of address records that can be used for connection and other purposes, each consisting of the following fields: | |||
* address family and data (network layer) | |||
* protocol and port (transport layer) | |||
* socktype (mode of operation) | |||
Additional information can be provided: | |||
* canonical name | |||
== Use cases == | |||
* Generic translation between hostnames and IP addresses (e.g. for ACL purposes) | |||
* Preparing for connect() or sendto() to contact a service | |||
* Preparing for bind() to provide a service | |||
== Name resolution methods == | |||
* [[Networking/NameResolution/Hosts|files (/etc/hosts)]] | |||
* [[Networking/NameResolution/Hosts|myhostname]] | |||
* [[Networking/NameResolution/DNS|DNS]] | |||
* [[Networking/NameResolution/mDNS|mDNS]] | |||
== Using getaddrinfo() == | |||
=== Connecting to services using <code>getaddrinfo()</code> === | |||
The <code>getaddrinfo()</code> function is a dualstack-friendly API to name | The <code>getaddrinfo()</code> function is a dualstack-friendly API to name | ||
resolution. It is used by applications to translate host and | resolution. It is used by applications to translate host and | ||
service names to a linked list of <code>struct addrinfo</code> | service names to a linked list of <code>struct addrinfo</code> | ||
objects. | objects. It has its own manual page <code>getaddrinfo(3)</code> in the Linux | ||
Programmer's Manual. | |||
==== Running <code>getaddrinfo()</code> ==== | ==== Running <code>getaddrinfo()</code> ==== | ||
Line 17: | Line 57: | ||
struct addrinfo hints = { | struct addrinfo hints = { | ||
.ai_family = AF_UNSPEC, | .ai_family = AF_UNSPEC, | ||
.ai_socktype = | .ai_socktype = SOCK_STREAM, | ||
. | .ai_protocol = IPPROTO_TCP, | ||
. | .ai_flags = AI_ADDRCONFIG, | ||
.ai_canonname = NULL, | .ai_canonname = NULL, | ||
.ai_addr = NULL, | .ai_addr = NULL, | ||
Line 36: | Line 76: | ||
* ''service'': numeric port number or a symbolic service name | * ''service'': numeric port number or a symbolic service name | ||
* ''hints.ai_family'': enable dualprotocol, IPv4-only or IPv6-only queries | * ''hints.ai_family'': enable dualprotocol, IPv4-only or IPv6-only queries | ||
* ''hints.ai_socktype'': select socket type | * ''hints.ai_socktype'': select socket type | ||
* ''hints.ai_protocol'': select transport protocol | |||
<code>getaddrinfo()</code> can be futher tweaked with the ''hints.ai_flags''. Other | Socktype and protocol are somewhat duplicate for TCP/IP stack with just TCP | ||
attributes are | and UDP. <code>getaddrinfo()</code> can be futher tweaked with the ''hints.ai_flags''. | ||
to be set in hints (''ai_canonname'', ''ai_addr'' and ''ai_next''). | Other attributes are not supposed to be set in hints (''ai_canonname'', ''ai_addr'' and ''ai_next''). | ||
On success, the ''error'' variable is assigned to 0 and ''result'' is pointed to | On success, the ''error'' variable is assigned to 0 and ''result'' is pointed to | ||
Line 98: | Line 139: | ||
service = "http" | service = "http" | ||
family = socket.AF_UNSPEC | family = socket.AF_UNSPEC | ||
socktype = socket. | socktype = socket.SOCK_STREAM | ||
protocol = | protocol = socket.SOL_TCP | ||
flags = 0 | flags = 0 | ||
Line 130: | Line 171: | ||
* AI_NUMERICSERV: use numeric service, don't perform service resolution | * AI_NUMERICSERV: use numeric service, don't perform service resolution | ||
* AI_CANONNAME: save canonical name to the first result | * AI_CANONNAME: save canonical name to the first result | ||
* AI_ADDRCONFIG: this never really worked, as far as I know | * AI_ADDRCONFIG: to be used with connect(), this never really worked, as far as I know, but [[Networking/NameResolution/ADDRCONFIG|we want to fix it]] | ||
* AI_V4MAPPED+AI_ALL: only with AF_INET6, return IPv4 addresses mapped into IPv6 space | * AI_V4MAPPED+AI_ALL: only with AF_INET6, return IPv4 addresses mapped into IPv6 space | ||
* AI_V4MAPPED: I don't see any real use for this, only returns mapped IPv4 if there are no IPv6 addresses | * AI_V4MAPPED: I don't see any real use for this, only returns mapped IPv4 if there are no IPv6 addresses | ||
==== Flag AI_ADDRCONFIG considered harmful ==== | ==== Connecting to multiple transport channels ==== | ||
Some applications need to open several TCP or UDP channels to the same host. The | |||
classic usage of <code>getaddrinfo()</code> returns a linked list of addrinfo | |||
objects for just one channel. | |||
Solutions: | |||
1) Run <code>getaddrinfo()</code> once per channel. This may for example cause | |||
multiple DNS requests for the same information, which is suboptimal | |||
2) Run <code>getaddrinfo()</code> only for the main (or first) channel. When | |||
connection succeeds, reuse the addrinfo structure for the other channels. It | |||
is usually safe to assume that when one channel succeeds, the machine is | |||
available for the other channels, too. | |||
An example of such an application is Spice. Thanks to David Jaša for information | |||
on this subject. | |||
=== Binding to addresses using <code>getaddrinfo()</code> === | |||
According to the manual page, you should use AI_PASSIVE flag when | |||
you use <code>getaddrinfo()</code> to retrieve addresses to | |||
<code>bind()</code> to. Those are usually stored as user configuration | |||
with NULL being the default value. | |||
<code>getaddrinfo()</code> returns a linked list of addrinfo structures. | |||
Developers should not generally assume that it only returns one address | |||
nor that the first address is the best and only one to <code>bind()</code> to. | |||
The general idea is that one would loop through <code>getaddrinfo()</code> | |||
structure and <code>bind()</code> one socket to each of them. But this doesn't work | |||
in general. Read on. | |||
==== Binding to the INADDR_ANY and/or in6addr_any addresses ==== | |||
This is the most common option that doesn't limit the service to | |||
a particular set of local addresses. | |||
<code>getaddrinfo(NULL, ...)</code> with AI_PASSIVE returns two addresses, | |||
<code>0.0.0.0</code> and <code>::</code>, in this order. If you use | |||
the general rule above, the resulting actions would look like: | |||
<pre> | |||
sock1 = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP) | |||
bind(sock1, INADDR_ANY, sizeof (INADDR_ANY)) | |||
... | |||
sock2 = socket(AF_INET6, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP) | |||
bind(sock2, in6addr_any, sizeof (in6addr_any)) | |||
... | |||
</pre> | |||
This won't work. The first <code>bind()</code> will successfully bind | |||
to 0.0.0.0, while the second tries to <code>bind()</code> in a dualstack | |||
manner, taking both <code>::</code> and <code>0.0.0.0</code> (unless | |||
sysctl net.ipv6.bindv6only is enabled) and therefore it will fail | |||
as <code>0.0.0.0</code> is already taken. | |||
The addresses are obviously returned in different order than usual | |||
(IPv4 first) and that should probably be fixed in glibc. But even | |||
if it's fixed, it only changes the order of the actions: | |||
<pre> | |||
sock1 = socket(AF_INET6, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP) | |||
bind(sock1, in6addr_any, sizeof (in6addr_any)) | |||
... | |||
sock2 = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP) | |||
bind(sock2, INADDR_ANY, sizeof (INADDR_ANY)) | |||
... | |||
</pre> | |||
The first socket succeeds and binds to both addresses. The second one | |||
fails. If the application ignores (or only warns about) the second failure, | |||
it would work without problem. | |||
The correct™ way to handle this with <code>getaddrinfo()</code> would be | |||
to prevent the linux kernel from using the ''dualstack hack'' with the | |||
<code>setsockopt()</code> call (yes is an int constant that equeals 1). | |||
<pre> | |||
sock1 = socket(AF_INET6, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP) | |||
setsockopt(sock1, IPPROTO_IPV6, IPV6_V6ONLY, &yes, sizeof(yes)) | |||
bind(sock1, in6addr_any, sizeof (in6addr_any)) | |||
... | |||
sock2 = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP) | |||
bind(sock2, INADDR_ANY, sizeof (INADDR_ANY)) | |||
... | |||
</pre> | |||
After writing this, I found [http://funcptr.net/2012/08/07/ipv6----getaddrinfo%28%29-and-bind%28%29-ordering-with-v6only/ a resource] from Bert JW Regeer on the same subject. | |||
==== Binding to specific addresses by number ==== | |||
This works well because in this case only one address is ever returned | |||
(if ''socktype'' and ''protocol'' are specified). It is possible | |||
to limit <code>getaddrinfo()</code> to this case using the | |||
AI_NUMERICHOST flag. AI_PASSIVE flag is not used in this case. | |||
==== Binding to a list of specific addresses by hostname ==== | |||
This is just <code>getaddrinfo()</code> resolving. The AI_PASSIVE | |||
flag is not used in this case. Always remember that <code>getaddrinfo()</code> | |||
returns a linked list of addresses. If you support binding by name, | |||
you should always create one socket for each address and <code>bind()</code> | |||
it. | |||
==== Proposed solutions ==== | |||
1) Only support listening on all addresses. Always <code>bind()</code> | |||
to the IPv6 address in dualstack mode. | |||
<pre> | |||
sock1 = socket(AF_INET6, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP) | |||
bind(sock1, in6addr_any, sizeof (in6addr_any)) | |||
... | |||
</pre> | |||
2) Use only numeric addresses and NULL setting. Special case NULL | |||
setting and solve them separately with #1. Only then, if you use | |||
AI_NUMERICHOST and properly | |||
specify the ''socktype'' and/or ''protocol'' fields, you can assume | |||
that <code>getaddrinfo()</code> only returns one result. | |||
If result order is fixed in glibc, you wouldn't actually have to special | |||
case the NULL host. But it's more of a hack. | |||
3) Support full name resolution. Always create one socket per | |||
resulting address. Set IPV6_V6ONLY on IPv6 sockets to suppres the | |||
transparent dualstack. This works for all cases. | |||
There are many other possibilities that seem to work at first glance | |||
but don't behave as expected in many situations. | |||
==== Testing code (in Python for simplicity) ==== | |||
The following test shows how it works: | |||
getaddrinfo-test-ai-passive.py: | |||
<pre> | |||
#!/usr/bin/python3 | |||
from socket import * | |||
hosts = [ | |||
None, | |||
"localhost", | |||
"info.nix.cz", | |||
"www.google.com", | |||
] | |||
for host in hosts: | |||
print(host) | |||
for item in getaddrinfo(host, "http", AF_UNSPEC, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP, AI_PASSIVE): | |||
print(" ", item) | |||
</pre> | |||
<pre> | |||
# ./getaddrinfo-test-ai-passive.py | |||
None | |||
(2, 1, 6, '', ('0.0.0.0', 80)) | |||
(10, 1, 6, '', ('::', 80, 0, 0)) | |||
localhost | |||
(10, 1, 6, '', ('::1', 80, 0, 0)) | |||
(2, 1, 6, '', ('127.0.0.1', 80)) | |||
info.nix.cz | |||
(10, 1, 6, '', ('2a02:38::1001', 80, 0, 0)) | |||
(2, 1, 6, '', ('195.47.235.3', 80)) | |||
www.google.com | |||
(10, 1, 6, '', ('2a00:1450:4016:801::1012', 80, 0, 0)) | |||
(2, 1, 6, '', ('173.194.35.144', 80)) | |||
(2, 1, 6, '', ('173.194.35.145', 80)) | |||
(2, 1, 6, '', ('173.194.35.147', 80)) | |||
(2, 1, 6, '', ('173.194.35.148', 80)) | |||
(2, 1, 6, '', ('173.194.35.146', 80)) | |||
</pre> | |||
You can clearly see the reversed order for NULL host and multiple results | |||
for hostnames. You can further improve the code with creation and | |||
binding of the sockets. | |||
=== Using <code>getaddrinfo()</code> for accesslists === | |||
Some software uses addresses where you can put addresses, hostnames or more | |||
sophisticated filters based on them. Names can be resolved at configuration | |||
time or at check time. | |||
Various hosts are connecting to the hostname using IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. Whenever | |||
the administrator uses a hostname in the accesslist, the hostname must point to | |||
all addresses that can be used for the connection. | |||
On the other hand, when the administrator puts addresses to the accesslist, he must | |||
put ''all'' possible addresses there, otherwise an unpleasant surprise awaits him | |||
when the host connects using an address that is not in the ACL. | |||
''localhost'' is a special case that, on most current distributions resolves to <code>::1</code> | |||
and <code>127.0.0.1</code>, in this order. This is usually only driven by the /etc/hosts configuration file, except the list is reordered by <code>getaddrinfo()</code>. | |||
<pre> | |||
127.0.0.1 localhost localhost.localdomain localhost4 localhost4.localdomain4 | |||
::1 localhost localhost.localdomain localhost6 localhost6.localdomain6 | |||
</pre> | |||
For example, when a service has <code>127.0.0.1</code> in the accesslist, it is | |||
illegal to try to connect to it over <code>::1</code>. But that's the first address | |||
<code>getaddrinfo("localhost", ...)</code> returns. This is a configuration problem | |||
but even many administrators skilled in IP networking won't realize that | |||
<code>localhost</code> is not identical to <code>127.0.0.1</code>. | |||
==== Proposed solutions ==== | |||
1) Make administrators fix their configurations. Tell them about the breakage | |||
of identity between "localhost" and "127.0.0.1". | |||
2) Workaround: Change client behavior on ''access denied'' error from server and treat | |||
it as a network error. Always try other addresses from the list returned by | |||
<code>getaddrinfo()</code>. | |||
3) Workaround: Prefer <code>127.0.0.1</code> over <code>::1</code>. This assumes that | |||
anyone putting <code>::1</code> in an access list knows what he's doing. | |||
=== Flag AI_ADDRCONFIG considered harmful === | |||
Current implementation of AI_ADDRCONFIG flag is a source problems and confusion. Detailed description of the problem was moved to a separate article: [[Networking/NameResolution/ADDRCONFIG|Flag AI_ADDRCONFIG considered harmful]]. | |||
= | |||
=== Comments and discussion === | |||
Please send any remarks and questions to psimerda-at-redhat-dot-com or use [[Talk:Networking]]. Edit with care. | |||
Latest revision as of 09:59, 8 October 2015
Overview
Name resolution topics:
Host and services are often called by names which need to be translated to IP addresses and port numbers.
Input arguments:
- node
- service
- filters (address family, socktype, protocol)
- flags
On output, we expect a list of address records that can be used for connection and other purposes, each consisting of the following fields:
- address family and data (network layer)
- protocol and port (transport layer)
- socktype (mode of operation)
Additional information can be provided:
- canonical name
Use cases
- Generic translation between hostnames and IP addresses (e.g. for ACL purposes)
- Preparing for connect() or sendto() to contact a service
- Preparing for bind() to provide a service
Name resolution methods
Using getaddrinfo()
Connecting to services using getaddrinfo()
The getaddrinfo()
function is a dualstack-friendly API to name
resolution. It is used by applications to translate host and
service names to a linked list of struct addrinfo
objects. It has its own manual page getaddrinfo(3)
in the Linux
Programmer's Manual.
Running getaddrinfo()
And example of getaddrinfo()
call:
const char *node = "www.fedoraproject.org"; const char *service = "http"; struct addrinfo hints = { .ai_family = AF_UNSPEC, .ai_socktype = SOCK_STREAM, .ai_protocol = IPPROTO_TCP, .ai_flags = AI_ADDRCONFIG, .ai_canonname = NULL, .ai_addr = NULL, .ai_next = NULL }; struct addrinfo *result; int error; error = getaddrinfo(node, service, &hints, &result);
The input of getaddrinfo() consists of node specification, service specification and further hints.
- node: literal IPv4 or IPv6 address, or a hostname to be resolved
- service: numeric port number or a symbolic service name
- hints.ai_family: enable dualprotocol, IPv4-only or IPv6-only queries
- hints.ai_socktype: select socket type
- hints.ai_protocol: select transport protocol
Socktype and protocol are somewhat duplicate for TCP/IP stack with just TCP
and UDP. getaddrinfo()
can be futher tweaked with the hints.ai_flags.
Other attributes are not supposed to be set in hints (ai_canonname, ai_addr and ai_next).
On success, the error variable is assigned to 0 and result is pointed to
a linked list of one or more struct addrinfo
objects.
Never assume that getaddrinfo() returns only one result or that the first result actually works!
Using getaddrinfo()
results
It is necesary to try all results until one successfully connects. This works perfectly for TCP connections as they can fail gracefully at this stage.
struct addrinfo *item; int sock; for (item = result; item; item = item->ai_next) { sock = socket(item->ai_family, item->ai_socktype, item->ai_protocol); if (sock == -1) continue; if (connect(sock, item->ai_addr, item->ai_addrlen) != -1) { fprintf(stderr, "Connected successfully."); break; } close(sock); }
For UDP, connect()
succeeds without contacting the other side (if you
are using connect()
with udp at all). Therefore you might want to
perform additional actions (such as sending a message and recieving a reply)
before crying out „success!“.
Freeing getaddrinfo()
results
When we're done with the results, we'll free the linked list.
freeaddrinfo(result);
Using getaddrinfo()
in Python
Python's socket.getaddrinfo()
API tries to be
a little bit more sane than the C API.
#!/usr/bin/python3 import sys, socket host = "www.fedoraproject.org" service = "http" family = socket.AF_UNSPEC socktype = socket.SOCK_STREAM protocol = socket.SOL_TCP flags = 0 result = socket.getaddrinfo(host, service, family, socktype, protocol, flags) sock = None for family, socktype, protocol, canonname, sockaddr in result: try: sock = socket.socket(family, socktype, protocol) except socket.error: continue try: sock.connect(sockaddr) print("Successfully connected to: {}".format(sockaddr)) except socket.error: sock.close() sock = None continue break if sock is None: print("Failed to connect.", file=sys.stderr) sys.exit(1)
Tweaking getaddrinfo()
flags
- AI_NUMERICHOST: use literal address, don't perform host resolution
- AI_PASSIVE: return socket addresses suitable for bind() instead of connect(), sendto() and sendmsg()
- AI_NUMERICSERV: use numeric service, don't perform service resolution
- AI_CANONNAME: save canonical name to the first result
- AI_ADDRCONFIG: to be used with connect(), this never really worked, as far as I know, but we want to fix it
- AI_V4MAPPED+AI_ALL: only with AF_INET6, return IPv4 addresses mapped into IPv6 space
- AI_V4MAPPED: I don't see any real use for this, only returns mapped IPv4 if there are no IPv6 addresses
Connecting to multiple transport channels
Some applications need to open several TCP or UDP channels to the same host. The
classic usage of getaddrinfo()
returns a linked list of addrinfo
objects for just one channel.
Solutions:
1) Run getaddrinfo()
once per channel. This may for example cause
multiple DNS requests for the same information, which is suboptimal
2) Run getaddrinfo()
only for the main (or first) channel. When
connection succeeds, reuse the addrinfo structure for the other channels. It
is usually safe to assume that when one channel succeeds, the machine is
available for the other channels, too.
An example of such an application is Spice. Thanks to David Jaša for information on this subject.
Binding to addresses using getaddrinfo()
According to the manual page, you should use AI_PASSIVE flag when
you use getaddrinfo()
to retrieve addresses to
bind()
to. Those are usually stored as user configuration
with NULL being the default value.
getaddrinfo()
returns a linked list of addrinfo structures.
Developers should not generally assume that it only returns one address
nor that the first address is the best and only one to bind()
to.
The general idea is that one would loop through getaddrinfo()
structure and bind()
one socket to each of them. But this doesn't work
in general. Read on.
Binding to the INADDR_ANY and/or in6addr_any addresses
This is the most common option that doesn't limit the service to a particular set of local addresses.
getaddrinfo(NULL, ...)
with AI_PASSIVE returns two addresses,
0.0.0.0
and ::
, in this order. If you use
the general rule above, the resulting actions would look like:
sock1 = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP) bind(sock1, INADDR_ANY, sizeof (INADDR_ANY)) ... sock2 = socket(AF_INET6, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP) bind(sock2, in6addr_any, sizeof (in6addr_any)) ...
This won't work. The first bind()
will successfully bind
to 0.0.0.0, while the second tries to bind()
in a dualstack
manner, taking both ::
and 0.0.0.0
(unless
sysctl net.ipv6.bindv6only is enabled) and therefore it will fail
as 0.0.0.0
is already taken.
The addresses are obviously returned in different order than usual (IPv4 first) and that should probably be fixed in glibc. But even if it's fixed, it only changes the order of the actions:
sock1 = socket(AF_INET6, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP) bind(sock1, in6addr_any, sizeof (in6addr_any)) ... sock2 = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP) bind(sock2, INADDR_ANY, sizeof (INADDR_ANY)) ...
The first socket succeeds and binds to both addresses. The second one fails. If the application ignores (or only warns about) the second failure, it would work without problem.
The correct™ way to handle this with getaddrinfo()
would be
to prevent the linux kernel from using the dualstack hack with the
setsockopt()
call (yes is an int constant that equeals 1).
sock1 = socket(AF_INET6, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP) setsockopt(sock1, IPPROTO_IPV6, IPV6_V6ONLY, &yes, sizeof(yes)) bind(sock1, in6addr_any, sizeof (in6addr_any)) ... sock2 = socket(AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP) bind(sock2, INADDR_ANY, sizeof (INADDR_ANY)) ...
After writing this, I found a resource from Bert JW Regeer on the same subject.
Binding to specific addresses by number
This works well because in this case only one address is ever returned
(if socktype and protocol are specified). It is possible
to limit getaddrinfo()
to this case using the
AI_NUMERICHOST flag. AI_PASSIVE flag is not used in this case.
Binding to a list of specific addresses by hostname
This is just getaddrinfo()
resolving. The AI_PASSIVE
flag is not used in this case. Always remember that getaddrinfo()
returns a linked list of addresses. If you support binding by name,
you should always create one socket for each address and bind()
it.
Proposed solutions
1) Only support listening on all addresses. Always bind()
to the IPv6 address in dualstack mode.
sock1 = socket(AF_INET6, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP) bind(sock1, in6addr_any, sizeof (in6addr_any)) ...
2) Use only numeric addresses and NULL setting. Special case NULL
setting and solve them separately with #1. Only then, if you use
AI_NUMERICHOST and properly
specify the socktype and/or protocol fields, you can assume
that getaddrinfo()
only returns one result.
If result order is fixed in glibc, you wouldn't actually have to special case the NULL host. But it's more of a hack.
3) Support full name resolution. Always create one socket per resulting address. Set IPV6_V6ONLY on IPv6 sockets to suppres the transparent dualstack. This works for all cases.
There are many other possibilities that seem to work at first glance but don't behave as expected in many situations.
Testing code (in Python for simplicity)
The following test shows how it works:
getaddrinfo-test-ai-passive.py:
#!/usr/bin/python3 from socket import * hosts = [ None, "localhost", "info.nix.cz", "www.google.com", ] for host in hosts: print(host) for item in getaddrinfo(host, "http", AF_UNSPEC, SOCK_STREAM, SOL_TCP, AI_PASSIVE): print(" ", item)
# ./getaddrinfo-test-ai-passive.py None (2, 1, 6, '', ('0.0.0.0', 80)) (10, 1, 6, '', ('::', 80, 0, 0)) localhost (10, 1, 6, '', ('::1', 80, 0, 0)) (2, 1, 6, '', ('127.0.0.1', 80)) info.nix.cz (10, 1, 6, '', ('2a02:38::1001', 80, 0, 0)) (2, 1, 6, '', ('195.47.235.3', 80)) www.google.com (10, 1, 6, '', ('2a00:1450:4016:801::1012', 80, 0, 0)) (2, 1, 6, '', ('173.194.35.144', 80)) (2, 1, 6, '', ('173.194.35.145', 80)) (2, 1, 6, '', ('173.194.35.147', 80)) (2, 1, 6, '', ('173.194.35.148', 80)) (2, 1, 6, '', ('173.194.35.146', 80))
You can clearly see the reversed order for NULL host and multiple results for hostnames. You can further improve the code with creation and binding of the sockets.
Using getaddrinfo()
for accesslists
Some software uses addresses where you can put addresses, hostnames or more sophisticated filters based on them. Names can be resolved at configuration time or at check time.
Various hosts are connecting to the hostname using IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. Whenever the administrator uses a hostname in the accesslist, the hostname must point to all addresses that can be used for the connection.
On the other hand, when the administrator puts addresses to the accesslist, he must put all possible addresses there, otherwise an unpleasant surprise awaits him when the host connects using an address that is not in the ACL.
localhost is a special case that, on most current distributions resolves to ::1
and 127.0.0.1
, in this order. This is usually only driven by the /etc/hosts configuration file, except the list is reordered by getaddrinfo()
.
127.0.0.1 localhost localhost.localdomain localhost4 localhost4.localdomain4 ::1 localhost localhost.localdomain localhost6 localhost6.localdomain6
For example, when a service has 127.0.0.1
in the accesslist, it is
illegal to try to connect to it over ::1
. But that's the first address
getaddrinfo("localhost", ...)
returns. This is a configuration problem
but even many administrators skilled in IP networking won't realize that
localhost
is not identical to 127.0.0.1
.
Proposed solutions
1) Make administrators fix their configurations. Tell them about the breakage of identity between "localhost" and "127.0.0.1".
2) Workaround: Change client behavior on access denied error from server and treat
it as a network error. Always try other addresses from the list returned by
getaddrinfo()
.
3) Workaround: Prefer 127.0.0.1
over ::1
. This assumes that
anyone putting ::1
in an access list knows what he's doing.
Flag AI_ADDRCONFIG considered harmful
Current implementation of AI_ADDRCONFIG flag is a source problems and confusion. Detailed description of the problem was moved to a separate article: Flag AI_ADDRCONFIG considered harmful.
=
Comments and discussion
Please send any remarks and questions to psimerda-at-redhat-dot-com or use Talk:Networking. Edit with care.