Since legacy tunnels have been removed for a while now, we can remove
many of the capnp rpc interfaces that are no longer leveraged by the
legacy tunnel registration and authentication mechanisms.
Combines the tunnelrpc and quic/schema capnp files into the same module.
To help reduce future issues with capnp id generation, capnpids are
provided in the capnp files from the existing capnp struct ids generated
in the go files.
Reduces the overall interface of the Capnp methods to the rest of
the code by providing an interface that will handle the quic protocol
selection.
Introduces a new `rpc-timeout` config that will allow all of the
SessionManager and ConfigurationManager RPC requests to have a timeout.
The timeout for these values is set to 5 seconds as non of these operations
for the managers should take a long time to complete.
Removed the RPC-specific logger as it never provided good debugging value
as the RPC method names were not visible in the logs.
This commit makes the remote diagnostics enabled by default, which is
a useful feature when debugging cloudflared issues without manual intervention from users.
Users can still opt-out by disabling the feature flag.
## Summary
To prevent bad eyeballs and severs to be able to exhaust the quic
control flows we are adding the possibility of having a timeout
for a write operation to be acknowledged. This will prevent hanging
connections from exhausting the quic control flows, creating a DDoS.
When embedding the tunnel command inside another CLI, it
became difficult to test shutdown behavior due to this leaking
tunnel. By using the command context, we're able to shutdown
gracefully.
This changes guarantees that the coommand to report rule matches when
testing local config reports the rule number using the 0-based indexing.
This is to be consistent with the 0-based indexing on the log lines when
proxying requests.
## Summary
Previously the force flag in the tunnel delete command was only explicitly deleting the
connections of a tunnel. Therefore, we are changing it to use the cascade query parameter
supported by the API. That parameter will delegate to the server the deletion of the tunnel
dependencies implicitly instead of the client doing it explicitly. This means that not only
the connections will get deleted, but also the tunnel routes, ensuring that no dependencies
are left without a non-deleted tunnel.
This commits makes sure that cloudflared starts using the new API
endpoints for managing routes.
Additionally, the delete route operation still allows deleting by CIDR
and VNet but it is being marked as deprecated in favor of specifying the
route ID.
The goal of this change is to make it simpler for the user to delete
routes without specifying Vnet.
This commit implements the option to disable PTMU discovery for QUIC
connections.
QUIC finds the PMTU during startup by increasing Ping packet frames
until Ping responses are not received anymore, and it seems to stick
with that PMTU forever.
This is no problem if the PTMU doesn't change over time, but if it does
it may case packet drops.
We add this hidden flag for debugging purposes in such situations as a
quick way to validate if problems that are being seen can be solved by
reducing the packet size to the edge.
Note however, that this option may impact UDP proxying since we expect
being able to send UDP packets of 1280 bytes over QUIC.
So, this option should not be used when tunnel is being used for UDP
proxying.
With the new flag --management-diagnostics (an opt-in flag)
cloudflared's will be able to report additional diagnostic information
over the management.argotunnel.com request path.
Additions include the /metrics prometheus endpoint; which is already
bound to a local port via --metrics.
/debug/pprof/(goroutine|heap) are also provided to allow for remotely
retrieving heap information from a running cloudflared connector.
I deliberately kept this as an unregistertimeout because that was the
intent. In the future we could change this to a UDPConnConfig if we want
to pass multiple values here.
The idea of this PR is simply to add a configurable unregister UDP
timeout.
It might make sense for users to sometimes name their cloudflared
connectors to make identification easier than relying on hostnames that
TUN-7360 provides. This PR provides a new --label option to cloudflared
tunnel that a user could provide to give custom names to their
connectors.
With the management tunnels work, we allow calls to our edge service
using an access JWT provided by Tunnelstore. Given a connector ID,
this request is then proxied to the appropriate Cloudflare Tunnel.
This PR takes advantage of this flow and adds a new host_details
endpoint. Calls to this endpoint will result in cloudflared gathering
some details about the host: hostname (os.hostname()) and ip address
(localAddr in a dial).
Note that the mini spec lists 4 alternatives and this picks alternative
3 because:
1. Ease of implementation: This is quick and non-intrusive to any of our
code path. We expect to change how connection tracking works and
regardless of the direction we take, it may be easy to keep, morph
or throw this away.
2. The cloudflared part of this round trip takes some time with a
hostname call and a dial. But note that this is off the critical path
and not an API that will be exercised often.
cloudflared tail will now fetch the management token from by making
a request to the Cloudflare API using the cert.pem (acquired from
cloudflared login).
Refactored some of the credentials code into it's own package as
to allow for easier use between subcommands outside of
`cloudflared tunnel`.
Going forward, the only protocols supported will be QUIC and HTTP2,
defaulting to QUIC for "auto". Selecting h2mux protocol will be forcibly
upgraded to http2 internally.
Named Tunnels can exist without Ingress rules (They would default to
8080). Moreover, having this check also prevents warp tunnels from
starting since they do not need ingress rules.