cloudflared falls back aggressively to HTTP/2 protocol if a connection
attempt with QUIC failed. This was done to ensure that machines with UDP
egress disabled did not stop clients from connecting to the cloudlfare
edge. This PR improves on that experience by having cloudflared remember
if a QUIC connection was successful which implies UDP egress works. In
this case, cloudflared does not fallback to HTTP/2 and keeps trying to
connect to the edge with QUIC.
cloudflared falls back aggressively to HTTP/2 protocol if a connection
attempt with QUIC failed. This was done to ensure that machines with UDP
egress disabled did not stop clients from connecting to the cloudlfare
edge. This PR improves on that experience by having cloudflared remember
if a QUIC connection was successful which implies UDP egress works. In
this case, cloudflared does not fallback to HTTP/2 and keeps trying to
connect to the edge with QUIC.
All header transformation code from h2mux has been consolidated in the connection package since it's used by both h2mux and http2 logic.
Exported headers used by proxying between edge and cloudflared so then can be shared by tunnel service on the edge.
Moved access-related headers to corresponding packages that have the code that sets/uses these headers.
Removed tunnel hostname tracking from h2mux since it wasn't used by anything. We will continue to set the tunnel hostname header from the edge for backward compatibilty, but it's no longer used by cloudflared.
Move bastion-related logic into carrier package, untangled dependencies between carrier, origin, and websocket packages.
- Don't rely on edge to close connection on graceful shutdown in h2mux, start muxer shutdown from cloudflared.
- Don't retry failed connections after graceful shutdown has started.
- After graceful shutdown channel is closed we stop waiting for retry timer and don't try to restart tunnel loop.
- Use readonly channel for graceful shutdown in functions that only consume the signal