For applications that use NETIF_STATUS_CALLBACK to help keep track of
extra per-address shadow state of IPv6 addresses, even in the light of
autogenerated addresses (which may "spontaneously" appear/disappear),
state transitions between tentative, duplicated, and invalid are
important as well. Therefore, invoke the status callback for all such
state transitions. Continue to filter out state changes between
various levels of progress of the tentative state, though.
Previously, Duplicate Address Detection (DAD) would work only for the
link-local address. For DAD-spawned Neighbor Solicitation requests for
any other address, the request would use the link-local address as the
source, meaning the other side would send a targeted reply (RFC 4861
Sec. 7.2.4). However, the nd6 implementation currently does not
consider targeted replies for DAD--even though technically an RFC 4862
Sec. 5.4.4 violation--supposedly because no real-world scenario could
trigger that case. The combination of these factors resulted in DAD
being entirely ineffective for non-link-local addresses.
This patch forces all DAD-spawned Neighbor Solicitation packets to use
the unspecified ('any') address as source, as per RFC 4862 Sec. 5.4.2.
As a result, other nodes would reply with multicast replies, for which
there is appropriate DAD checking code.
The patch also makes a slight rearrangement of statements such that
MLD join messages are sent before the NS packets, rather than after.
In the cases that nd6 checks whether the interface is up before
sending a packet, also check whether the link is up. Without this
additional check, temporary link downtime could easily result in
unnecessary false negatives for Duplicate Address Detection.
In addition, use the netif abstraction macros to perform the checks.
In summary, this patch aims to resolve bugs #47923 and #48162, by
decoupling address autoconfiguration from the on-link prefix list,
since those are not related. Important necessary changes are needed
to meet this goal, ultimately bringing the lwIP ND6 implementation
closer to compliance with RFC 4862. The main changes are:
1. support for address lifetimes, and,
2. addition of a new DUPLICATED address state.
The decoupling implies that the prefix list can no longer be used to
maintain state for address autoconfiguration. Most importantly, the
lifetime of each address, which was previously derived from the
prefix slot's lifetime, must now be associated with the address
itself. This patch implements address lifetime tracking, maintaining
both a valid and a preferred lifetime for each address, along with
the corresponding address state changes (e.g., between PREFERRED and
DEPRECATED), all as required by RFC 4862.
The support for address lifetimes can be enabled with a new
LWIP_IPV6_ADDRESS_LIFETIMES setting in lwipopts.h. It is required for
autoconfiguration and enabled by default if autoconfiguration is
enabled as well, but it may also be enabled separately, so as to allow
application-controlled lifetime management (e.g., if autoconfiguration
is implemented in a separate application). A special valid-lifetime of
zero is used to denote a static address--that is, an address that was
configured manually, that does not have lifetimes, and that should be
left alone by the autoconfiguration functionality. Addresses assigned
without setting a lifetime are deemed static, thus preserving
compatibility with existing lwIP-based applications in this respect.
Similarly, the decoupling implies that the prefix list can no longer
be used to remember cases of address duplication. Previously, the
detection of a duplicated address would simply result in removal of
the address altogether. Instead, this patch introduces a new state
"DUPLICATED", indicating that the address, while technically still
present, has been found to conflict with other node addresses, and no
attempt should be made to produce an autoconfiguration address for
that prefix.
Manually added addresses, including the link-local address, once set
to DUPLICATED, will remain in that state until manual intervention.
Autoconfigured DUPLICATED addresses will expire according to their
valid-lifetime, essentially preserving the current behavior but
without the use of the prefix list. As a first attempt to approach
compliance with RFC 4862 Sec. 5.4.5, if the link-local address is
detected to be duplicated, all derived addresses are marked duplicated
as well, and no new addresses will be autoconfigured. More work is to
be done for full compliance with that section, however.
Together, those two main changes indeed do fully decouple address
autoconfiguration from the on-link prefix list. Changes to the latter
thus no longer affect the former, resolving bug #47923. Moreover, as a
result, autoconfiguration can, and does, now also take place on
advertised prefixes that do not have the on-link flag set, resolving
bug #48162. The routing changes mentioned in the discussion of that
bug are left to a separate patch, though.
This patch adds a new RAW_FLAGS_HDRINCL flag to the raw core
implementation. When this flag is set on a RAW PCB, the raw send
routines expect the caller to supply an IP header for the given
packet, and will use that IP header instead of prepending one to
the packet themselves.
This feature allows the IP_HDRINCL socket option to be implemented
in higher layers with no further effort. Even thoguh that option is
traditionally supported for IPv4 sockets only (e.g., see RFC 3542
Sec. 3), the RAW_FLAGS_HDRINCL flag supports both IPv4 and IPv6, as
much of the lower-level infrastructure was already in place anyway.
Similar to the core UDP API, the new function may be used to implement
IPV6_PKTINFO (RFC 3542 Sec. 4), for example. This patch makes no
further functional changes; it merely moves code around a bit.
The support for connecting raw sockets is extended to match the
support for UDP sockets, while keeping the current API unchanged:
- for connected sockets, filter incoming packets on source address;
- use a flag to indicate whether a socket is connected, at no extra
memory cost; the application may check this flag if needed;
- added raw_disconnect(), which so far existed in documentation only.
The boolean condition of setting the WILL flag differs from that of appending the will message
Found by Axel Lin
(I fixed it the same way as Axel suggested, but I wanted a different commit message)
The caller of tcp_listen_with_backlog_and_err() usually check if the return
pcb is NULL before checking the err reason. I think the commit adding
tcp_listen_with_backlog_and_err() accidently change the behavior, Fix it.
Fixes: 98fc82fa7128 ("added function tcp_listen_with_backlog_and_err() to get the error reason when listening fails")
Signed-off-by: Axel Lin <axel.lin@ingics.com>
This is a mqtt client, so it does not make sense to determinate the server port
at compile time. Update mqtt_client_connect() function to allow setting server
port.
Signed-off-by: Axel Lin <axel.lin@ingics.com>