All routes are now installed in a custom netbird routing table.
Management and wireguard traffic is now marked with a custom fwmark.
When the mark is present the traffic is routed via the main routing table, bypassing the VPN.
When the mark is absent the traffic is routed via the netbird routing table, if:
- there's no match in the main routing table
- it would match the default route in the routing table
IPv6 traffic is blocked when a default route IPv4 route is configured to avoid leakage.
This PR adds `gosec` linter with the following checks disabled:
- G102: Bind to all interfaces
- G107: Url provided to HTTP request as taint input
- G112: Potential slowloris attack
- G114: Use of net/http serve function that has no support for setting timeouts
- G204: Audit use of command execution
- G401: Detect the usage of DES, RC4, MD5 or SHA1
- G402: Look for bad TLS connection settings
- G404: Insecure random number source (rand)
- G501: Import blocklist: crypto/md5
- G505: Import blocklist: crypto/sha1
We have complaints related to the checks above. They have to be addressed separately.
Most operating systems add a /32 route for the default gateway address to its routing table
This will allow routes to be configured into the system even when the incoming range contains the default gateway.
In case a range is a sub-range of an existing route and this range happens to contain the default gateway it attempts to create a default gateway route to prevent loop issues
Handle routes updates from management
Manage routing firewall rules
Manage peer RIB table
Add get peer and get notification channel from the status recorder
Update interface peers allowed IPs