- wireguard/windows version update to 0.5.3
- follow up forked wireguard-go MTU related changes
- fix MTU settings on Windows
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Co-authored-by: Maycon Santos <mlsmaycon@gmail.com>
This PR brings support of a shared port between stun (ICE agent) and
the kernel WireGuard
It implements a single port mode for execution with kernel WireGuard
interface using a raw socket listener.
BPF filters ensure that only STUN packets hit the NetBird userspace app
Removed a lot of the proxy logic and direct mode exchange.
Now we are doing an extra hole punch to the remote WireGuard
port for best-effort cases and support to old client's direct mode.
This PR adds supports for the WireGuard userspace implementation
using Bind interface from wireguard-go.
The newly introduced ICEBind struct implements Bind with UDPMux-based
structs from pion/ice to handle hole punching using ICE.
The core implementation was taken from StdBind of wireguard-go.
The result is a single WireGuard port that is used for host and server reflexive candidates.
Relay candidates are still handled separately and will be integrated in the following PRs.
ICEBind checks the incoming packets for being STUN or WireGuard ones
and routes them to UDPMux (to handle hole punching) or to WireGuard respectively.
Default Rego policy generated from the rules in some cases is broken.
This change fixes the Rego template for rules to generate policies.
Also, file store load constantly regenerates policy objects from rules.
It allows updating/fixing of the default Rego template during releases.
Before defining if we will use direct or proxy connection we will exchange a
message with the other peer if the modes match we keep the decision
from the shouldUseProxy function otherwise we skip using direct connection.
Added a feature support message to the signal protocol
Among other improvements, it fixes a memory leak with
srfx conn channels not being closed
it also make use of new pion/transport Net interface
https://github.com/pion/ice/pull/471
Adding --external-ip-map and --dns-resolver-address to up command and shorthand option to global flags.
Refactor get and read config functions with new ConfigInput type.
updated cobra package to latest release.
This PR adds system activity tracking.
The management service records events like
add/remove peer, group, rule, route, etc.
The activity events are stored in the SQLite event store
and can be queried by the HTTP API.
Added host configurators for Linux, Windows, and macOS.
The host configurator will update the peer system configuration
directing DNS queries according to its capabilities.
Some Linux distributions don't support split (match) DNS or custom ports,
and that will be reported to our management system in another PR
This PR brings open-telemetry metrics to the
Management service.
The Management service exposes new HTTP endpoint
/metrics on 8081 port by default.
The port can be changed by specifying
--metrics-port PORT flag when starting the service.
This PR brings user invites logic to the Management service
via HTTP API.
The POST /users/ API endpoint creates a new user in the Idp
and then in the local storage.
Once the invited user signs ups, the account invitation is redeemed.
There are a few limitations.
This works only with an enabled IdP manager.
Users that already have a registered account can't be invited.
* Seticon only when status changes
This prevents a memory leak with the systray lib
when setting the icon every 2 seconds causes a large memory consumption
see https://github.com/getlantern/systray/issues/135
* Use fork with permanent fix
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
This PR is a part of an effort to use standard ports (443 or 80) that are usually allowed by default in most of the environments.
Right now Management Service runs the Let'sEncrypt manager on port 443, HTTP API server on port 33071,
and a gRPC server on port 33073. There are three separate listeners.
This PR combines these listeners into one.
With this change, the HTTP and gRPC server runs on either 443 with TLS or 80 without TLS
by default (no --port specified).
Let's Encrypt manager always runs on port 443 if enabled.
The backward compatibility server runs on port 33073 (with TLS or without).
HTTP port 33071 is obsolete and not used anymore.
Newly installed agents will connect to port 443 by default instead of port 33073 if not specified otherwise.
Right now Signal Service runs the Let'sEncrypt manager on port 80
and a gRPC server on port 10000. There are two separate listeners.
This PR combines these listeners into one with a cmux lib.
The gRPC server runs on either 443 with TLS or 80 without TLS.
Let's Encrypt manager always runs on port 80.
This PR adds support for SSH access through the NetBird network
without managing SSH skeys.
NetBird client app has an embedded SSH server (Linux/Mac only)
and a netbird ssh command.
Introduced an OpenAPI specification.
Updated API handlers to use the specification types.
Added patch operation for rules and groups
and methods to the account manager.
HTTP PUT operations require id, fail if not provided.
Use snake_case for HTTP request and response body
The peer IP allocation logic was allocating sequential peer IP from the 100.64.0.0/10
address block.
Each account is created with a random subnet from 100.64.0.0/10.
The total amount of potential subnets is 64.
The new logic allocates random peer IP
from the account subnet.
This gives us flexibility to add support for
multi subnet accounts without overlapping IPs.