ZeroTierOne/node/Packet.hpp
Adam Ierymenko 0e5651f353
1.12.0 merge to main (#2104)
* add note about forceTcpRelay

* Create a sample systemd unit for tcp proxy

* set gitattributes for rust & cargo so hashes dont conflict on Windows

* Revert "set gitattributes for rust & cargo so hashes dont conflict on Windows"

This reverts commit 032dc5c108.

* Turn off autocrlf for rust source

Doesn't appear to play nice well when it comes to git and vendored cargo package hashes

* Fix #1883 (#1886)

Still unknown as to why, but the call to `nc->GetProperties()` can fail
when setting a friendly name on the Windows virtual ethernet adapter.
Ensure that `ncp` is not null before continuing and accessing the device
GUID.

* Don't vendor packages for zeroidc (#1885)

* Added docker environment way to join networks (#1871)

* add StringUtils

* fix headers
use recommended headers and remove unused headers

* move extern "C"
only JNI functions need to be exported

* cleanup

* fix ANDROID-50: RESULT_ERROR_BAD_PARAMETER typo

* fix typo in log message

* fix typos in JNI method signatures

* fix typo

* fix ANDROID-51: fieldName is uninitialized

* fix ANDROID-35: memory leak

* fix missing DeleteLocalRef in loops

* update to use unique error codes

* add GETENV macro

* add LOG_TAG defines

* ANDROID-48: add ZT_jnicache.cpp

* ANDROID-48: use ZT_jnicache.cpp and remove ZT_jnilookup.cpp and ZT_jniarray.cpp

* add Event.fromInt

* add PeerRole.fromInt

* add ResultCode.fromInt

* fix ANDROID-36: issues with ResultCode

* add VirtualNetworkConfigOperation.fromInt

* fix ANDROID-40: VirtualNetworkConfigOperation out-of-sync with ZT_VirtualNetworkConfigOperation enum

* add VirtualNetworkStatus.fromInt

* fix ANDROID-37: VirtualNetworkStatus out-of-sync with ZT_VirtualNetworkStatus enum

* add VirtualNetworkType.fromInt

* make NodeStatus a plain data class

* fix ANDROID-52: synchronization bug with nodeMap

* Node init work: separate Node construction and init

* add Node.toString

* make PeerPhysicalPath a plain data class

* remove unused PeerPhysicalPath.fixed

* add array functions

* make Peer a plain data class

* make Version a plain data class

* fix ANDROID-42: copy/paste error

* fix ANDROID-49: VirtualNetworkConfig.equals is wrong

* reimplement VirtualNetworkConfig.equals

* reimplement VirtualNetworkConfig.compareTo

* add VirtualNetworkConfig.hashCode

* make VirtualNetworkConfig a plain data class

* remove unused VirtualNetworkConfig.enabled

* reimplement VirtualNetworkDNS.equals

* add VirtualNetworkDNS.hashCode

* make VirtualNetworkDNS a plain data class

* reimplement VirtualNetworkRoute.equals

* reimplement VirtualNetworkRoute.compareTo

* reimplement VirtualNetworkRoute.toString

* add VirtualNetworkRoute.hashCode

* make VirtualNetworkRoute a plain data class

* add isSocketAddressEmpty

* add addressPort

* add fromSocketAddressObject

* invert logic in a couple of places and return early

* newInetAddress and newInetSocketAddress work
allow newInetSocketAddress to return NULL if given empty address

* fix ANDROID-38: stack corruption in onSendPacketRequested

* use GETENV macro

* JniRef work
JniRef does not use callbacks struct, so remove
fix NewGlobalRef / DeleteGlobalRef mismatch

* use PRId64 macros

* switch statement work

* comments and logging

* Modifier 'public' is redundant for interface members

* NodeException can be made a checked Exception

* 'NodeException' does not define a 'serialVersionUID' field

* 'finalize()' should not be overridden
this is fine to do because ZeroTierOneService calls close() when it is done

* error handling, error reporting, asserts, logging

* simplify loadLibrary

* rename Node.networks -> Node.networkConfigs

* Windows file permissions fix (#1887)

* Allow macOS interfaces to use multiple IP addresses (#1879)

Co-authored-by: Sean OMeara <someara@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Grant Limberg <glimberg@users.noreply.github.com>

* Fix condition where full HELLOs might not be sent when necessary (#1877)

Co-authored-by: Grant Limberg <glimberg@users.noreply.github.com>

* 1.10.4 version bumps

* Add security policy to repo (#1889)

* [+] add e2k64 arch (#1890)

* temp fix for ANDROID-56: crash inside newNetworkConfig from too many args

* 1.10.4 release notes

* Windows 1.10.4 Advanced Installer bump

* Revert "temp fix for ANDROID-56: crash inside newNetworkConfig from too many args"

This reverts commit dd627cd7f4.

* actual fix for ANDROID-56: crash inside newNetworkConfig
cast all arguments to varargs functions as good style

* Fix addIp being called with applied ips (#1897)

This was getting called outside of the check for existing ips
Because of the added ifdef and a brace getting moved to the
wrong place.

```
if (! n.tap()->addIp(*ip)) {
	fprintf(stderr, "ERROR: unable to add ip address %s" ZT_EOL_S, ip->toString(ipbuf));
}
WinFWHelper::newICMPRule(*ip, n.config().nwid);

```

* 1.10.5 (#1905)

* 1.10.5 bump

* 1.10.5 for Windows

* 1.10.5

* Prevent path-learning loops (#1914)

* Prevent path-learning loops

* Only allow new overwrite if not bonded

* fix binding temporary ipv6 addresses on macos (#1910)

The check code wasn't running.

I don't know why !defined(TARGET_OS_IOS) would exclude code on
desktop macOS. I did a quick search and changed it to defined(TARGET_OS_MAC).
Not 100% sure what the most correct solution there is.

You can verify the old and new versions with

`ifconfig | grep temporary`

plus

`zerotier-cli info -j` -> listeningOn

* 1.10.6 (#1929)

* 1.10.5 bump

* 1.10.6

* 1.10.6 AIP for Windows.

* Release notes for 1.10.6 (#1931)

* Minor tweak to Synology Docker image script (#1936)

* Change if_def again so ios can build (#1937)

All apple's variables are "defined"
but sometimes they are defined as "0"

* move begin/commit into try/catch block (#1932)

Thread was exiting in some cases

* Bump openssl from 0.10.45 to 0.10.48 in /zeroidc (#1938)

Bumps [openssl](https://github.com/sfackler/rust-openssl) from 0.10.45 to 0.10.48.
- [Release notes](https://github.com/sfackler/rust-openssl/releases)
- [Commits](https://github.com/sfackler/rust-openssl/compare/openssl-v0.10.45...openssl-v0.10.48)

---
updated-dependencies:
- dependency-name: openssl
  dependency-type: indirect
...

Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>

* new drone bits

* Fix multiple network join from environment entrypoint.sh.release (#1961)

* _bond_m guards _bond, not _paths_m (#1965)

* Fix: warning: mutex '_aqm_m' is not held on every path through here [-Wthread-safety-analysis] (#1964)

* Bump h2 from 0.3.16 to 0.3.17 in /zeroidc (#1963)

Bumps [h2](https://github.com/hyperium/h2) from 0.3.16 to 0.3.17.
- [Release notes](https://github.com/hyperium/h2/releases)
- [Changelog](https://github.com/hyperium/h2/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md)
- [Commits](https://github.com/hyperium/h2/compare/v0.3.16...v0.3.17)

---
updated-dependencies:
- dependency-name: h2
  dependency-type: indirect
...

Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Grant Limberg <glimberg@users.noreply.github.com>

* Add note that binutils is required on FreeBSD (#1968)

* Add prometheus metrics for Central controllers (#1969)

* add header-only prometheus lib to ext

* rename folder

* Undo rename directory

* prometheus simpleapi included on mac & linux

* wip

* wire up some controller stats

* Get windows building with prometheus

* bsd build flags for prometheus

* Fix multiple network join from environment entrypoint.sh.release (#1961)

* _bond_m guards _bond, not _paths_m (#1965)

* Fix: warning: mutex '_aqm_m' is not held on every path through here [-Wthread-safety-analysis] (#1964)

* Serve prom metrics from /metrics endpoint

* Add prom metrics for Central controller specific things

* reorganize metric initialization

* testing out a labled gauge on Networks

* increment error counter on throw

* Consolidate metrics definitions

Put all metric definitions into node/Metrics.hpp.  Accessed as needed
from there.

* Revert "testing out a labled gauge on Networks"

This reverts commit 499ed6d95e.

* still blows up but adding to the record for completeness right now

* Fix runtime issues with metrics

* Add metrics files to visual studio project

* Missed an "extern"

* add copyright headers to new files

* Add metrics for sent/received bytes (total)

* put /metrics endpoint behind auth

* sendto returns int on Win32

---------

Co-authored-by: Leonardo Amaral <leleobhz@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Brenton Bostick <bostick@gmail.com>

* Central startup update (#1973)

* allow specifying authtoken in central startup

* set allowManagedFrom

* move redis_mem_notification to the correct place

* add node checkins metric

* wire up min/max connection pool size metrics

* x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu on ubuntu runner (#1975)

* adding incoming zt packet type metrics (#1976)

* use cpp-httplib for HTTP control plane (#1979)

refactored the old control plane code to use [cpp-httplib](https://github.com/yhirose/cpp-httplib) instead of a hand rolled HTTP server.  Makes the control plane code much more legible.  Also no longer randomly stops responding.

* Outgoing Packet Metrics (#1980)

add tx/rx labels to packet counters and add metrics for outgoing packets

* Add short-term validation test workflow (#1974)

Add short-term validation test workflow

* Brenton/curly braces (#1971)

* fix formatting

* properly adjust various lines
breakup multiple statements onto multiple lines

* insert {} around if, for, etc.

* Fix rust dependency caching (#1983)

* fun with rust caching

* kick

* comment out invalid yaml keys for now

* Caching should now work

* re-add/rename key directives

* bump

* bump

* bump

* Don't force rebuild on Windows build GH Action (#1985)

Switching `/t:ZeroTierOne:Rebuild` to just `/t:ZeroTierOne` allows the Windows build to use the rust cache.  `/t:ZeroTierOne:Rebuild` cleared the cache before building.

* More packet metrics (#1982)

* found path negotation sends that weren't accounted for

* Fix histogram so it will actually compile

* Found more places for packet metrics

* separate the bind & listen calls on the http backplane (#1988)

* fix memory leak (#1992)

* fix a couple of metrics (#1989)

* More aggressive CLI spamming (#1993)

* fix type signatures (#1991)

* Network-metrics (#1994)

* Add a couple quick functions for converting a uint64_t network ID/node ID into std::string

* Network metrics

* Peer metrics (#1995)

* Adding peer metrics

still need to be wired up for use

* per peer packet metrics

* Fix crash from bad instantiation of histogram

* separate alive & dead path counts

* Add peer metric update block

* add peer latency values in doPingAndKeepalive

* prevent deadlock

* peer latency histogram actually works now

* cleanup

* capture counts of packets to specific peers

---------

Co-authored-by: Joseph Henry <joseph.henry@zerotier.com>

* Metrics consolidation (#1997)

* Rename zt_packet_incoming -> zt_packet

Also consolidate zt_peer_packets into a single metric with tx and rx labels.  Same for ztc_tcp_data and ztc_udp_data

* Further collapse tcp & udp into metric labels for zt_data

* Fix zt_data metric description

* zt_peer_packets description fix

* Consolidate incoming/outgoing network packets to a single metric

* zt_incoming_packet_error -> zt_packet_error

* Disable peer metrics for central controllers

Can change in the future if needed, but given the traffic our controllers serve, that's going to be a *lot* of data

* Disable peer metrics for controllers pt 2

* Update readme files for metrics (#2000)

* Controller Metrics & Network Config Request Fix (#2003)

* add new metrics for network config request queue size and sso expirations
* move sso expiration to its own thread in the controller
* fix potential undefined behavior when modifying a set

* Enable RTTI in Windows build

The new prometheus histogram stuff needs it.

Access violation - no RTTI data!INVALID packet 636ebd9ee8cac6c0 from cafe9efeb9(2605:9880:200:1200:30:571:e34:51/9993) (unexpected exception in tryDecode())

* Don't re-apply routes on BSD

See issue #1986

* Capture setContent by-value instead of by-reference (#2006)

Co-authored-by: Grant Limberg <glimberg@users.noreply.github.com>

* fix typos (#2010)

* central controller metrics & request path updates (#2012)

* internal db metrics

* use shared mutexes for read/write locks

* remove this lock. only used for a metric

* more metrics

* remove exploratory metrics

place controller request benchmarks behind ifdef

* Improve validation test (#2013)

* fix init order for EmbeddedNetworkController (#2014)

* add constant for getifaddrs cache time

* cache getifaddrs - mac

* cache getifaddrs - linux

* cache getifaddrs - bsd

* cache getifaddrs - windows

* Fix oidc client lookup query

join condition referenced the wrong table.  Worked fine unless there were multiple identical client IDs

* Fix udp sent metric

was only incrementing by 1 for each packet sent

* Allow sending all surface addresses to peer in low-bandwidth mode

* allow enabling of low bandwidth mode on controllers

* don't unborrow bad connections

pool will clean them up later

* Multi-arch controller container (#2037)

create arm64 & amd64 images for central controller

* Update README.md

issue #2009

* docker tags change

* fix oidc auth url memory leak (#2031)

getAuthURL() was not calling zeroidc::free_cstr(url);

the only place authAuthURL is called, the url can be retrieved
from the network config instead.

You could alternatively copy the string and call free_cstr in getAuthURL.
If that's better we can change the PR.

Since now there are no callers of getAuthURL I deleted it.

Co-authored-by: Grant Limberg <glimberg@users.noreply.github.com>

* Bump openssl from 0.10.48 to 0.10.55 in /zeroidc (#2034)

Bumps [openssl](https://github.com/sfackler/rust-openssl) from 0.10.48 to 0.10.55.
- [Release notes](https://github.com/sfackler/rust-openssl/releases)
- [Commits](https://github.com/sfackler/rust-openssl/compare/openssl-v0.10.48...openssl-v0.10.55)

---
updated-dependencies:
- dependency-name: openssl
  dependency-type: indirect
...

Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Grant Limberg <glimberg@users.noreply.github.com>

* zeroidc cargo warnings (#2029)

* fix unused struct member cargo warning

* fix unused import cargo warning

* fix unused return value cargo warning

---------

Co-authored-by: Grant Limberg <glimberg@users.noreply.github.com>

* fix memory leak in macos ipv6/dns helper (#2030)

Co-authored-by: Grant Limberg <glimberg@users.noreply.github.com>

* Consider ZEROTIER_JOIN_NETWORKS in healthcheck (#1978)

* Add a 2nd auth token only for access to /metrics (#2043)

* Add a 2nd auth token for /metrics

Allows administrators to distribute a token that only has access to read
metrics and nothing else.

Also added support for using bearer auth tokens for both types of tokens

Separate endpoint for metrics #2041

* Update readme

* fix a couple of cases of writing the wrong token

* Add warning to cli for allow default on FreeBSD

It doesn't work.
Not possible to fix with deficient network
stack and APIs.

ZeroTierOne-freebsd # zerotier-cli set 9bee8941b5xxxxxx allowDefault=1
400 set Allow Default does not work properly on FreeBSD. See #580
root@freebsd13-a:~/ZeroTierOne-freebsd # zerotier-cli get 9bee8941b5xxxxxx allowDefault
1

* ARM64 Support for TapDriver6 (#1949)

* Release memory previously allocated by UPNP_GetValidIGD

* Fix ifdef that breaks libzt on iOS (#2050)

* less drone (#2060)

* Exit if loading an invalid identity from disk (#2058)

* Exit if loading an invalid identity from disk

Previously, if an invalid identity was loaded from disk, ZeroTier would
generate a new identity & chug along and generate a brand new identity
as if nothing happened.  When running in containers, this introduces the
possibility for key matter loss; especially when running in containers
where the identity files are mounted in the container read only.  In
this case, ZT will continue chugging along with a brand new identity
with no possibility of recovering the private key.

ZeroTier should exit upon loading of invalid identity.public/identity.secret #2056

* add validation test for #2056

* tcp-proxy: fix build

* Adjust tcp-proxy makefile to support metrics

There's no way to get the metrics yet. Someone will
have to add the http service.

* remove ZT_NO_METRIC ifdef

* Implement recvmmsg() for Linux to reduce syscalls. (#2046)

Between 5% and 40% speed improvement on Linux, depending on system configuration and load.

* suppress warnings: comparison of integers of different signs: 'int64_t' (aka 'long') and 'uint64_t' (aka 'unsigned long') [-Wsign-compare] (#2063)

* fix warning: 'OS_STRING' macro redefined [-Wmacro-redefined] (#2064)

Even though this is in ext, these particular chunks of code were added
by us, so are ok to modify.

* Apply default route a different way - macOS

The original way we applied default route, by forking
0.0.0.0/0 into 0/1 and 128/1 works, but if mac os has any networking
hiccups -if you change SSIDs or sleep/wake- macos erases the system default route.
And then all networking on the computer is broken.

to summarize the new way:
allowDefault=1
```
sudo route delete default 192.168.82.1
sudo route add default 10.2.0.2
sudo route add -ifscope en1 default 192.168.82.1
```

gives us this routing table
```
Destination        Gateway            RT_IFA             Flags        Refs      Use    Mtu          Netif Expire    rtt(ms) rttvar(ms)
default            10.2.0.2           10.2.0.18          UGScg          90        1   2800       feth4823
default            192.168.82.1       192.168.82.217     UGScIg
```

allowDefault=0
```
sudo route delete default
sudo route delete -ifscope en1 default
sudo route add default 192.168.82.1
```

Notice the I flag, for -ifscope, on the physical default route.

route change does not seem to work reliably.

* fix docker tag for controllers (#2066)

* Update build.sh (#2068)

fix mkwork compilation errors

* Fix network DNS on macOS

It stopped working for ipv4 only networks in Monterey.
See #1696

We add some config like so to System Configuration

```
scutil
show State:/Network/Service/9bee8941b5xxxxxx/IPv4
<dictionary> {
  Addresses : <array> {
    0 : 10.2.1.36
  }
  InterfaceName : feth4823
  Router : 10.2.1.36
  ServerAddress : 127.0.0.1
}

```

* Add search domain to macos dns configuration

Stumbled upon this while debugging something else.
If we add search domain to our system configuration for
network DNS, then search domains work:

```
ping server1                                                                                                                                                                                    ~
PING server1.my.domain (10.123.3.1): 56 data bytes
64 bytes from 10.123.3.1
```

* Fix reporting of secondaryPort and tertiaryPort See: #2039

* Fix typos (#2075)

* Disable executable stacks on assembly objects (#2071)

Add `--noexecstack` to the assembler flags so the resulting binary
will link with a non-executable stack.

Fixes zerotier/ZeroTierOne#1179

Co-authored-by: Joseph Henry <joseph.henry@zerotier.com>

* Test that starting zerotier before internet works

* Don't skip hellos when there are no paths available

working on #2082

* Update validate-1m-linux.sh

* Save zt node log files on abort

* Separate test and summary step in validator script

* Don't apply default route until zerotier is "online"

I was running into issues with restarting the zerotier service while
"full tunnel" mode is enabled.
When zerotier first boots, it gets network state from the cache
on disk. So it immediately applies all the routes it knew about
before it shutdown.
The network config may have change in this time.
If it has, then your default route is via a route
you are blocked from talking on. So you  can't get the current
network config, so your internet does not work.

Other options include
- don't use cached network state on boot
- find a better criteria than "online"

* Fix node time-to-online counter in validator script

* Export variables so that they are accessible by exit function

* Fix PortMapper issue on ZeroTier startup

See issue #2082

We use a call to libnatpmp::ininatpp to make sure the computer
has working network sockets before we go into the main
nat-pmp/upnp logic.

With basic exponenetial delay up to 30 seconds.

* testing

* Comment out PortMapper debug

this got left turned on in a confusing merge previously

* fix macos default route again

see commit fb6af1971 * Fix network DNS on macOS
adding that stuff to System Config causes this extra route to be added
which breaks ipv4 default route.
We figured out a weird System Coniguration setting
that works.

--- old
couldn't figure out how to fix it in SystemConfiguration
so here we are# Please enter the commit message for your changes. Lines starting

We also moved the dns setter to before the syncIps stuff
to help with a race condition. It didn't always work when
you re-joined a network with default route enabled.

* Catch all conditions in switch statement, remove trailing whitespaces

* Add setmtu command, fix bond lifetime issue

* Basic cleanups

* Check if null is passed to VirtualNetworkConfig.equals and name fixes

* ANDROID-96: Simplify and use return code from node_init directly

* Windows arm64 (#2099)

* ARM64 changes for 1.12

* 1.12 Windows advanced installer updates and updates for ARM64

* 1.12.0

* Linux build fixes for old distros.

* release notes

---------

Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
Co-authored-by: travis laduke <travisladuke@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Grant Limberg <grant.limberg@zerotier.com>
Co-authored-by: Grant Limberg <glimberg@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Leonardo Amaral <leleobhz@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Brenton Bostick <bostick@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Sean OMeara <someara@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Joseph Henry <joseph-henry@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Roman Peshkichev <roman.peshkichev@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Joseph Henry <joseph.henry@zerotier.com>
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Stavros Kois <47820033+stavros-k@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jake Vis <jakevis@outlook.com>
Co-authored-by: Jörg Thalheim <joerg@thalheim.io>
Co-authored-by: lison <imlison@foxmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Kenny MacDermid <kenny@macdermid.ca>
2023-08-23 14:24:21 -04:00

1437 lines
52 KiB
C++

/*
* Copyright (c)2013-2020 ZeroTier, Inc.
*
* Use of this software is governed by the Business Source License included
* in the LICENSE.TXT file in the project's root directory.
*
* Change Date: 2025-01-01
*
* On the date above, in accordance with the Business Source License, use
* of this software will be governed by version 2.0 of the Apache License.
*/
/****/
#ifndef ZT_N_PACKET_HPP
#define ZT_N_PACKET_HPP
#include <stdint.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include "Constants.hpp"
#include "Address.hpp"
#include "Poly1305.hpp"
#include "Salsa20.hpp"
#include "AES.hpp"
#include "Utils.hpp"
#include "Buffer.hpp"
/**
* Protocol version -- incremented only for major changes
*
* 1 - 0.2.0 ... 0.2.5
* 2 - 0.3.0 ... 0.4.5
* + Added signature and originating peer to multicast frame
* + Double size of multicast frame bloom filter
* 3 - 0.5.0 ... 0.6.0
* + Yet another multicast redesign
* + New crypto completely changes key agreement cipher
* 4 - 0.6.0 ... 1.0.6
* + BREAKING CHANGE: New identity format based on hashcash design
* 5 - 1.1.0 ... 1.1.5
* + Supports echo
* + Supports in-band world (root server definition) updates
* + Clustering! (Though this will work with protocol v4 clients.)
* + Otherwise backward compatible with protocol v4
* 6 - 1.1.5 ... 1.1.10
* + Network configuration format revisions including binary values
* 7 - 1.1.10 ... 1.1.17
* + Introduce trusted paths for local SDN use
* 8 - 1.1.17 ... 1.2.0
* + Multipart network configurations for large network configs
* + Tags and Capabilities
* + Inline push of CertificateOfMembership deprecated
* 9 - 1.2.0 ... 1.2.14
* 10 - 1.4.0 ... 1.4.6
* 11 - 1.4.7 ... 1.4.8
* + Multipath capability and load balancing (beta)
* 12 - 1.4.8 ... CURRENT (1.4 series)
* + AES-GMAC-SIV backported for faster peer-to-peer crypto
*/
#define ZT_PROTO_VERSION 12
/**
* Minimum supported protocol version
*/
#define ZT_PROTO_VERSION_MIN 4
/**
* Maximum hop count allowed by packet structure (3 bits, 0-7)
*
* This is a protocol constant. It's the maximum allowed by the length
* of the hop counter -- three bits. See node/Constants.hpp for the
* pragmatic forwarding limit, which is typically lower.
*/
#define ZT_PROTO_MAX_HOPS 7
/**
* Cipher suite: Curve25519/Poly1305/Salsa20/12/NOCRYPT
*
* This specifies Poly1305 MAC using a 32-bit key derived from the first
* 32 bytes of a Salsa20/12 keystream as in the Salsa20/12 cipher suite,
* but the payload is not encrypted. This is currently only used to send
* HELLO since that's the public key specification packet and must be
* sent in the clear. Key agreement is performed using Curve25519 elliptic
* curve Diffie-Hellman.
*/
#define ZT_PROTO_CIPHER_SUITE__C25519_POLY1305_NONE 0
/**
* Cipher suite: Curve25519/Poly1305/Salsa20/12
*
* This specifies Poly1305 using the first 32 bytes of a Salsa20/12 key
* stream as its one-time-use key followed by payload encryption with
* the remaining Salsa20/12 key stream. Key agreement is performed using
* Curve25519 elliptic curve Diffie-Hellman.
*/
#define ZT_PROTO_CIPHER_SUITE__C25519_POLY1305_SALSA2012 1
/**
* AES-GMAC-SIV backported from 2.x
*/
#define ZT_PROTO_CIPHER_SUITE__AES_GMAC_SIV 3
/**
* AES-GMAC-SIV first of two keys
*/
#define ZT_KBKDF_LABEL_AES_GMAC_SIV_K0 '0'
/**
* AES-GMAC-SIV second of two keys
*/
#define ZT_KBKDF_LABEL_AES_GMAC_SIV_K1 '1'
/**
* Cipher suite: NONE
*
* This differs from POLY1305/NONE in that *no* crypto is done, not even
* authentication. This is for trusted local LAN interconnects for internal
* SDN use within a data center.
*
* For this mode the MAC field becomes a trusted path ID and must match the
* configured ID of a trusted path or the packet is discarded.
*/
#define ZT_PROTO_CIPHER_SUITE__NO_CRYPTO_TRUSTED_PATH 2
/**
* DEPRECATED payload encrypted flag, may be re-used in the future.
*
* This has been replaced by the three-bit cipher suite selection field.
*/
#define ZT_PROTO_FLAG_ENCRYPTED 0x80
/**
* Header flag indicating that a packet is fragmented
*
* If this flag is set, the receiver knows to expect more than one fragment.
* See Packet::Fragment for details.
*/
#define ZT_PROTO_FLAG_FRAGMENTED 0x40
/**
* Verb flag indicating payload is compressed with LZ4
*/
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_FLAG_COMPRESSED 0x80
/**
* Rounds used for Salsa20 encryption in ZT
*
* Discussion:
*
* DJB (Salsa20's designer) designed Salsa20 with a significant margin of 20
* rounds, but has said repeatedly that 12 is likely sufficient. So far (as of
* July 2015) there are no published attacks against 12 rounds, let alone 20.
*
* In cryptography, a "break" means something different from what it means in
* common discussion. If a cipher is 256 bits strong and someone finds a way
* to reduce key search to 254 bits, this constitutes a "break" in the academic
* literature. 254 bits is still far beyond what can be leveraged to accomplish
* a "break" as most people would understand it -- the actual decryption and
* reading of traffic.
*
* Nevertheless, "attacks only get better" as cryptographers like to say. As
* a result, they recommend not using anything that's shown any weakness even
* if that weakness is so far only meaningful to academics. It may be a sign
* of a deeper problem.
*
* So why choose a lower round count?
*
* Turns out the speed difference is nontrivial. On a Macbook Pro (Core i3) 20
* rounds of SSE-optimized Salsa20 achieves ~508mb/sec/core, while 12 rounds
* hits ~832mb/sec/core. ZeroTier is designed for multiple objectives:
* security, simplicity, and performance. In this case a deference was made
* for performance.
*
* Meta discussion:
*
* The cipher is not the thing you should be paranoid about.
*
* I'll qualify that. If the cipher is known to be weak, like RC4, or has a
* key size that is too small, like DES, then yes you should worry about
* the cipher.
*
* But if the cipher is strong and your adversary is anyone other than the
* intelligence apparatus of a major superpower, you are fine in that
* department.
*
* Go ahead. Search for the last ten vulnerabilities discovered in SSL. Not
* a single one involved the breaking of a cipher. Now broaden your search.
* Look for issues with SSH, IPSec, etc. The only cipher-related issues you
* will find might involve the use of RC4 or MD5, algorithms with known
* issues or small key/digest sizes. But even weak ciphers are difficult to
* exploit in the real world -- you usually need a lot of data and a lot of
* compute time. No, virtually EVERY security vulnerability you will find
* involves a problem with the IMPLEMENTATION not with the cipher.
*
* A flaw in ZeroTier's protocol or code is incredibly, unbelievably
* more likely than a flaw in Salsa20 or any other cipher or cryptographic
* primitive it uses. We're talking odds of dying in a car wreck vs. odds of
* being personally impacted on the head by a meteorite. Nobody without a
* billion dollar budget is going to break into your network by actually
* cracking Salsa20/12 (or even /8) in the field.
*
* So stop worrying about the cipher unless you are, say, the Kremlin and your
* adversary is the NSA and the GCHQ. In that case... well that's above my
* pay grade. I'll just say defense in depth.
*/
#define ZT_PROTO_SALSA20_ROUNDS 12
/**
* PUSH_DIRECT_PATHS flag: forget path
*/
#define ZT_PUSH_DIRECT_PATHS_FLAG_FORGET_PATH 0x01
/**
* PUSH_DIRECT_PATHS flag: cluster redirect
*/
#define ZT_PUSH_DIRECT_PATHS_FLAG_CLUSTER_REDIRECT 0x02
// Field indexes in packet header
#define ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV 0
#define ZT_PACKET_IDX_DEST 8
#define ZT_PACKET_IDX_SOURCE 13
#define ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS 18
#define ZT_PACKET_IDX_MAC 19
#define ZT_PACKET_IDX_VERB 27
#define ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD 28
/**
* Packet buffer size (can be changed)
*/
#define ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH (ZT_MAX_PACKET_FRAGMENTS * ZT_DEFAULT_PHYSMTU)
/**
* Minimum viable packet length (a.k.a. header length)
*/
#define ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD
// Indexes of fields in fragment header
#define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PACKET_ID 0
#define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_DEST 8
#define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_INDICATOR 13
#define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_NO 14
#define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_HOPS 15
#define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD 16
/**
* Magic number found at ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_INDICATOR
*/
#define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_INDICATOR ZT_ADDRESS_RESERVED_PREFIX
/**
* Minimum viable fragment length
*/
#define ZT_PROTO_MIN_FRAGMENT_LENGTH ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD
// Field indices for parsing verbs -------------------------------------------
// Some verbs have variable-length fields. Those aren't fully defined here
// yet-- instead they are parsed using relative indexes in IncomingPacket.
// See their respective handler functions.
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_PROTOCOL_VERSION (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_MAJOR_VERSION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_PROTOCOL_VERSION + 1)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_MINOR_VERSION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_MAJOR_VERSION + 1)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_REVISION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_MINOR_VERSION + 1)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_TIMESTAMP (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_REVISION + 2)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_IDENTITY (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_TIMESTAMP + 8)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_IN_RE_VERB (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_IN_RE_PACKET_ID (ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_IN_RE_VERB + 1)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_ERROR_CODE (ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_IN_RE_PACKET_ID + 8)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_PAYLOAD (ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_ERROR_CODE + 1)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_IN_RE_VERB (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_IN_RE_PACKET_ID (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_IN_RE_VERB + 1)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_PAYLOAD (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_IN_RE_PACKET_ID + 8)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_WHOIS_IDX_ZTADDRESS (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_FLAGS (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_ZTADDRESS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_FLAGS + 1)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_PORT (ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_ZTADDRESS + 5)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_ADDRLEN (ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_PORT + 2)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_ADDRESS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_ADDRLEN + 1)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_FRAME_IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_FRAME_IDX_ETHERTYPE (ZT_PROTO_VERB_FRAME_IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_FRAME_IDX_PAYLOAD (ZT_PROTO_VERB_FRAME_IDX_ETHERTYPE + 2)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_NETWORK_ID 8
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_NETWORK_ID + ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_NETWORK_ID)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_FLAGS 1
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_COM (ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS + ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_FLAGS)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_TO (ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS + ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_FLAGS)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_TO 6
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_FROM (ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_TO + ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_TO)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_FROM 6
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_ETHERTYPE (ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_FROM + ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_FROM)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_ETHERTYPE 2
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_PAYLOAD (ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_ETHERTYPE + ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_ETHERTYPE)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST_IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST_IDX_DICT_LEN (ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST_IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST_IDX_DICT (ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST_IDX_DICT_LEN + 2)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_FLAGS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_MAC (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_FLAGS + 1)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_ADI (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_MAC + 6)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_GATHER_LIMIT (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_ADI + 4)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_COM (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_GATHER_LIMIT + 4)
// Note: COM, GATHER_LIMIT, and SOURCE_MAC are optional, and so are specified without size
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_COM (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS + 1)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_GATHER_LIMIT (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS + 1)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_SOURCE_MAC (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS + 1)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_DEST_MAC (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS + 1)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_DEST_ADI (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_DEST_MAC + 6)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_ETHERTYPE (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_DEST_ADI + 4)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_FRAME (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_ETHERTYPE + 2)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_TIMESTAMP (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_PAYLOAD)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_PROTOCOL_VERSION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_TIMESTAMP + 8)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_MAJOR_VERSION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_PROTOCOL_VERSION + 1)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_MINOR_VERSION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_MAJOR_VERSION + 1)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_REVISION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_MINOR_VERSION + 1)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_WHOIS__OK__IDX_IDENTITY (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_PAYLOAD)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST__OK__IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_PAYLOAD)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST__OK__IDX_DICT_LEN (ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST__OK__IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST__OK__IDX_DICT (ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST__OK__IDX_DICT_LEN + 2)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_PAYLOAD)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_MAC (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_ADI (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_MAC + 6)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_GATHER_RESULTS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_ADI + 4)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_PAYLOAD)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_MAC (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_ADI (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_MAC + 6)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_FLAGS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_ADI + 4)
#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_COM_AND_GATHER_RESULTS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_FLAGS + 1)
// ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
namespace ZeroTier {
/**
* ZeroTier packet
*
* Packet format:
* <[8] 64-bit packet ID / crypto IV / packet counter>
* <[5] destination ZT address>
* <[5] source ZT address>
* <[1] flags/cipher/hops>
* <[8] 64-bit MAC (or trusted path ID in trusted path mode)>
* [... -- begin encryption envelope -- ...]
* <[1] encrypted flags (MS 3 bits) and verb (LS 5 bits)>
* [... verb-specific payload ...]
*
* Packets smaller than 28 bytes are invalid and silently discarded.
*
* The 64-bit packet ID is a strongly random value used as a crypto IV.
* Its least significant 3 bits are also used as a monotonically increasing
* (and looping) counter for sending packets to a particular recipient. This
* can be used for link quality monitoring and reporting and has no crypto
* impact as it does not increase the likelihood of an IV collision. (The
* crypto we use is not sensitive to the nature of the IV, only that it does
* not repeat.)
*
* The flags/cipher/hops bit field is: FFCCCHHH where C is a 3-bit cipher
* selection allowing up to 7 cipher suites, F is outside-envelope flags,
* and H is hop count.
*
* The three-bit hop count is the only part of a packet that is mutable in
* transit without invalidating the MAC. All other bits in the packet are
* immutable. This is because intermediate nodes can increment the hop
* count up to 7 (protocol max).
*
* For unencrypted packets, MAC is computed on plaintext. Only HELLO is ever
* sent in the clear, as it's the "here is my public key" message.
*/
class Packet : public Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>
{
public:
/**
* A packet fragment
*
* Fragments are sent if a packet is larger than UDP MTU. The first fragment
* is sent with its normal header with the fragmented flag set. Remaining
* fragments are sent this way.
*
* The fragmented bit indicates that there is at least one fragment. Fragments
* themselves contain the total, so the receiver must "learn" this from the
* first fragment it receives.
*
* Fragments are sent with the following format:
* <[8] packet ID of packet whose fragment this belongs to>
* <[5] destination ZT address>
* <[1] 0xff, a reserved address, signals that this isn't a normal packet>
* <[1] total fragments (most significant 4 bits), fragment no (LS 4 bits)>
* <[1] ZT hop count (top 5 bits unused and must be zero)>
* <[...] fragment data>
*
* The protocol supports a maximum of 16 fragments. If a fragment is received
* before its main packet header, it should be cached for a brief period of
* time to see if its parent arrives. Loss of any fragment constitutes packet
* loss; there is no retransmission mechanism. The receiver must wait for full
* receipt to authenticate and decrypt; there is no per-fragment MAC. (But if
* fragments are corrupt, the MAC will fail for the whole assembled packet.)
*/
class Fragment : public Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>
{
public:
Fragment() :
Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>()
{
}
template<unsigned int C2>
Fragment(const Buffer<C2> &b) :
Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(b)
{
}
Fragment(const void *data,unsigned int len) :
Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(data,len)
{
}
/**
* Initialize from a packet
*
* @param p Original assembled packet
* @param fragStart Start of fragment (raw index in packet data)
* @param fragLen Length of fragment in bytes
* @param fragNo Which fragment (>= 1, since 0 is Packet with end chopped off)
* @param fragTotal Total number of fragments (including 0)
*/
Fragment(const Packet &p,unsigned int fragStart,unsigned int fragLen,unsigned int fragNo,unsigned int fragTotal)
{
init(p,fragStart,fragLen,fragNo,fragTotal);
}
/**
* Initialize from a packet
*
* @param p Original assembled packet
* @param fragStart Start of fragment (raw index in packet data)
* @param fragLen Length of fragment in bytes
* @param fragNo Which fragment (>= 1, since 0 is Packet with end chopped off)
* @param fragTotal Total number of fragments (including 0)
*/
inline void init(const Packet &p,unsigned int fragStart,unsigned int fragLen,unsigned int fragNo,unsigned int fragTotal)
{
if ((fragStart + fragLen) > p.size()) {
throw ZT_EXCEPTION_OUT_OF_BOUNDS;
}
setSize(fragLen + ZT_PROTO_MIN_FRAGMENT_LENGTH);
// NOTE: this copies both the IV/packet ID and the destination address.
memcpy(field(ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PACKET_ID,13),p.field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV,13),13);
(*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_INDICATOR] = ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_INDICATOR;
(*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_NO] = (char)(((fragTotal & 0xf) << 4) | (fragNo & 0xf));
(*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_HOPS] = 0;
memcpy(field(ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD,fragLen),p.field(fragStart,fragLen),fragLen);
}
/**
* Get this fragment's destination
*
* @return Destination ZT address
*/
inline Address destination() const { return Address(field(ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_DEST,ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH),ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH); }
/**
* @return True if fragment is of a valid length
*/
inline bool lengthValid() const { return (size() >= ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD); }
/**
* @return ID of packet this is a fragment of
*/
inline uint64_t packetId() const { return at<uint64_t>(ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PACKET_ID); }
/**
* @return Total number of fragments in packet
*/
inline unsigned int totalFragments() const { return (((unsigned int)((*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_NO]) >> 4) & 0xf); }
/**
* @return Fragment number of this fragment
*/
inline unsigned int fragmentNumber() const { return ((unsigned int)((*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_NO]) & 0xf); }
/**
* @return Fragment ZT hop count
*/
inline unsigned int hops() const { return (unsigned int)((*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_HOPS]); }
/**
* Increment this packet's hop count
*/
inline void incrementHops()
{
(*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_HOPS] = (((*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_HOPS]) + 1) & ZT_PROTO_MAX_HOPS;
}
/**
* @return Length of payload in bytes
*/
inline unsigned int payloadLength() const { return ((size() > ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD) ? (size() - ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD) : 0); }
/**
* @return Raw packet payload
*/
inline const unsigned char *payload() const
{
return field(ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD,size() - ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD);
}
};
/**
* ZeroTier protocol verbs
*/
enum Verb /* Max value: 32 (5 bits) */
{
/**
* No operation (ignored, no reply)
*/
VERB_NOP = 0x00,
/**
* Announcement of a node's existence and vitals:
* <[1] protocol version>
* <[1] software major version>
* <[1] software minor version>
* <[2] software revision>
* <[8] timestamp for determining latency>
* <[...] binary serialized identity (see Identity)>
* <[...] physical destination address of packet>
* <[8] 64-bit world ID of current planet>
* <[8] 64-bit timestamp of current planet>
* [... remainder if packet is encrypted using cryptField() ...]
* <[2] 16-bit number of moons>
* [<[1] 8-bit type ID of moon>]
* [<[8] 64-bit world ID of moon>]
* [<[8] 64-bit timestamp of moon>]
* [... additional moon type/ID/timestamp tuples ...]
*
* HELLO is sent in the clear as it is how peers share their identity
* public keys. A few additional fields are sent in the clear too, but
* these are things that are public info or are easy to determine. As
* of 1.2.0 we have added a few more fields, but since these could have
* the potential to be sensitive we introduced the encryption of the
* remainder of the packet. See cryptField(). Packet MAC is still
* performed of course, so authentication occurs as normal.
*
* Destination address is the actual wire address to which the packet
* was sent. See InetAddress::serialize() for format.
*
* OK payload:
* <[8] HELLO timestamp field echo>
* <[1] protocol version>
* <[1] software major version>
* <[1] software minor version>
* <[2] software revision>
* <[...] physical destination address of packet>
* <[2] 16-bit length of world update(s) or 0 if none>
* [[...] updates to planets and/or moons]
*
* With the exception of the timestamp, the other fields pertain to the
* respondent who is sending OK and are not echoes.
*
* Note that OK is fully encrypted so no selective cryptField() of
* potentially sensitive fields is needed.
*
* ERROR has no payload.
*/
VERB_HELLO = 0x01,
/**
* Error response:
* <[1] in-re verb>
* <[8] in-re packet ID>
* <[1] error code>
* <[...] error-dependent payload>
*/
VERB_ERROR = 0x02,
/**
* Success response:
* <[1] in-re verb>
* <[8] in-re packet ID>
* <[...] request-specific payload>
*/
VERB_OK = 0x03,
/**
* Query an identity by address:
* <[5] address to look up>
* [<[...] additional addresses to look up>
*
* OK response payload:
* <[...] binary serialized identity>
* [<[...] additional binary serialized identities>]
*
* If querying a cluster, duplicate OK responses may occasionally occur.
* These must be tolerated, which is easy since they'll have info you
* already have.
*
* If the address is not found, no response is generated. The semantics
* of WHOIS is similar to ARP and NDP in that persistent retrying can
* be performed.
*/
VERB_WHOIS = 0x04,
/**
* Relay-mediated NAT traversal or firewall punching initiation:
* <[1] flags (unused, currently 0)>
* <[5] ZeroTier address of peer that might be found at this address>
* <[2] 16-bit protocol address port>
* <[1] protocol address length (4 for IPv4, 16 for IPv6)>
* <[...] protocol address (network byte order)>
*
* An upstream node can send this to inform both sides of a relay of
* information they might use to establish a direct connection.
*
* Upon receipt a peer sends HELLO to establish a direct link.
*
* No OK or ERROR is generated.
*/
VERB_RENDEZVOUS = 0x05,
/**
* ZT-to-ZT unicast ethernet frame (shortened EXT_FRAME):
* <[8] 64-bit network ID>
* <[2] 16-bit ethertype>
* <[...] ethernet payload>
*
* MAC addresses are derived from the packet's source and destination
* ZeroTier addresses. This is a shortened EXT_FRAME that elides full
* Ethernet framing and other optional flags and features when they
* are not necessary.
*
* ERROR may be generated if a membership certificate is needed for a
* closed network. Payload will be network ID.
*/
VERB_FRAME = 0x06,
/**
* Full Ethernet frame with MAC addressing and optional fields:
* <[8] 64-bit network ID>
* <[1] flags>
* <[6] destination MAC or all zero for destination node>
* <[6] source MAC or all zero for node of origin>
* <[2] 16-bit ethertype>
* <[...] ethernet payload>
*
* Flags:
* 0x01 - Certificate of network membership attached (DEPRECATED)
* 0x02 - Most significant bit of subtype (see below)
* 0x04 - Middle bit of subtype (see below)
* 0x08 - Least significant bit of subtype (see below)
* 0x10 - ACK requested in the form of OK(EXT_FRAME)
*
* Subtypes (0..7):
* 0x0 - Normal frame (bridging can be determined by checking MAC)
* 0x1 - TEEd outbound frame
* 0x2 - REDIRECTed outbound frame
* 0x3 - WATCHed outbound frame (TEE with ACK, ACK bit also set)
* 0x4 - TEEd inbound frame
* 0x5 - REDIRECTed inbound frame
* 0x6 - WATCHed inbound frame
* 0x7 - (reserved for future use)
*
* An extended frame carries full MAC addressing, making it a
* superset of VERB_FRAME. It is used for bridged traffic,
* redirected or observed traffic via rules, and can in theory
* be used for multicast though MULTICAST_FRAME exists for that
* purpose and has additional options and capabilities.
*
* OK payload (if ACK flag is set):
* <[8] 64-bit network ID>
*/
VERB_EXT_FRAME = 0x07,
/**
* ECHO request (a.k.a. ping):
* <[...] arbitrary payload>
*
* This generates OK with a copy of the transmitted payload. No ERROR
* is generated. Response to ECHO requests is optional and ECHO may be
* ignored if a node detects a possible flood.
*/
VERB_ECHO = 0x08,
/**
* Announce interest in multicast group(s):
* <[8] 64-bit network ID>
* <[6] multicast Ethernet address>
* <[4] multicast additional distinguishing information (ADI)>
* [... additional tuples of network/address/adi ...]
*
* LIKEs may be sent to any peer, though a good implementation should
* restrict them to peers on the same network they're for and to network
* controllers and root servers. In the current network, root servers
* will provide the service of final multicast cache.
*
* VERB_NETWORK_CREDENTIALS should be pushed along with this, especially
* if using upstream (e.g. root) nodes as multicast databases. This allows
* GATHERs to be authenticated.
*
* OK/ERROR are not generated.
*/
VERB_MULTICAST_LIKE = 0x09,
/**
* Network credentials push:
* [<[...] one or more certificates of membership>]
* <[1] 0x00, null byte marking end of COM array>
* <[2] 16-bit number of capabilities>
* <[...] one or more serialized Capability>
* <[2] 16-bit number of tags>
* <[...] one or more serialized Tags>
* <[2] 16-bit number of revocations>
* <[...] one or more serialized Revocations>
* <[2] 16-bit number of certificates of ownership>
* <[...] one or more serialized CertificateOfOwnership>
*
* This can be sent by anyone at any time to push network credentials.
* These will of course only be accepted if they are properly signed.
* Credentials can be for any number of networks.
*
* The use of a zero byte to terminate the COM section is for legacy
* backward compatibility. Newer fields are prefixed with a length.
*
* OK/ERROR are not generated.
*/
VERB_NETWORK_CREDENTIALS = 0x0a,
/**
* Network configuration request:
* <[8] 64-bit network ID>
* <[2] 16-bit length of request meta-data dictionary>
* <[...] string-serialized request meta-data>
* <[8] 64-bit revision of netconf we currently have>
* <[8] 64-bit timestamp of netconf we currently have>
*
* This message requests network configuration from a node capable of
* providing it.
*
* Responses to this are always whole configs intended for the recipient.
* For patches and other updates a NETWORK_CONFIG is sent instead.
*
* It would be valid and correct as of 1.2.0 to use NETWORK_CONFIG always,
* but OK(NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST) should be sent for compatibility.
*
* OK response payload:
* <[8] 64-bit network ID>
* <[2] 16-bit length of network configuration dictionary chunk>
* <[...] network configuration dictionary (may be incomplete)>
* [ ... end of legacy single chunk response ... ]
* <[1] 8-bit flags>
* <[8] 64-bit config update ID (should never be 0)>
* <[4] 32-bit total length of assembled dictionary>
* <[4] 32-bit index of chunk>
* [ ... end signed portion ... ]
* <[1] 8-bit chunk signature type>
* <[2] 16-bit length of chunk signature>
* <[...] chunk signature>
*
* The chunk signature signs the entire payload of the OK response.
* Currently only one signature type is supported: ed25519 (1).
*
* Each config chunk is signed to prevent memory exhaustion or
* traffic crowding DOS attacks against config fragment assembly.
*
* If the packet is from the network controller it is permitted to end
* before the config update ID or other chunking related or signature
* fields. This is to support older controllers that don't include
* these fields and may be removed in the future.
*
* ERROR response payload:
* <[8] 64-bit network ID>
* <[2] 16-bit length of error-related data (optional)>
* <[...] error-related data (optional)>
*
* Error related data is a Dictionary containing things like a URL
* for authentication or a human-readable error message, and is
* optional and may be absent or empty.
*/
VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST = 0x0b,
/**
* Network configuration data push:
* <[8] 64-bit network ID>
* <[2] 16-bit length of network configuration dictionary chunk>
* <[...] network configuration dictionary (may be incomplete)>
* <[1] 8-bit flags>
* <[8] 64-bit config update ID (should never be 0)>
* <[4] 32-bit total length of assembled dictionary>
* <[4] 32-bit index of chunk>
* [ ... end signed portion ... ]
* <[1] 8-bit chunk signature type>
* <[2] 16-bit length of chunk signature>
* <[...] chunk signature>
*
* This is a direct push variant for network config updates. It otherwise
* carries the same payload as OK(NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST) and has the same
* semantics.
*
* The legacy mode missing the additional chunking fields is not supported
* here.
*
* Flags:
* 0x01 - Use fast propagation
*
* An OK should be sent if the config is successfully received and
* accepted.
*
* OK payload:
* <[8] 64-bit network ID>
* <[8] 64-bit config update ID>
*/
VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG = 0x0c,
/**
* Request endpoints for multicast distribution:
* <[8] 64-bit network ID>
* <[1] flags>
* <[6] MAC address of multicast group being queried>
* <[4] 32-bit ADI for multicast group being queried>
* <[4] 32-bit requested max number of multicast peers>
* [<[...] network certificate of membership>]
*
* Flags:
* 0x01 - COM is attached
*
* This message asks a peer for additional known endpoints that have
* LIKEd a given multicast group. It's sent when the sender wishes
* to send multicast but does not have the desired number of recipient
* peers.
*
* More than one OK response can occur if the response is broken up across
* multiple packets or if querying a clustered node.
*
* The COM should be included so that upstream nodes that are not
* members of our network can validate our request.
*
* OK response payload:
* <[8] 64-bit network ID>
* <[6] MAC address of multicast group being queried>
* <[4] 32-bit ADI for multicast group being queried>
* [begin gather results -- these same fields can be in OK(MULTICAST_FRAME)]
* <[4] 32-bit total number of known members in this multicast group>
* <[2] 16-bit number of members enumerated in this packet>
* <[...] series of 5-byte ZeroTier addresses of enumerated members>
*
* ERROR is not generated; queries that return no response are dropped.
*/
VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER = 0x0d,
/**
* Multicast frame:
* <[8] 64-bit network ID>
* <[1] flags>
* [<[4] 32-bit implicit gather limit>]
* [<[6] source MAC>]
* <[6] destination MAC (multicast address)>
* <[4] 32-bit multicast ADI (multicast address extension)>
* <[2] 16-bit ethertype>
* <[...] ethernet payload>
*
* Flags:
* 0x01 - Network certificate of membership attached (DEPRECATED)
* 0x02 - Implicit gather limit field is present
* 0x04 - Source MAC is specified -- otherwise it's computed from sender
* 0x08 - Please replicate (sent to multicast replicators)
*
* OK and ERROR responses are optional. OK may be generated if there are
* implicit gather results or if the recipient wants to send its own
* updated certificate of network membership to the sender. ERROR may be
* generated if a certificate is needed or if multicasts to this group
* are no longer wanted (multicast unsubscribe).
*
* OK response payload:
* <[8] 64-bit network ID>
* <[6] MAC address of multicast group>
* <[4] 32-bit ADI for multicast group>
* <[1] flags>
* [<[...] network certificate of membership (DEPRECATED)>]
* [<[...] implicit gather results if flag 0x01 is set>]
*
* OK flags (same bits as request flags):
* 0x01 - OK includes certificate of network membership (DEPRECATED)
* 0x02 - OK includes implicit gather results
*
* ERROR response payload:
* <[8] 64-bit network ID>
* <[6] multicast group MAC>
* <[4] 32-bit multicast group ADI>
*/
VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME = 0x0e,
/**
* Push of potential endpoints for direct communication:
* <[2] 16-bit number of paths>
* <[...] paths>
*
* Path record format:
* <[1] 8-bit path flags>
* <[2] length of extended path characteristics or 0 for none>
* <[...] extended path characteristics>
* <[1] address type>
* <[1] address length in bytes>
* <[...] address>
*
* Path record flags:
* 0x01 - Forget this path if currently known (not implemented yet)
* 0x02 - Cluster redirect -- use this in preference to others
*
* The receiver may, upon receiving a push, attempt to establish a
* direct link to one or more of the indicated addresses. It is the
* responsibility of the sender to limit which peers it pushes direct
* paths to to those with whom it has a trust relationship. The receiver
* must obey any restrictions provided such as exclusivity or blacklists.
* OK responses to this message are optional.
*
* Note that a direct path push does not imply that learned paths can't
* be used unless they are blacklisted explicitly or unless flag 0x01
* is set.
*
* OK and ERROR are not generated.
*/
VERB_PUSH_DIRECT_PATHS = 0x10,
// 0x11 -- deprecated
/**
* An acknowledgment of receipt of a series of recent packets from another
* peer. This is used to calculate relative throughput values and to detect
* packet loss. Only VERB_FRAME and VERB_EXT_FRAME packets are counted.
*
* ACK response format:
* <[4] 32-bit number of bytes received since last ACK>
*
* Upon receipt of this packet, the local peer will verify that the correct
* number of bytes were received by the remote peer. If these values do
* not agree that could be an indication of packet loss.
*
* Additionally, the local peer knows the interval of time that has
* elapsed since the last received ACK. With this information it can compute
* a rough estimate of the current throughput.
*
* This is sent at a maximum rate of once per every ZT_QOS_ACK_INTERVAL
*/
VERB_ACK = 0x12,
/**
* A packet containing timing measurements useful for estimating path quality.
* Composed of a list of <packet ID:internal sojourn time> pairs for an
* arbitrary set of recent packets. This is used to sample for latency and
* packet delay variance (PDV, "jitter").
*
* QoS record format:
*
* <[8] 64-bit packet ID of previously-received packet>
* <[1] 8-bit packet sojourn time>
* <...repeat until end of max 1400 byte packet...>
*
* The number of possible records per QoS packet is: (1400 * 8) / 72 = 155
* This packet should be sent very rarely (every few seconds) as it can be
* somewhat large if the connection is saturated. Future versions might use
* a bloom table to probabilistically determine these values in a vastly
* more space-efficient manner.
*
* Note: The 'internal packet sojourn time' is a slight misnomer as it is a
* measure of the amount of time between when a packet was received and the
* egress time of its tracking QoS packet.
*
* This is sent at a maximum rate of once per every
* ZT_QOS_MEASUREMENT_INTERVAL
*/
VERB_QOS_MEASUREMENT = 0x13,
/**
* A message with arbitrary user-definable content:
* <[8] 64-bit arbitrary message type ID>
* [<[...] message payload>]
*
* This can be used to send arbitrary messages over VL1. It generates no
* OK or ERROR and has no special semantics outside of whatever the user
* (via the ZeroTier core API) chooses to give it.
*
* Message type IDs less than or equal to 65535 are reserved for use by
* ZeroTier, Inc. itself. We recommend making up random ones for your own
* implementations.
*/
VERB_USER_MESSAGE = 0x14,
/**
* A trace for remote debugging or diagnostics:
* <[...] null-terminated dictionary containing trace information>
* [<[...] additional null-terminated dictionaries>]
*
* This message contains a remote trace event. Remote trace events can
* be sent to observers configured at the network level for those that
* pertain directly to activity on a network, or to global observers if
* locally configured.
*
* The instance ID is a random 64-bit value generated by each ZeroTier
* node on startup. This is helpful in identifying traces from different
* members of a cluster.
*/
VERB_REMOTE_TRACE = 0x15,
/**
* A request to a peer to use a specific path in a multi-path scenario:
* <[2] 16-bit unsigned integer that encodes a path choice utility>
*
* This is sent when a node operating in multipath mode observes that
* its inbound and outbound traffic aren't going over the same path. The
* node will compute its perceived utility for using its chosen outbound
* path and send this to a peer in an attempt to petition it to send
* its traffic over this same path.
*
* Scenarios:
*
* (1) Remote peer utility is GREATER than ours:
* - Remote peer will refuse the petition and continue using current path
* (2) Remote peer utility is LESS than than ours:
* - Remote peer will accept the petition and switch to our chosen path
* (3) Remote peer utility is EQUAL to our own:
* - To prevent confusion and flapping, both side will agree to use the
* numerical values of their identities to determine which path to use.
* The peer with the greatest identity will win.
*
* If a node petitions a peer repeatedly with no effect it will regard
* that as a refusal by the remote peer, in this case if the utility is
* negligible it will voluntarily switch to the remote peer's chosen path.
*/
VERB_PATH_NEGOTIATION_REQUEST = 0x16
};
/**
* Error codes for VERB_ERROR
*/
enum ErrorCode
{
/* No error, not actually used in transit */
ERROR_NONE = 0x00,
/* Invalid request */
ERROR_INVALID_REQUEST = 0x01,
/* Bad/unsupported protocol version */
ERROR_BAD_PROTOCOL_VERSION = 0x02,
/* Unknown object queried */
ERROR_OBJ_NOT_FOUND = 0x03,
/* HELLO pushed an identity whose address is already claimed */
ERROR_IDENTITY_COLLISION = 0x04,
/* Verb or use case not supported/enabled by this node */
ERROR_UNSUPPORTED_OPERATION = 0x05,
/* Network membership certificate update needed */
ERROR_NEED_MEMBERSHIP_CERTIFICATE = 0x06,
/* Tried to join network, but you're not a member */
ERROR_NETWORK_ACCESS_DENIED_ = 0x07, /* extra _ at end to avoid Windows name conflict */
/* Multicasts to this group are not wanted */
ERROR_UNWANTED_MULTICAST = 0x08,
/* Network requires external or 2FA authentication (e.g. SSO). */
ERROR_NETWORK_AUTHENTICATION_REQUIRED = 0x09
};
template<unsigned int C2>
Packet(const Buffer<C2> &b) :
Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(b)
{
}
Packet(const void *data,unsigned int len) :
Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(data,len)
{
}
/**
* Construct a new empty packet with a unique random packet ID
*
* Flags and hops will be zero. Other fields and data region are undefined.
* Use the header access methods (setDestination() and friends) to fill out
* the header. Payload should be appended; initial size is header size.
*/
Packet() :
Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH)
{
Utils::getSecureRandom(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV,8),8);
(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] = 0; // zero flags, cipher ID, and hops
}
/**
* Make a copy of a packet with a new initialization vector and destination address
*
* This can be used to take one draft prototype packet and quickly make copies to
* encrypt for different destinations.
*
* @param prototype Prototype packet
* @param dest Destination ZeroTier address for new packet
*/
Packet(const Packet &prototype,const Address &dest) :
Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(prototype)
{
Utils::getSecureRandom(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV,8),8);
setDestination(dest);
}
/**
* Construct a new empty packet with a unique random packet ID
*
* @param dest Destination ZT address
* @param source Source ZT address
* @param v Verb
*/
Packet(const Address &dest,const Address &source,const Verb v) :
Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH)
{
Utils::getSecureRandom(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV,8),8);
setDestination(dest);
setSource(source);
(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] = 0; // zero flags and hops
setVerb(v);
}
/**
* Reset this packet structure for reuse in place
*
* @param dest Destination ZT address
* @param source Source ZT address
* @param v Verb
*/
inline void reset(const Address &dest,const Address &source,const Verb v)
{
setSize(ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH);
Utils::getSecureRandom(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV,8),8);
setDestination(dest);
setSource(source);
(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] = 0; // zero flags, cipher ID, and hops
setVerb(v);
}
/**
* Generate a new IV / packet ID in place
*
* This can be used to re-use a packet buffer multiple times to send
* technically different but otherwise identical copies of the same
* packet.
*/
inline void newInitializationVector() { Utils::getSecureRandom(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV,8),8); }
/**
* Set this packet's destination
*
* @param dest ZeroTier address of destination
*/
inline void setDestination(const Address &dest) { dest.copyTo(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_DEST,ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH),ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH); }
/**
* Set this packet's source
*
* @param source ZeroTier address of source
*/
inline void setSource(const Address &source) { source.copyTo(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_SOURCE,ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH),ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH); }
/**
* Get this packet's destination
*
* @return Destination ZT address
*/
inline Address destination() const { return Address(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_DEST,ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH),ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH); }
/**
* Get this packet's source
*
* @return Source ZT address
*/
inline Address source() const { return Address(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_SOURCE,ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH),ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH); }
/**
* @return True if packet is of valid length
*/
inline bool lengthValid() const { return (size() >= ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH); }
/**
* @return True if packet is fragmented (expect fragments)
*/
inline bool fragmented() const { return (((unsigned char)(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] & ZT_PROTO_FLAG_FRAGMENTED) != 0); }
/**
* Set this packet's fragmented flag
*
* @param f Fragmented flag value
*/
inline void setFragmented(bool f)
{
if (f) {
(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] |= (char)ZT_PROTO_FLAG_FRAGMENTED;
} else {
(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] &= (char)(~ZT_PROTO_FLAG_FRAGMENTED);
}
}
/**
* @return True if compressed (result only valid if unencrypted)
*/
inline bool compressed() const { return (((unsigned char)(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_VERB] & ZT_PROTO_VERB_FLAG_COMPRESSED) != 0); }
/**
* @return ZeroTier forwarding hops (0 to 7)
*/
inline unsigned int hops() const { return ((unsigned int)(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] & 0x07); }
/**
* Increment this packet's hop count
*/
inline void incrementHops()
{
unsigned char &b = (*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS];
b = (b & 0xf8) | ((b + 1) & 0x07);
}
/**
* @return Cipher suite selector: 0 - 7 (see #defines)
*/
inline unsigned int cipher() const
{
return (((unsigned int)(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] & 0x38) >> 3);
}
/**
* @return Whether this packet is currently encrypted
*/
inline bool isEncrypted() const
{
return (cipher() == ZT_PROTO_CIPHER_SUITE__C25519_POLY1305_SALSA2012) || (cipher() == ZT_PROTO_CIPHER_SUITE__AES_GMAC_SIV);
}
/**
* Set this packet's cipher suite
*/
inline void setCipher(unsigned int c)
{
unsigned char &b = (*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS];
b = (b & 0xc7) | (unsigned char)((c << 3) & 0x38); // bits: FFCCCHHH
// Set DEPRECATED "encrypted" flag -- used by pre-1.0.3 peers
if (c == ZT_PROTO_CIPHER_SUITE__C25519_POLY1305_SALSA2012) {
b |= ZT_PROTO_FLAG_ENCRYPTED;
} else {
b &= (~ZT_PROTO_FLAG_ENCRYPTED);
}
}
/**
* Get the trusted path ID for this packet (only meaningful if cipher is trusted path)
*
* @return Trusted path ID (from MAC field)
*/
inline uint64_t trustedPathId() const { return at<uint64_t>(ZT_PACKET_IDX_MAC); }
/**
* Set this packet's trusted path ID and set the cipher spec to trusted path
*
* @param tpid Trusted path ID
*/
inline void setTrusted(const uint64_t tpid)
{
setCipher(ZT_PROTO_CIPHER_SUITE__NO_CRYPTO_TRUSTED_PATH);
setAt(ZT_PACKET_IDX_MAC,tpid);
}
/**
* Get this packet's unique ID (the IV field interpreted as uint64_t)
*
* Note that the least significant 3 bits of this ID will change when armor()
* is called to armor the packet for transport. This is because armor() will
* mask the last 3 bits against the send counter for QoS monitoring use prior
* to actually using the IV to encrypt and MAC the packet. Be aware of this
* when grabbing the packetId of a new packet prior to armor/send.
*
* @return Packet ID
*/
inline uint64_t packetId() const { return at<uint64_t>(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV); }
/**
* Set packet verb
*
* This also has the side-effect of clearing any verb flags, such as
* compressed, and so must only be done during packet composition.
*
* @param v New packet verb
*/
inline void setVerb(Verb v) { (*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_VERB] = (char)v; }
/**
* @return Packet verb (not including flag bits)
*/
inline Verb verb() const { return (Verb)((*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_VERB] & 0x1f); }
/**
* @return Length of packet payload
*/
inline unsigned int payloadLength() const { return ((size() < ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH) ? 0 : (size() - ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH)); }
/**
* @return Raw packet payload
*/
inline const unsigned char *payload() const { return field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD,size() - ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD); }
/**
* Armor packet for transport
*
* @param key 32-byte key
* @param encryptPayload If true, encrypt packet payload, else just MAC
* @param aesKeys If non-NULL these are the two keys for AES-GMAC-SIV
*/
void armor(const void *key,bool encryptPayload,const AES aesKeys[2]);
/**
* Verify and (if encrypted) decrypt packet
*
* This does not handle trusted path mode packets and will return false
* for these. These are handled in IncomingPacket if the sending physical
* address and MAC field match a trusted path.
*
* @param key 32-byte key
* @param aesKeys If non-NULL these are the two keys for AES-GMAC-SIV
* @return False if packet is invalid or failed MAC authenticity check
*/
bool dearmor(const void *key,const AES aesKeys[2]);
/**
* Encrypt/decrypt a separately armored portion of a packet
*
* This is currently only used to mask portions of HELLO as an extra
* security precaution since most of that message is sent in the clear.
*
* This must NEVER be used more than once in the same packet, as doing
* so will result in re-use of the same key stream.
*
* @param key 32-byte key
* @param start Start of encrypted portion
* @param len Length of encrypted portion
*/
void cryptField(const void *key,unsigned int start,unsigned int len);
/**
* Attempt to compress payload if not already (must be unencrypted)
*
* This requires that the payload at least contain the verb byte already
* set. The compressed flag in the verb is set if compression successfully
* results in a size reduction. If no size reduction occurs, compression
* is not done and the flag is left cleared.
*
* @return True if compression occurred
*/
bool compress();
/**
* Attempt to decompress payload if it is compressed (must be unencrypted)
*
* If payload is compressed, it is decompressed and the compressed verb
* flag is cleared. Otherwise nothing is done and true is returned.
*
* @return True if data is now decompressed and valid, false on error
*/
bool uncompress();
private:
static const unsigned char ZERO_KEY[32];
/**
* Deterministically mangle a 256-bit crypto key based on packet
*
* This uses extra data from the packet to mangle the secret, giving us an
* effective IV that is somewhat more than 64 bits. This is "free" for
* Salsa20 since it has negligible key setup time so using a different
* key each time is fine.
*
* @param in Input key (32 bytes)
* @param out Output buffer (32 bytes)
*/
inline void _salsa20MangleKey(const unsigned char *in,unsigned char *out) const
{
const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)data();
// IV and source/destination addresses. Using the addresses divides the
// key space into two halves-- A->B and B->A (since order will change).
for(unsigned int i=0;i<18;++i) { // 8 + (ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH * 2) == 18
out[i] = in[i] ^ d[i];
}
// Flags, but with hop count masked off. Hop count is altered by forwarding
// nodes. It's one of the only parts of a packet modifiable by people
// without the key.
out[18] = in[18] ^ (d[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] & 0xf8);
// Raw packet size in bytes -- thus each packet size defines a new
// key space.
out[19] = in[19] ^ (unsigned char)(size() & 0xff);
out[20] = in[20] ^ (unsigned char)((size() >> 8) & 0xff); // little endian
// Rest of raw key is used unchanged
for(unsigned int i=21;i<32;++i) {
out[i] = in[i];
}
}
};
} // namespace ZeroTier
#endif