ooni-probe-cli/internal/tutorial/netxlite/chapter07/main.go

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// -=-=- StartHere -=-=-
//
// # Chapter I: HTTP GET with TLS conn
//
// In this chapter we will write together a `main.go` file that
// uses netxlite to establish a TLS connection to a remote endpoint
// and then fetches a webpage from it using GET.
//
// This file is basically the same as the one used in chapter03
// with the small addition of the code to perform the GET.
//
// (This file is auto-generated from the corresponding source file,
// so make sure you don't edit it manually.)
//
// ## The main.go file
//
// We define `main.go` file using `package main`.
//
// The beginning of the program is equal to chapter03,
// so there is not much to say about it.
//
// ```Go
package main
import (
"context"
"crypto/tls"
"errors"
"flag"
"net"
"net/http"
"net/url"
"os"
"time"
"github.com/apex/log"
"github.com/ooni/probe-cli/v3/internal/netxlite"
utls "gitlab.com/yawning/utls.git"
)
func main() {
log.SetLevel(log.DebugLevel)
address := flag.String("address", "8.8.4.4:443", "Remote endpoint address")
sni := flag.String("sni", "dns.google", "SNI to use")
timeout := flag.Duration("timeout", 60*time.Second, "Timeout")
flag.Parse()
ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(context.Background(), *timeout)
defer cancel()
config := &tls.Config{
ServerName: *sni,
NextProtos: []string{"h2", "http/1.1"},
RootCAs: netxlite.NewDefaultCertPool(),
}
conn, _, err := dialTLS(ctx, *address, config)
if err != nil {
fatal(err)
}
log.Infof("Conn type : %T", conn)
// ```
//
// This is where things diverge. We create an HTTP client
// using a transport created with `netxlite.NewHTTPTransport`.
//
// This transport will have as TCP connections dialer a
// "null" dialer that fails whenever you attempt to dial
// (and we should not be dialing anything here since we
// already have a TLS connection).
//
// It will also use as TLSDialer (the type that dials TLS
// and, morally, combines `dialTCP` with `handshakeTLS`) one
// that is "single use". What does this mean? Well, we
// create such a TLSDialer using the connection we already
// established. The first time the HTTP code dials for
// TLS, the TLSDialer will return the connection we passed
// to its constructor immediately. Every subsequent TLS
// dial attempt will fail.
//
// The result is an HTTPTransport suitable for performing
// a single request using the given TLS conn.
//
// (A similar construct allows to create an HTTPTransport that
// uses a cleartext TCP connection. In the next chapter we'll
// see how to do the same using QUIC.)
//
// ```Go
clnt := &http.Client{Transport: netxlite.NewHTTPTransport(
log.Log, netxlite.NewNullDialer(),
netxlite.NewSingleUseTLSDialer(conn.(netxlite.TLSConn)),
)}
// ```
//
// Once we have the proper transport and client, the rest of
// the code is basically standard Go for fetching a webpage
// using the GET method.
//
// ```Go
log.Infof("Transport : %T", clnt.Transport)
defer clnt.CloseIdleConnections()
resp, err := clnt.Get(
(&url.URL{Scheme: "https", Host: *sni, Path: "/"}).String())
if err != nil {
fatal(err)
}
log.Infof("Status code: %d", resp.StatusCode)
resp.Body.Close()
}
// ```
//
// We won't comment on the rest of the program because it is
// exactly like what we've seen in chapter03.
//
// ```Go
func dialTCP(ctx context.Context, address string) (net.Conn, error) {
d := netxlite.NewDialerWithoutResolver(log.Log)
return d.DialContext(ctx, "tcp", address)
}
func handshakeTLS(ctx context.Context, tcpConn net.Conn,
config *tls.Config) (net.Conn, tls.ConnectionState, error) {
th := netxlite.NewTLSHandshakerUTLS(log.Log, &utls.HelloFirefox_55)
return th.Handshake(ctx, tcpConn, config)
}
func dialTLS(ctx context.Context, address string,
config *tls.Config) (net.Conn, tls.ConnectionState, error) {
tcpConn, err := dialTCP(ctx, address)
if err != nil {
return nil, tls.ConnectionState{}, err
}
tlsConn, state, err := handshakeTLS(ctx, tcpConn, config)
if err != nil {
tcpConn.Close()
return nil, tls.ConnectionState{}, err
}
return tlsConn, state, nil
}
func fatal(err error) {
var ew *netxlite.ErrWrapper
if !errors.As(err, &ew) {
log.Fatal("cannot get ErrWrapper")
}
log.Warnf("error string : %s", err.Error())
log.Warnf("OONI failure : %s", ew.Failure)
log.Warnf("failed operation: %s", ew.Operation)
log.Warnf("underlying error: %+v", ew.WrappedErr)
os.Exit(1)
}
// ```
//
// ## Running the code
//
// ### Vanilla run
//
// You can now run this code as follows:
//
// ```bash
// go run -race ./internal/tutorial/netxlite/chapter07
// ```
//
// You will see debug logs describing what is happening along with timing info.
//
// ### Connect timeout
//
// ```bash
// go run -race ./internal/tutorial/netxlite/chapter07 -address 8.8.4.4:1
// ```
//
// should cause a connect timeout error. Try lowering the timout adding, e.g.,
// the `-timeout 5s` flag to the command line.
//
// ### Connection refused
//
// ```bash
// go run -race ./internal/tutorial/netxlite/chapter07 -address '[::1]:1'
// ```
//
// should give you a connection refused error in most cases. (We are quoting
// the `::1` IPv6 address using `[` and `]` here.)
//
// ### SNI mismatch
//
// ```bash
// go run -race ./internal/tutorial/netxlite/chapter07 -sni example.com
// ```
//
// should give you a TLS invalid hostname error (for historical reasons
// named `ssl_invalid_hostname`).
//
// ## Conclusions
//
// We have seen how to establish a TLS connection with a website
// and then how to GET a webpage using such a connection.