1. Use the netxlite.NewHTTPTransport factory for creating a new
HTTP2 (and HTTP1) transport;
2. Recognize the netxlite.NewOOHTTPTransport has now become
an implementation detail so make it private;
3. Recognize that netxlite.NewHTTP3Transport should call
netxlite.WrapTransport so it returns the same typechain
returned by netxlite.NewHTTPTransport (modulo, of course,
the real underlying transport), so ensure that we are
calling netxlite.WrapTransport in NewHTTP3Transport;
4. Recognize that the table based constructor inside of
netx needs a logger to create HTTPTransport instances using
either netxlite.NewHTTP{,3}Transport so pass this argument
along and ensure it's not nil using a constructor inside
model that guarantees that;
5. Cleanup netx's tests to avoid type asserting on the
typechains returned by netxlite since we already test
that inside netxlite;
6. Recognize that now we can make more legacy names inside
of netxlite private because we don't need to use them
inside tests anymore (because of previous point).
Reference issue: https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/2121
This diff modifies netx to use netxlite to build the TLSDialer.
Building the TLSDialer entails building a TLSHandshaker.
While there, hide netxlite names we don't want to be public
and change netx tests to test for functionality.
To this end, refactor filtering to provide an easier to
use TLS server. We don't need the complexity of proxying
rather we need to provoke specific errors.
Part of https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/2121
This diff modifies the system resolver to use a getaddrinf transport.
Obviously the transport is a fake, but its existence will allow us
to observe DNS events more naturally.
A lookup using the system resolver would be a ANY lookup that will
contain all the resolved IP addresses into the same response.
This change was also part of websteps-illustrated, albeit the way in
which I did it there was less clean than what we have here.
Ref issue: https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/2096
This diff modifies the construction of a dialer to allow one
to insert custom dialer wrappers into the dialers chain.
The point of the chain in which we allow custom wrappers is the
optimal one for connect, read, and write measurements.
This new design is better than the previous netx design since
we don't need to construct the whole chain manually now.
The work in this diff is part of the effort to make engine/netx
just a tiny wrapper around netxlite.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/2121.
This diff has been extracted and adapted from 8848c8c516
The reason to prefer composition over embedding is that we want the
build to break if we add new methods to interfaces we define. If the build
does not break, we may forget about wrapping methods we should
actually be wrapping. I noticed this issue inside netxlite when I was working
on websteps-illustrated and I added support for NS and PTR queries.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/2096
While there, perform comprehensive netxlite code review
and apply minor changes and improve the docs.
This diff addresses another point of https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1956:
> - [ ] observe that we're still using a bunch of private interfaces for common interfaces such as the `Dialer`, so we can get rid of these private interfaces and always use the ones in `model`, which allows us to remove a bunch of legacy wrappers
Additional cleanups may still be possible. The more I cleanup, the more I see
there's extra legacy code we can dispose of (which seems good?).
This diff implements the first two cleanups defined at https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1956:
> - [ ] observe that `netxlite` and `netx` differ in error wrapping only in the way in which we set `ErrWrapper.Operation`. Observe that the code using `netxlite` does not care about such a field. Therefore, we can modify `netxlite` to set such a field using the code of `netx` and we can remove `netx` specific code for errors (which currently lives inside of the `./internal/engine/legacy/errorsx` package
>
> - [ ] after we've done the previous cleanup, we can make all the classifiers code private, since there's no code outside `netxlite` that needs them
A subsequent diff will address the remaining cleanup.
While there, notice that there are failing, unrelated obfs4 tests, so disable them in short mode. (I am confident these tests are unrelated because they fail for me when running test locally from the `master` branch.)
## Checklist
- [x] I have read the [contribution guidelines](https://github.com/ooni/probe-cli/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md)
- [x] reference issue for this pull request: https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1885
- [x] related ooni/spec pull request: N/A
Location of the issue tracker: https://github.com/ooni/probe
## Description
This PR contains a set of changes to move important interfaces and data types into the `./internal/model` package.
The criteria for including an interface or data type in here is roughly that the type should be important and used by several packages. We are especially interested to move more interfaces here to increase modularity.
An additional side effect is that, by reading this package, one should be able to understand more quickly how different parts of the codebase interact with each other.
This is what I want to move in `internal/model`:
- [x] most important interfaces from `internal/netxlite`
- [x] everything that was previously part of `internal/engine/model`
- [x] mocks from `internal/netxlite/mocks` should also be moved in here as a subpackage
I have recently seen a data race related our way of
mutating the outgoing request to set the host header.
Unfortunately, I've lost track of the race output,
because I rebooted my Linux box before saving it.
Though, after inspecting why and and where we're mutating
outgoing requets, I've found that:
1. we add the host header when logging to have it logged,
which is not a big deal since we already emit the URL
rather than just the URL path when logging a request, and
so we can safely zap this piece of code;
2. as a result, in measurements we may omit the host header
but again this is pretty much obvious from the URL itself
and so it should not be very important (nonetheless,
avoid surprises and keep the existing behavior);
3. when the User-Agent header is not set, we default to
a `miniooni/0.1.0-dev` user agent, which is probably not
very useful anyway, so we can actually remove it.
Part of https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1733 (this diff
has been extracted from https://github.com/ooni/probe-cli/pull/506).
I discovered which transport were used by apitool and made sure he gets the same transports now. While there, I discovered an issue with ooni/oohttp that has been fixed with cba9b1ce5e.
Part of https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1591
Like before, do not touch the rest of the tree. Rather create
compatibility types declared as legacy.
We will soon be able to close idle connections for an HTTP3
transport using any kind of resolvers more easily.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1591
This quirk really saddens me. It's a piece of tech debt we're
carrying over from the original netx implementation.
We cannot remove it _until_ we have legacy netx code around.
The second best thing we can do is to clearly move this code in
a place where it's clear it's a quirk and write and use some extra
code that makes sure the quirk's assumptions are always met.
Sigh.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1591
This basically adapts already existing code inside websteps to
instead be into the netxlite package, where it belongs.
In the process, abstract the TLSDialer but keep a reference to the
previous name to avoid refactoring existing code (just for now).
While there, notice that the right name is CloseIdleConnections (i.e.,
plural not singular) and change the name.
While there, since we abstracted TLSDialer to be an interface, create
suitable factories for making a TLSDialer type from a Dialer and a
TLSHandshaker.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1591
Like we did before for the resolver, a dialer should propagate the
request to close idle connections to underlying types.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1591
We would like to refactor the code so that a DoH resolver owns the
connections of its underlying HTTP client.
To do that, we need first to incorporate CloseIdleConnections
into the Resolver model. Then, we need to add the same function
to all netxlite types that wrap a Resolver type.
At the same time, we want the rest of the code for now to continue
with the simpler definition of a Resolver, now called ResolverLegacy.
We will eventually propagate this change to the rest of the tree
and simplify the way in which we manage Resolvers.
To make this possible, we introduce a new factory function that
adapts a ResolverLegacy to become a Resolver.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1591.
## Description
This PR continues the refactoring of `netx` under the following principles:
1. do not break the rest of the tree and do not engage in extensive tree-wide refactoring yet
2. move under `netxlite` clearly related subpackages (e.g., `iox`, `netxmocks`)
3. move into `internal/netxlite/internal` stuff that is clearly private of `netxlite`
4. hide implementation details in `netxlite` pending new factories
5. refactor `tls` code in `netxlite` to clearly separate `crypto/tls` code from `utls` code
After each commit, I run `go test -short -race ./...` locally. Each individual commit explains what it does. I will squash, but this operation will preserve the original commit titles, so this will give further insight on each step.
## Commits
* refactor: rename netxmocks -> netxlite/mocks
Part of https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1591
* refactor: rename quicx -> netxlite/quicx
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1591
* refactor: rename iox -> netxlite/iox
Regenerate sources and make sure the tests pass.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1591.
* refactor(iox): move MockableReader to netxlite/mocks
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1591
* refactor(netxlite): generator is an implementation detail
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1591
* refactor(netxlite): separate tls and utls code
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1591
* refactor(netxlite): hide most types but keep old names as legacy
With this change we avoid breaking the rest of the tree, but we start
hiding some implementation details a bit. Factories will follow.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1591
What do I mean by pivoting? Netx is currently organized by row:
```
| dialer | quicdialer | resolver | ...
saving | | | | ...
errorwrapping | | | | ...
logging | | | | ...
mocking/sys | | | | ...
```
Every row needs to implement saving, errorwrapping, logging, mocking (or
adapting to the system or to some underlying library).
This causes cross package dependencies and, in turn, complexity. For
example, we need the `trace` package for supporting saving.
And `dialer`, `quickdialer`, et al. need to depend on such a package.
The same goes for errorwrapping.
This arrangement further complicates testing. For example, I am
currently working on https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1505 and
I realize it need to repeat integration tests in multiple places.
Let's say instead we pivot the above matrix as follows:
```
| saving | errorwrapping | logging | ...
dialer | | | | ...
quicdialer | | | | ...
logging | | | | ...
mocking/sys | | | | ...
...
```
In this way, now every row contains everything related to a specific
action to perform. We can now share code without relying on extra
support packages. What's more, we can write tests and, judding from
the way in which things are made, it seems we only need integration
testing in `errorwrapping` because it's where data quality matters
whereas, in all other cases, unit testing is fine.
I am going, therefore, to proceed with these changes and "pivot"
`netx`. Hopefully, it won't be too painful.