This change should prevent old clients (e.g., Android 6) from
failing to perform a ndt7 experiment because their internal CA
bundle is now too old.
Reference issue: https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/2031
While there, run `go mod tidy` to fix a minor inconsistence in
the current `go.mod` file.
This diff WILL require a backport to release/3.14.
This experiment pings a QUIC-able host. It can be used to measure QUIC availability independently from TLS.
This is the reference issue: https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1994
### A QUIC PING is:
- a QUIC Initial packet with a size of 1200 bytes (minimum datagram size defined in the [RFC 9000](https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc9000.html#initial-size)),
- with a random payload (i.e. no TLS ClientHello),
- with the version string 0xbabababa which forces Version Negotiation at the server.
QUIC-able hosts respond to the QUIC PING with a Version Negotiation packet.
The input is a domain name or an IP address. The default port used by quicping is 443, as this is the port used by HTTP/3. The port can be modified with the `-O Port=` option.
The default number of repetitions is 10, it can be changed with `-O Repetitions=`.
### Usage:
```
./miniooni -i google.com quicping
./miniooni -i 142.250.181.206 quicping
./miniooni -i 142.250.181.206 -OPort=443 quicping
./miniooni -i 142.250.181.206 -ORepetitions=2 quicping
```
This diff forward ports b6db4f64dc83a2a27ee3ce6bba5ac93db922832d, whose
original log message is the following:
- - -
We're now using ooni/oohttp as our HTTP library in most cases.
A limitation of this library is that net/http/httptrace does not
work very well and reliably because (1) we need to use oohttp's
version of that code and (2) we cannot observe net events.
I noticed this fact because an integration test for collecting
HTTP performance metrics was broken.
The best solution here is to remove this functionality, since
it was basically unused in the repository. Only some integration
tests inside urlgetter bothered with these metrics.
A more clinical fix would have been to use ooni/oohttp/httptrace
instead of net/http/httptrace in the stdlib, but it does not
seem to be a good idea, given that those metrics were not used.
With this diff applied, we'll further reduce the number of locally
failing integration tests to just jafar-specific tests.
This diff WILL need to be forwardported to `master`.
This diff contains significant improvements over the previous
implementation of the torsf experiment.
We add support for configuring different rendezvous methods after
the convo at https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/2004. In doing
that, I've tried to use a terminology that is consistent with the
names being actually used by tor developers.
In terms of what to do next, this diff basically instruments
torsf to always rendezvous using domain fronting. Yet, it's also
possible to change the rendezvous method from the command line,
when using miniooni, which allows to experiment a bit more. In the
same vein, by default we use a persistent tor datadir, but it's
also possible to use a temporary datadir using the cmdline.
Here's how a generic invocation of `torsf` looks like:
```bash
./miniooni -O DisablePersistentDatadir=true \
-O RendezvousMethod=amp \
-O DisableProgress=true \
torsf
```
(The default is `DisablePersistentDatadir=false` and
`RendezvousMethod=domain_fronting`.)
With this implementation, we can start measuring whether snowflake
and tor together can boostrap, which seems the most important thing
to focus on at the beginning. Understanding why the bootstrap most
often does not converge with a temporary datadir on Android devices
remains instead an open problem for now. (I'll also update the
relevant issues or create new issues after commit this.)
We also address some methodology improvements that were proposed
in https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1686. Namely:
1. we record the tor version;
2. we include the bootstrap percentage by reading the logs;
3. we set the anomaly key correctly;
4. we measure the bytes send and received (by `tor` not by `snowflake`, since
doing it for snowflake seems more complex at this stage).
What remains to be done is the possibility of including Snowflake
events into the measurement, which is not possible until the new
improvements at common/event in snowflake.git are included into a
tagged version of snowflake itself. (I'll make sure to mention
this aspect to @cohosh in https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/2004.)
This commit message is the same across probe-cli, probe-desktop,
and probe-android. With the changes contained in the enclosed
diff, I'm starting to add support for torsf for android and for
desktop.
When smoke testing that torsf was WAI, I also noticed that its
progress messages in output are too frequent. We may want to do
better in a future version when we'll be able to read `tor`'s
output. In the meanwhile, make the progress messages less
frequent and indicated the maximum runtime inside of the messages
themselves. This improved message, albeit not so nice from the
UX PoV, should at least provide a clue that we're not stuck.
Reference issue: https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1917
Reference issue: https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1917.
I needed to change the summary key type returned by `torsf` to be a value. It seems the DB layer assumes that. If we pass it a pointer, it panics because it's experiment a value rather than a pointer 🤷.
This diff contains the following changes and enhancements:
1. upgrade snowflake to v2
2. observe that we were not changing defaults from outside of snowflake.go, so remove code allowing to do that;
3. bump the timeout to 600 seconds (it seems 300 was not always enough based on my testing);
4. add useful knob to disable `torsf` progress (it's really annoying on console, we should do something about this);
5. ptx.go: avoid printing an error when the connection has just been closed;
6. snowflake: test AMP cache, see that it's not working currently, so leave it disabled.
Related issues: https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1845, https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1894, and https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1917.
This diff introduces a new package called `./internal/archival`. This package collects data from `./internal/model` network interfaces (e.g., `Dialer`, `QUICDialer`, `HTTPTransport`), saves such data into an internal tabular data format suitable for on-line processing and analysis, and allows exporting data into the OONI data format.
The code for collecting and the internal tabular data formats are adapted from `measurex`. The code for formatting and exporting OONI data-format-compliant structures is adapted from `netx/archival`.
My original objective was to _also_ (1) fully replace `netx/archival` with this package and (2) adapt `measurex` to use this package rather than its own code. Both operations seem easily feasible because: (a) this code is `measurex` code without extensions that are `measurex` related, which will need to be added back as part of the process; (b) the API provided by this code allows for trivially converting from using `netx/archival` to using this code.
Yet, both changes should not be taken lightly. After implementing them, there's need to spend some time doing QA and ensuring all nettests work as intended. However, I am planning a release in the next two weeks, and this QA task is likely going to defer the release. For this reason, I have chosen to commit the work done so far into the tree and defer the second part of this refactoring for a later moment in time. (This explains why the title mentions "1/N").
On a more high-level perspective, it would also be beneficial, I guess, to explain _why_ I am doing these changes. There are two intertwined reasons. The first reason is that `netx/archival` has shortcomings deriving from its original https://github.com/ooni/netx legacy. The most relevant shortcoming is that it saves all kind of data into the same tabular structure named `Event`. This design choice is unfortunate because it does not allow one to apply data-type specific logic when processing the results. In turn, this choice results in complex processing code. Therefore, I believe that replacing the code with event-specific data structures is clearly an improvement in terms of code maintainability and would quite likely lead us to more confidently change and evolve the codebase.
The second reason why I would like to move forward these changes is to unify the codepaths used for measuring. At this point in time, we basically have two codepaths: `./internal/engine/netx` and `./internal/measurex`. They both have pros and cons and I don't think we want to rewrite whole experiments using `netx`. Rather, what we probably want is to gradually merge these two codepaths such that `netx` is a set of abstractions on top of `measurex` (which is more low-level and has a more-easily-testable design). Because saving events and generating an archival data format out of them consists of at least 50% of the complexity of both `netx` and `measurex`, it seems reasonable to unify this archival-related part of the two codebases as the first step.
At the highest level of abstraction, these changes are part of the train of changes which will eventually lead us to bless `websteps` as a first class citizen in OONI land. Because `websteps` requires different underlying primitives, I chose to develop these primitives from scratch rather than wrestling with `netx`, which used another model. The model used by `websteps` is that we perform each operation in isolation and immediately we save the results, while `netx` creates whole data structures and collects all the events happening via tracing. We believe the model used by `websteps` to be better because it does not require your code to figure out everything that happened after the measurement, which is a source of subtle bugs in the current implementation. So, when I started implementing websteps I extracted the bits of `netx` that could also be beneficial to `websteps` into a separate library, thus `netxlite` was born.
The reference issue describing merging the archival of `netx` and `measurex` is https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1957. As of this writing the issue still references the original plan, which I could not complete by the end of this Sprint, so I am going to adapt the text of the issue to only refer to what was done in here next. Of course, I also need follow-up issues.
* chore(netxlite): add currently failing test case
This diff introduces a test cases that will fail because of the reason
explained in https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1965.
* chore(netxlite/iox_test.go): add failing unit tests
These tests directly show how the Go implementation of ReadAll
and Copy has the issue of checking for io.EOF equality.
* fix(netxlite): make {ReadAll,Copy}Context robust to wrapped io.EOF
The fix is simple: we just need to check for `errors.Is(err, io.EOF)`
after either io.ReadAll or io.Copy has returned. When this condition is
true, we need to convert the error back to `nil` as it ought to be.
While there, observe that the unit tests I committed in the previous
commit are wrongly asserting that the error must be wrapped. This
assertion is not correct, because in both cases we have just ensured
that the returned error is `nil` (i.e., success).
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1965.
* cleanup: remove previous workaround for wrapped io.EOF
These workarounds were partial, meaning that they would cover some
cases in which the issue occurred but not all of them.
Handling the problem in `netxlite.{ReadAll,Copy}Context` is the
right thing to do _as long as_ we always use these functions instead
of `io.{ReadAll,Copy}`.
This is why it's now important to ensure we clearly mention that
inside of the `CONTRIBUTING.md` guide and to also ensure that we're
not using these functions in the code base.
* fix(urlgetter): repair tests who assumed to see EOF error
Now that we have established that we should normalize EOF when
reading bodies like the stdlib does and now that it's clear why
our behavior diverged from the stdlib, we also need to repair
all the tests that assumed this incorrect behavior.
* fix(all): don't use io{,util}.{Copy,ReadAll}
* feat: add checks to ensure we don't use io.{Copy,ReadAll}
* doc(netxlite): document we know how to deal w/ wrapped io.EOF
* fix(nocopyreadall.bash): add exception for i/n/iox.go
The DNSClient type existed because the Resolver type did not
include CloseIdleConnections in its signature.
Now that Resolver includes CloseIdleConnections, the DNSClient
type has become unnecessary and can be safely removed.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1956.
This diff addresses two items of https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1956:
> - [ ] we can remove legacy names from `./internal/engine/netx/resolver/legacy.go`
>
> - [ ] we can remove `DialTLSContext` from `./internal/engine/netx/resolver/tls_test.go`
More cleanups may follow.
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.)
Since https://github.com/ooni/probe-cli/pull/527, if an experiment
returns an error, the corresponding measurement is not submitted since
the semantics of returning an error is that something fundamental
went wrong (e.g., we could not parse the input URL).
This diff ensures that all experiments only return and error when
something fundamental was wrong and return nil otherwise.
Reference issue: https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1808.
This diff rewrites the tor experiment to use measurex "easy" API.
To this end, we need to introduce an "easy" measurex API, which basically
performs easy measurements returning two pieces of data:
1. the resulting measurement, which is already using the OONI
archival data format and is always non-nil
2. a failure (i.e., the pointer to an error string), which
is nil on success and points to a string on failure
With this change, we should now be able to completely dispose of
the original netx API, which was only used by tor.
Reference issue: https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1688.
1. we want optionally to log the body (we don't want to log the body
when we're fetching psiphon secrets or tor targets)
2. we want body logging to _also_ happen on error since this is quite
useful to debug possible errors when accessing the API
This diff adds the above functionality, which were previously
described in https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1951.
This diff also adds comprehensive testing.
As mentioned in https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1951, one of
the main issues I did see with httpx.APIClient is that in some cases
it's used in a very fragile way by probeservices.Client.
This happens in psiphon.go and tor.go, where we create a copy of
the APIClient and then modify it's Authorization field.
If we ever refactor probeservices.Client to take a pointer to
httpx.Client, we are now mutating the httpx.Client.
Of course, we don't want that to happen.
This diff attempts to address such a problem as follows:
1. we create a new APIClientTemplate type that holds the same
fields of an APIClient and allows to build an APIClient
2. we modify every user of APIClient to use APIClientTemplate
3. when we need an APIClient, we build it from the corresponding
template and, when we need to use a specific Authorization, we
use a build factory that sets APIClient.Authorization
4. we hide APIClient by renaming it apiClient and by defining
an interface called APIClient that allows to use it
So, now the codebase always uses the opaque APIClient interface to
issue API calls and always uses the APIClientTemplate to build an
opaque APIClient.
Boom! We have separated construction from usage and we are not
mutating in weird ways the APIClient anymore.
This PR starts to implement the refactoring described at https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1951. I originally wrote more patches than the ones in this PR, but overall they were not readable. Since I want to squash and merge, here's a reasonable subset of the original patches that will still be readable and understandable in the future.
## 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
Here we're refactoring stunreachability to not provide internally a
default input and to take in input an URL rather than a string.
The related ooni/spec change is https://github.com/ooni/spec/pull/227.
This diff has been extracted from https://github.com/ooni/probe-cli/pull/539.
Because the original diff was large, I'm splitting it in a set of
more easily manageable diffs.
The reference issue is https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1814, which
is complex enough to require us to proceed incrementally.
This diff WILL need to be backported to release/3.11.
* [forwardport] fix(oonimkall): make logger used by tasks unit testable (#623)
This diff forward ports e4b04642c51e7461728b25941624e1b97ef0ec83.
Reference issue: https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1903
* [forwardport] feat(oonimkall): improve taskEmitter testability (#624)
This diff forward ports 3e0f01a389c1f4cdd7878ec151aff91870a0bdff.
1. rename eventemitter{,_test}.go => taskemitter{,_test}.go because
the new name is more proper after we merged the internal/task package
inside of the oonimkall package;
2. rename runner.go's `run` function to `runTask`;
3. modify `runTask` to use the new `taskEmitterUsingChan` abstraction
on which we will spend more works in a later point of this list;
4. introduce `runTaskWithEmitter` factory that is called by `runTask`
and allows us to more easily write unit tests;
5. acknowledge that `runner` was not using its `out` field;
6. use the new `taskEmitterWrapper` in `newRunner`;
7. acknowledge that `runnerCallbacks` could use a generic
`taskEmitter` as field type rather than a specific type;
8. rewrite tests to use `runTaskWithEmitter` which leads to
simpler code that does not require a goroutine;
9. acknowledge that the code has been ignoring the `DisabledEvents`
settings for quite some time, so stop supporting it;
10. refactor the `taskEmitter` implementation to be like:
1. we still have the `taskEmitter` interface;
2. `taskEmitterUsingChan` wraps the channel and allows for
emitting events using the channel;
3. `taskEmitterUsingChan` owns an `eof` channel that is
closed by `Close` (which is idempotent) and signals we
should be stop emitting;
4. make sure `runTask` creates a `taskEmitterUsingChan`
and calls its `Close` method when done;
5. completely remove the code for disabling events
since the code was actually ignoring the stting;
6. add a `taskEmitterWrapper` that adds common functions
for emitting events to _any_ `taskWrapper`;
7. write unit tests for `taskEmitterUsingChan` and
for `taskEmitterWrapper`;
11. acknowledge that the abstraction we need for testing is
actually a thread-safe thing that collects events into a
vector containing events and refactor all tests accordingly.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1903
* [forwardport] refactor(oonimkall): make the runner unit-testable (#625)
This diff forward ports 9423947faf6980d92d2fe67efe3829e8fef76586.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1903
* [forwardport] feat(oonimkall): write unit tests for the runner component (#626)
This diff forward ports 35dd0e3788b8fa99c541452bbb5e0ae4871239e1.
Forward porting note: compared to 35dd0e3788b8fa99c541452bbb5e0ae4871239e1,
the diff I'm committing here is slightly different. In `master` we do not
have the case where a measurement fails and a measurement is returned, thus
I needed to adapt the test to become like this:
```diff
diff --git a/pkg/oonimkall/runner_internal_test.go b/pkg/oonimkall/runner_internal_test.go
index 334b574..84c7436 100644
--- a/pkg/oonimkall/runner_internal_test.go
+++ b/pkg/oonimkall/runner_internal_test.go
@@ -568,15 +568,6 @@ func TestTaskRunnerRun(t *testing.T) {
}, {
Key: failureMeasurement,
Count: 1,
- }, {
- Key: measurement,
- Count: 1,
- }, {
- Key: statusMeasurementSubmission,
- Count: 1,
- }, {
- Key: statusMeasurementDone,
- Count: 1,
}, {
Key: statusEnd,
Count: 1,
```
I still need to write more assertions for each emitted event
but the code we've here is already a great starting point.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1903
* [forwardport] refactor(oonimkall): merge files, use proper names, zap unneeded integration tests (#627)
This diff forward ports f894427d24edc9a03fc78306d0093e7b51c46c25.
Forward porting note: this diff is slightly different from the original
mentioned above because it carries forward changes mentioned in the
previous diff caused by a different way of handling a failed measurement
in the master branch compared to the release/3.11 branch.
Move everything that looked like "task's model" inside of the
taskmodel.go file, for consistency.
Make sure it's clear some variables are event types.
Rename the concrete `runner` as `runnerForTask`.
Also, remove now-unnecessary (and flaky!) integration tests
for the `runnerForTask` type.
While there, notice there were wrong URLs that were generated
during the probe-engine => probe-cli move and fix them.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1903
* [forwardport] refactor(oonimkall): we can simplify StartTask tests (#628)
This diff forward ports dcf2986c2032d8185d58d24130a7f2c2d61ef2fb.
* refactor(oonimkall): we can simplify StartTask tests
We have enough checks for runnerForTask. So we do not need to
duplicate them when checking for StartTask.
While there, refactor how we start tasks to remove the need for
extra runner functions.
This is the objective I wanted to achieve for oonimkall:
1. less duplicate tests, and
2. more unit tests (which are less flaky)
At this point, we're basically done (pending forwardporting to
master) with https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1903.
* fix(oonimkall): TestStartTaskGood shouldn't cancel the test
This creates a race condition where the test may fail if we cannot
complete the whole "Example" test in less than one second.
This should explain the build failures I've seen so far and why
I didn't see those failures when running locally.
* [forwardport] fix(webconnectivity): send specific user agent (#615)
This forward ports b8c530388e66b2cc86abad26d077202782e4a823 to `master`.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1902
* fix(websteps): send the correct user agent
Also related to https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1902: let's just
ensure that also websteps behaves in the correct way.
This diff changes the algorithm used by webconnectivity's
httpanalysis.go to ignore any status code <= 0 rather
than just ignoring the == 0 case.
Make sure we add test cases for when the control's status
code is negative rather than being zero.
While there, simplify code where boolean checks could be
more compact according to staticcheck.
Closes https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1825
This change should simplify the pipeline's job.
Reference issue: https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1817.
I previously dismissed this possibility, but now it seems clear it
is simpler to have a very tabular data format internally and to
convert such a format to OONI's data format when serializing.
The OONI data format is what the pipeline expects, but processing
is easier with a more linear/tabular format.
This diff adds the prototype websteps implementation that used
to live at https://github.com/ooni/probe-cli/pull/506.
The code is reasonably good already and it's pointing to a roaming
test helper that I've properly configured.
You can run websteps with:
```
./miniooni -n websteps
```
This will go over the test list for your country.
At this stage the mechanics of the experiment is set, but we
still need to have a conversation on the following topics:
1. whether we're okay with reusing the data format used by other
OONI experiments, or we would like to use a more compact data
format (which may either be a more compact JSON or we can choose
to always submit compressed measurements for websteps);
2. the extent to which we would like to keep the measurement as
a collection of "the experiment saw this" and "the test helper
saw that" and let the pipeline choose an overall score: this is
clearly an option, but there is also the opposite option to
build a summary of the measurement on the probe.
Compared to the previous prototype of websteps, the main
architectural change we have here is that we are following
the point of view of the probe and the test helper is
much more dumb. Basically, the probe will choose which
redirection to follow and ask the test helper every time
it discovers a new URL to measure it w/o redirections.
Reference issue: https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1733
When preparing a tutorial for netxlite, I figured it is easier
to tell people "hey, this is the package you should use for all
low-level networking stuff" rather than introducing people to
a set of packages working together where some piece of functionality
is here and some other piece is there.
Part of https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1591
We need still to add similar wrappers to internal/netxlite but we
will adopt a saner approach to error wrapping this time.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1591
The legacy part for now is internal/errorsx. It will stay there until
I figure out whether it also needs some extra bug fixing.
The good part is now in internal/netxlite/errorsx and contains all the
logic for mapping errors. We need to further improve upon this logic
by writing more thorough integration tests for QUIC.
We also need to copy the various dialer, conn, etc adapters that set
errors. We will put them inside netxlite and we will generate errors in
a way that is less crazy with respect to the major operation. (The
idea is to always wrap, given that now we measure in an incremental way
and we don't measure every operation together.)
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 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
* fix(netxlite): make default resolver converge faster
Closes https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1726
* Update internal/netxlite/resolver.go
* fix(ndt7): adapt tests after previous change
Because now we're running the DNS resolution inside a goroutine
with a child context, the returned error string is different.
The previous error said we canceled the whole dialing operation,
while now we see directly that the context was canceled.
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
The quic-go library does not support it anymore. So, let us be consistent
and remove any reference to h3-29 from our codebase.
Closes https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1740.
This diff enables `websteps` to use uTLS for TLS parroting. It integrates the `oohttp.StdlibTransport` wrapper which uses the `ooni/oohttp` fork. `oohttp` supports TLS-like connections like `utls.Conn`.
As a prototype, the testhelper and `websteps` code now uses the `utls.HelloChrome_Auto` fingerprint, i.e. the simulated TLS fingerprint of the Google Chrome browser.
It is a further contribution for my GSoC project.
Reference issue: https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1733