Commit Graph

4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Simone Basso
f3912188e1
getaddrinfo: fix CGO_ENABLED=0 and record resolver type (#765)
After https://github.com/ooni/probe-cli/pull/764, the build for
CGO_ENABLED=0 has been broken for miniooni:

https://github.com/ooni/probe-cli/runs/6636995859?check_suite_focus=true

Likewise, it's not possible to run tests with CGO_ENABLED=0.

To make tests work with `CGO_ENABLED=0`, I needed to sacrifice some
unit tests run for the CGO case. It is not fully clear to me what was happening
here, but basically `getaddrinfo_cgo_test.go` was compiled with CGO
being disabled, even though the ``//go:build cgo` flag was specified.

Additionally, @hellais previously raised a valid point in the review
of https://github.com/ooni/probe-cli/pull/698:

> Another issue we should consider is that, if I understand how
> this works correctly, depending on whether or not we have built
> with CGO_ENABLED=0 on or not, we are going to be measuring
> things in a different way (using our cgo inspired getaddrinfo
> implementation or using netgo). This might present issues when
> analyzing or interpreting the data.
>
> Do we perhaps want to add some field to the output data format that
> gives us an indication of which DNS resolution code was used to
> generate the the metric?

This comment is relevant to the current commit because
https://github.com/ooni/probe-cli/pull/698 is the previous
iteration of https://github.com/ooni/probe-cli/pull/764.

So, while fixing the build and test issues, let us also distinguish
between the CGO_ENABLED=1 and CGO_ENABLED=0 cases.

Before this commit, OONI used "system" to indicate the case where
we were using net.DefaultResolver. This behavior dates back to the
Measurement Kit days. While it is true that ooni/probe-engine and
ooni/probe-cli could have been using netgo in the past when we
said "system" as the resolver, it also seems reasonable to continue
to use "system" top indicate getaddrinfo.

So, the choice here is basically to use "netgo" from now on to
indicate the cases in which we were built with CGO_ENABLED=0.

This change will need to be documented into ooni/spec along with
the introduction of the `android_dns_cache_no_data` error.

## 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/2029
- [x] if you changed anything related how experiments work and you need to reflect these changes in the ooni/spec repository, please link to the related ooni/spec pull request: https://github.com/ooni/spec/pull/242
2022-05-30 07:34:25 +02:00
Simone Basso
d922bd9afc
cleanup: mark more integration tests as !short mode (#755)
The objective is to make PR checks run much faster.

See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/2113 for context.

Regarding netxlite's tests:

Checking for every commit on master or on a release branch is
good enough and makes pull requests faster than one minute since
netxlite for windows is now 1m slower than coverage.

We're losing some coverage but coverage from integration tests
is not so good anyway, so I'm not super sad about this loss.
2022-05-24 21:01:15 +02:00
Simone Basso
e983a5cffb
feat: introduce the tcpping experiment (#696)
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/2030 (reference issue) and https://github.com/ooni/spec/pull/235 (spec).
2022-05-09 09:33:18 +02:00
kelmenhorst
88236a4352
feat: add an experimental quicping experiment (#677)
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

```
2022-02-14 19:21:16 +01:00