We're currently use jafar for QA and jafar is a better mechanism,
even though it is not portable outside of Linux.
This self censorship mechanism was less cool and added a bunch
of (also cognitive) complexity to netx.
If we ever want to go down a self censorship like road, we probably
want to do as little work as possible in the problem and as much
work as possible inside a helper like jafar.
Part of https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1591.
* fix(webconnectivity): allow measuring https://1.1.1.1
There were two issues preventing us from doing so:
1. in netx, the address resolver was too later in the resolver
chain. Therefore, its result wasn't added to the events.
2. when building the DNSCache (in httpget.go), we didn't consider
the case where the input is an address. We need to treat this
case specially to make sure there is no DNSCache.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1376.
* fix: add unit tests for code making the dnscache
* fix(netx): make sure all tests pass
* chore: bump webconnectivity version
This is how I did it:
1. `git clone https://github.com/ooni/probe-engine internal/engine`
2. ```
(cd internal/engine && git describe --tags)
v0.23.0
```
3. `nvim go.mod` (merging `go.mod` with `internal/engine/go.mod`
4. `rm -rf internal/.git internal/engine/go.{mod,sum}`
5. `git add internal/engine`
6. `find . -type f -name \*.go -exec sed -i 's@/ooni/probe-engine@/ooni/probe-cli/v3/internal/engine@g' {} \;`
7. `go build ./...` (passes)
8. `go test -race ./...` (temporary failure on RiseupVPN)
9. `go mod tidy`
10. this commit message
Once this piece of work is done, we can build a new version of `ooniprobe` that
is using `internal/engine` directly. We need to do more work to ensure all the
other functionality in `probe-engine` (e.g. making mobile packages) are still WAI.
Part of https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1335