With this change, we are now able to change more dependent code to simplify
the way in which we create and manage resolvers.
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
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
This is the extension of https://github.com/ooni/probe-cli/pull/431, and my final deliverable for GSoC 2021.
The diff introduces:
1) The new `testhelper` which supports testing multiple IP endpoints per domain and introduces HTTP/3 control measurements. The specification of the `testhelper` can be found at https://github.com/ooni/spec/pull/219. The `testhelper` algorithm consists of three main steps:
* `InitialChecks` verifies that the input URL can be parsed, has an expected scheme, and contains a valid domain name.
* `Explore` enumerates all the URLs that it discovers by redirection from the original URL, or by detecting h3 support at the target host.
* `Generate` performs a step-by-step measurement of each discovered URL.
2) A prototype of the corresponding new experiment `websteps` which uses the control measurement of the `testhelper` to know which URLs to measure, and what to expect. The prototype does not yet have:
* unit and integration tests,
* an analysis tool to compare the control and the probe measurement.
This PR is my final deliverable as it is the outcome of the trials, considerations and efforts of my GSoC weeks at OONI.
It fully integrates HTTP/3 (QUIC) support which has been only used in the `urlgetter` experiment until now.
Related issues: https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1729 and https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1733.
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.
* fix(all): introduce and use iox.ReadAllContext
This improvement over the ioutil.ReadAll utility returns early
if the context expires. This enables us to unblock stuck code in
case there's censorship confounding the TCP stack.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1417.
Compared to the functionality postulated in the above mentioned
issue, I choose to be more generic and separate limiting the
maximum body size (not implemented here) from using the context
to return early when reading a body (or any other reader).
After implementing iox.ReadAllContext, I made sure we always
use it everywhere in the tree instead of ioutil.ReadAll.
This includes many parts of the codebase where in theory we don't
need iox.ReadAllContext. Though, changing all the places makes
checking whether we're not using ioutil.ReadAll where we should
not be using it easy: `git grep` should return no lines.
* Update internal/iox/iox_test.go
* fix(ndt7): treat context errors as non-errors
The rationale is explained by the comment documenting reduceErr.
* Update internal/engine/experiment/ndt7/download.go
* refactor(atomicx): move outside the engine package
After merging probe-engine into probe-cli, my impression is that we have
too much unnecessary nesting of packages in this repository.
The idea of this commit and of a bunch of following commits will instead
be to reduce the nesting and simplify the structure.
While there, improve the documentation.
* fix: always use the atomicx package
For consistency, never use sync/atomic and always use ./internal/atomicx
so we can just grep and make sure we're not risking to crash if we make
a subtle mistake on a 32 bit platform.
While there, mention in the contributing guidelines that we want to
always prefer the ./internal/atomicx package over sync/atomic.
* fix(atomicx): remove unnecessary constructor
We don't need a constructor here. The default constructed `&Int64{}`
instance is already usable and the constructor does not add anything to
what we are doing, rather it just creates extra confusion.
* cleanup(atomicx): we are not using Float64
Because atomicx.Float64 is unused, we can safely zap it.
* cleanup(atomicx): simplify impl and improve tests
We can simplify the implementation by using defer and by letting
the Load() method call Add(0).
We can improve tests by making many goroutines updated the
atomic int64 value concurrently.
* refactor(fsx): can live in the ./internal pkg
Let us reduce the amount of nesting. While there, ensure that the
package only exports the bare minimum, and improve the documentation
of the tests, to ease reading the code.
* refactor: move runtimex to ./internal
* refactor: move shellx into the ./internal package
While there, remove unnecessary dependency between packages.
While there, specify in the contributing guidelines that
one should use x/sys/execabs instead of os/exec.
* refactor: move ooapi into the ./internal pkg
* refactor(humanize): move to ./internal and better docs
* refactor: move platform to ./internal
* refactor(randx): move to ./internal
* refactor(multierror): move into the ./internal pkg
* refactor(kvstore): all kvstores in ./internal
Rather than having part of the kvstore inside ./internal/engine/kvstore
and part in ./internal/engine/kvstore.go, let us put every piece of code
that is kvstore related into the ./internal/kvstore package.
* fix(kvstore): always return ErrNoSuchKey on Get() error
It should help to use the kvstore everywhere removing all the
copies that are lingering around the tree.
* sessionresolver: make KVStore mandatory
Simplifies implementation. While there, use the ./internal/kvstore
package rather than having our private implementation.
* fix(ooapi): use the ./internal/kvstore package
* fix(platform): better documentation
* refactor: move more commands to internal/cmd
Part of https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1335.
We would like all commands to be at the same level of engine
rather than inside engine (now that we can do it).
* fix: update .gitignore
* refactor: also move jafar outside engine
* We should be good now?