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.
## 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
* feat: run ~always netxlite integration tests
This diff ensures that we check on windows, linux, macos that our
fundamental networking library (netxlite) works.
We combine unit and integration tests.
This work is part of https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1733, where
I want to have more strong guarantees about the foundations.
* fix(filtering/tls_test.go): make portable on Windows
The trick here is to use the wrapped error so to normalize the
different errors messages we see on Windows.
* fix(netxlite/quic_test.go): make portable on windows
Rather than using the zero port, use the `x` port which fails
when the stdlib is parsing the address.
The zero port seems to work on Windows while it does not on Unix.
* fix(serialresolver_test.go): make error more timeout than before
This seems enough to convince Go on Windows about this error
being really a timeout timeouty timeouted thingie.
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
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
They are now more readable. I'll do another pass and start
separating integration testing from unit testing.
I think we need to have some always on integration testing
for netxlite that runs on macOS, linux, and windows.
See https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1591
This is the last bit of functionality we need before rewriting a
chunk of websteps to use netxlite.
To rewrite most of it, we still need to move over:
1. dnstransport code
2. errorsx code
With both done, netxlite is a good library for websteps as well
as for most other operations we perform outside of the experiments.
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
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
* refactor: cleaner way of passing a UDPConn around
Also part of https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1505
* Update internal/engine/netx/quicdialer/connectionstate.go
Auto-configure every relevant TLS field as close as possible to
where it's actually used.
As a side effect, add support for mocking the creation of a TLS
connection, which should possibly be useful for uTLS?
Work that is part of https://github.com/ooni/probe/issues/1505