This device is a dual 5GHz device. It is recommended to manually change the
radio of the first device to the lower 5GHz channels and the second radio
to the upper 5GHz channels.
The commit b3762fc61c ("gluon-client-bridge: move IPv4 local subnet route
to br-client (#1312)") moves the IPv4 prefix from the local-port interface
to br-client. A client requesting an IPv4 connection to the IPv4 anycast
address of the node (the device running gluon) will create following
packets:
1. ARP packet from client to get the MAC of the mac address of the anycast
IPv4 address
2. ARP reply from node to client with the anycast MAC address for the IPv4
anycast address
3. IPv4 packet from client which requires reply (for example ICMP echo
request)
4. ARP request for the client MAC address for its IPv4 address in prefix4
(done with the mac address of br-client and transmitted over br-client)
5. IPv4 packet from node (transmitted over br-client with br-client MAC
address) as reply for the client IPv4 packet (for example ICMP echo
reply)
The step 4 and 5 are problematic here because packets use the node specific
MAC addresses from br-client instead of the anycast MAC address. The client
will receive the ARP packet with the node specific MAC address and change
their own neighbor IP (translation) table. This will for example break the
access to the status page to the connected device or the anycast DNS
forwarder implementation when the client roams to a different node.
This reverts commit b3762fc61c and adds an
upgrade code to remove local_node_route on on existing installations.
The commit b3762fc61c ("gluon-client-bridge: move IPv4 local subnet route
to br-client (#1312)") moves the IPv4 prefix from the local-port interface
to br-client. A client requesting an IPv4 connection to the IPv4 anycast
address of the node (the device running gluon) will create following
packets:
1. ARP packet from client to get the MAC of the mac address of the anycast
IPv4 address
2. ARP reply from node to client with the anycast MAC address for the IPv4
anycast address
3. IPv4 packet from client which requires reply (for example ICMP echo
request)
4. ARP request for the client MAC address for its IPv4 address in prefix4
(done with the mac address of br-client and transmitted over br-client)
5. IPv4 packet from node (transmitted over br-client with br-client MAC
address) as reply for the client IPv4 packet (for example ICMP echo
reply)
The step 4 is extremely problematic here. ARP replies with the anycast IPv4
address must not be submitted or received via bat0 - expecially not when it
contains an node specific MAC address as source. When it is still done then
the wrong MAC address is stored in the batadv DAT cache and ARP packet is
maybe even forwarded to clients. This latter is especially true for ARP
requests which are broadcast and will be flooded to the complete mesh.
Clients will see these ARP packets and change their own neighbor IP
(translation) table. They will then try to submit the packets for IPv4
anycast addresses to the complete wrong device in the mesh. This will for
example break the access to the status page to the connected device or the
anycast DNS forwarder implementation. Especially the latter causes extreme
latency when clients try to connect to server using a domain name or even
breaks the connection setup process completely. Both are caused by the
unanswered DNS requests which at first glance look like packet loss.
An node must therefore take care of:
* not transmitting ARP packets related to the anycast IPv4 address over
bat0
* drop ARP packets related to the anycast IPv4 when they are received on
bat0 from a still broken node
* don't accept ARP packets related to the anycast IPv4 replies on local
node when it comes from bat0
Fixes: b3762fc61c ("gluon-client-bridge: move IPv4 local subnet route to br-client (#1312)")
optional = true does not make sense without a datatype. When no datatype is
set, the empty string will be a valid value, so data is never unset in the
write function. Restore the minlength(1) datatype so the contact setting is
deleted as intended when no value is provided.
* do not allow to obligatorily require contact information
* add remark that the data is provided voluntarily
* mention how to delete the data
* be very clear about the fact that the data being entered is public and
can be downloaded and processed by anyone.
This commit adds information about:
- how cpu time is spent since boot in jiffies (1/100*sek) (cpu)
- the value is summed for all cores, so in 10 seconds the
summed values will increase by 4000, if the cpu has
4 cores
- context switches since boot (ctxt)
- interrupt counters since boot (intr, softirq)
- forks since boot (processes)
{ "stat": {
"cpu": {
"user": 219403,
"nice": 1714,
"system": 75159,
"idle": 2727739,
"iowait": 2943,
"irq": 0,
"softirq": 571
},
"intr": 8426340,
"ctxt": 50992590,
"processes": 10549,
"softirq": 5161884
} }
In multidomain setups, VXLAN is enabled by default, but can be disabled in
domain configs using the mesh/vxlan option. In single domain setups, the
mesh/vxlan option is mandatory.
The UCI option for legacy mode is removed.
Fixes#1364
dnsmasq's caching is severly broken and does not handle all answer records
equally. In particular, its cached answers are missing DNSKEY and DS
records, breaking DNSSEC validation on clients.
Remove the cache for now. It may return if dnsmasq is fixed or we switch to
a different resolver.
net.ipv6.conf.br-client.forwarding is moved from gluon-client-bridge to
gluon-mesh-batman-adv, as the setting is not useful with non-bridged
protocols.
With the batman-adv multicast support compiled back in again we end up
with multicast addresses in the batman-adv translation table.
Currently we wrongly interpret multicast addresses returned by TT as a
unique host, too, which adds them with a source address filter to
ebtables as well. However, the source address of an ethernet frames is
never supposed to be a multicat one.
This leads to unnecessary entries in ebtables. Fixing this by ignoring
those MAC addreses returned by TT which have the multicast bit set.
Signed-off-by: Linus Lüssing <linus.luessing@c0d3.blue>
This setting allows to enforce manually setting a hostname.
In the initial configuration, the hostname field is now left empty; when
setting the hostname is not enforced, the default hostname is shown as the
field placeholder.
Fixes#1139
Our VXLAN setup was changed to accept VXLAN packets without checksum almost
2 months ago, so we can disable sending the checksums now as well. Slightly
improves performance.
The RFC standard multicast querier interval is 120s. Our querier uses in
interval of 20s for better support of roaming clients, but our robustness
setting of 3 leads to external queriers using the standard interval to be
timeout after only 60s, leading to frequent "querier appeared/disappeared"
messages. Increase robustness so that external queriers with any interval
<180s are supported.
We must ensure that each node becomes IGMP/MLD querier for its local
clients; having only a single querier for the whole mesh is generally
unreliable, leading to frequent "IGMP/MLD querier appeared/disappeared"
messages from batman-adv and unreliable snooping.
In smaller meshes it might be interesting only segment querier domains, but
allow membership reports to pass through the mesh, in order to support
snooping switches outside the mesh without special configuration. A
site.conf switch is provided to control this behaviour.
Fixes#1320
A downside of this behaviour is that the page does not work for IPv4-only
clients, as the redirect will always point at an IPv6 address.
Still, it seems like a good idea to enforce the redirect even from the IPv4
next-node address, as switching nodes while being connected to the status
page would lead to unexpected behaviour.
All Access-Control-Allow-Origin are removed to improve users' privacy. As
the status page API is thus not useful without the status page anymore,
merge them back into a single package.
The status-page-api respondd provider is removed as well.
Fixes#1194
This new status page is significantly smaller than the old one. It always
loads its resources from the same host as the page itself, not requiring
cross-origin requests anymore.
It also uses the common i18n infrastructure of gluon-web.
Fixes#914
- CGI script and index.html are moved from gluon-web to
gluon-config-mode-core, the script is renamed to 'config'
- gluon-web and gluon-web-model base views and i18n files are symlinked
into the new path
- gluon-web-theme is renamed to gluon-config-mode-theme and installs
directly into the new path
- all gluon-web-* models, controllers and views are moved into the new
path