By default, Windows sets the SIO_UDP_CONNRESET and SIO_UDP_NETRESET
options on created UDP sockets. These behaviours make the UDP socket
ICMP-aware; when the system gets an ICMP message (e.g. an "ICMP Port
Unreachable" message, in the case of SIO_UDP_CONNRESET), it will cause
the underlying UDP socket to throw an error. Confusingly, this can occur
even on reads, if the same UDP socket is used to write a packet that
triggers this response.
The Go runtime disabled the SIO_UDP_CONNRESET behavior in 3114bd6, but
did not change SIO_UDP_NETRESET–probably because that socket option
isn't documented particularly well.
Various other networking code seem to disable this behaviour, such as
the Godot game engine (godotengine/godot#22332) and the Eclipse TCF
agent (link below). Others appear to work around this by ignoring the
error returned (anacrolix/dht#16, among others).
For now, until it's clear whether this ends up in the upstream Go
implementation or not, let's also disable the SIO_UDP_NETRESET in a
similar manner to SIO_UDP_CONNRESET.
Eclipse TCF agent: https://gitlab.eclipse.org/eclipse/tcf/tcf.agent/-/blob/master/agent/tcf/framework/mdep.c
Updates #10976
Updates golang/go#68614
Signed-off-by: Andrew Dunham <andrew@du.nham.ca>
Change-Id: I70a2f19855f8dec1bfb82e63f6d14fc4a22ed5c3
This updates all source files to use a new standard header for copyright
and license declaration. Notably, copyright no longer includes a date,
and we now use the standard SPDX-License-Identifier header.
This commit was done almost entirely mechanically with perl, and then
some minimal manual fixes.
Updates #6865
Signed-off-by: Will Norris <will@tailscale.com>
The //go:build syntax was introduced in Go 1.17:
https://go.dev/doc/go1.17#build-lines
gofmt has kept the +build and go:build lines in sync since
then, but enough time has passed. Time to remove them.
Done with:
perl -i -npe 's,^// \+build.*\n,,' $(git grep -l -F '+build')
Signed-off-by: Brad Fitzpatrick <bradfitz@tailscale.com>
This is usually the same as the requested interface, but on some
unixes can vary based on device number allocation, and on Windows
it's the GUID instead of the pretty name, since everything relating
to configuration wants the GUID.
Signed-off-by: David Anderson <danderson@tailscale.com>