Some ISPs block the ICMP Fragmentation Needed packets that tinc sends. We
clamp the MSS of IPv4 SYN packets to prevent hosts behind those ISPs from
sending too large packets.
For IPv6, the minimum MTU is 1280 (RFC 2460), for IPv4 the minimum is actually
68, but this is such a low limit that it will probably hurt performance, so we
do as if it is 576 (the minimum packet size hosts should be able to handle, RFC
791). If we detect a path MTU smaller than those minima, and we have to handle
a packet that is bigger than the PMTU but smaller than those minima, we forward
them via TCP instead of fragmenting or returning ICMP packets.
Before it would check all addresses, and not learn an address if another node
already claimed that address. This caused fast roaming to fail, the code from
commit 6f6f426b35 was never triggered.
We now handle MAC Subnets in exactly the same way as IPv4 and IPv6 Subnets.
This also fixes a problem that causes unncessary broadcasting of unicast
packets in VPNs where some daemons run 1.0.10 and some run other versions.
This feature is not necessary anymore since we have tools like valgrind today
that can catch stack overflow errors before they make a backtrace in gdb
impossible.
During the path MTU discovery phase, we might not know the maximum MTU yet, but
we do know a safe minimum. If we encounter a packet that is larger than that
the minimum, we now send it via TCP instead to ensure it arrives. We also
allow large packets that we cannot fragment or create ICMP replies for to be
sent via TCP.
If PMTUDiscovery is enabled, and we see a unicast packet that is larger than
the path MTU in switch mode, treat it just like we would do in router mode.
Apparently FreeBSD likes to send out neighbor solicitation requests, even on a
tun interface where this is completely pointless. These requests do not have an
option header containing a link layer address, so the proxy-neighborsol code
was treating these requests as invalid. We now handle such requests, and send
back equally pointless replies, also without a link layer address. This seems
to satisfy FreeBSD.
When no session key is known for a node, or when it is doing PMTU discovery but
no MTU probes have returned yet, packets are sent via TCP. Some logic is added
to make sure intermediate nodes continue forwarding via TCP. The per-node
packet queue is now no longer necessary and has been removed.