Otherwise, the call to daemon() could close filedescriptors in use by libevent
itself; for example if it uses kqueue or epoll instead of a select() or poll()
backend.
If the LISTEN_FDS environment variable is set and tinc is run in the
foreground, tinc will use filedescriptors 3 to 3 + LISTEN_FDS for its listening
TCP sockets. For now, tinc will create matching listening UDP sockets itself.
There is no dependency on systemd or on libsystemd-daemon.
Seeking in files and rewriting parts of them does not seem to work properly on
Windows. Instead, when old RSA keys are found when generating new ones, the
file containing the old keys is copied to a temporary file where the changes
are made, and that file is renamed back to the original filename. On Windows,
we cannot atomically replace files with a rename(), so we need to move the
original file out of the way first. If anything fails, the new code will warn
that the user has to solve the problem by hand.
This allows tincctl to receive log messages from a running tincd,
independent of what is logged to syslog or to file. Tincctl can receive
debug messages with an arbitrary level.
Apart from the platform specific tun/tap driver, link with the dummy and
raw_socket devices, and optionally with support for UML and VDE devices.
At runtime, the DeviceType option can be used to select which driver to
use.
Treat netname "." in a special way as if there was no netname
specified. Before, f.e. tincd -n. -k didn't work as it tried
to open /var/run/tinc-.pid. Now -n. works as if there was no
-n option is specified.
Signed-Off-By: Michael Tokarev <mjt@tls.msk.ru>
Options given on the command line have precedence over configuration from files.
This can be useful, for example, for a roaming node, for which 'ConnectTo' and
<host>.Address depends on its location.
The control socket code was completely different from how meta connections are
handled, resulting in lots of extra code to handle requests. Also, not every
operating system has UNIX sockets, so we have to resort to another type of
sockets or pipes for those anyway. To reduce code duplication and make control
sockets work the same on all platforms, we now just connect to the TCP port
where tincd is already listening on.
To authenticate, the program that wants to control a running tinc daemon must
send the contents of a cookie file. The cookie is a random 256 bits number that
is regenerated every time tincd starts. The cookie file should only be readable
by the same user that can start a tincd.
Instead of the binary-ish protocol previously used, we now use an ASCII
protocol similar to that of the meta connections, but this can still change.
UNIX domain sockets, of course, don't exist on Windows. For now, when compiling
tinc in a MinGW environment, try to use a TCP socket bound to localhost as an
alternative.
Git's log and blame tools were used to find out which files had significant
contributions from authors who sent in patches that were applied before we used
git.