1CDDL HEADER START 2 3The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the 4Common Development and Distribution License (the "License"). 5You may not use this file except in compliance with the License. 6 7You can obtain a copy of the license at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE 8or http://www.opensolaris.org/os/licensing. 9See the License for the specific language governing permissions 10and limitations under the License. 11 12When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each 13file and include the License file at usr/src/OPENSOLARIS.LICENSE. 14If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the 15fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying 16information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner] 17 18CDDL HEADER END 19 20Copyright 2007 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved. 21Use is subject to license terms. 22 23 24** PLEASE NOTE: 25** 26** This document discusses aspects of the DHCPv4 client design that have 27** since changed (e.g., DLPI is no longer used). However, since those 28** aspects affected the DHCPv6 design, the discussion has been left for 29** historical record. 30 31 32DHCPv6 Client Low-Level Design 33 34Introduction 35 36 This project adds DHCPv6 client-side (not server) support to 37 Solaris. Future projects may add server-side support as well as 38 enhance the basic capabilities added here. These future projects 39 are not discussed in detail in this document. 40 41 This document assumes that the reader is familiar with the following 42 other documents: 43 44 - RFC 3315: the primary description of DHCPv6 45 - RFCs 2131 and 2132: IPv4 DHCP 46 - RFCs 2461 and 2462: IPv6 NDP and stateless autoconfiguration 47 - RFC 3484: IPv6 default address selection 48 - ifconfig(1M): Solaris IP interface configuration 49 - in.ndpd(1M): Solaris IPv6 Neighbor and Router Discovery daemon 50 - dhcpagent(1M): Solaris DHCP client 51 - dhcpinfo(1): Solaris DHCP parameter utility 52 - ndpd.conf(4): in.ndpd configuration file 53 - netstat(1M): Solaris network status utility 54 - snoop(1M): Solaris network packet capture and inspection 55 - "DHCPv6 Client High-Level Design" 56 57 Several terms from those documents (such as the DHCPv6 IA_NA and 58 IAADDR options) are used without further explanation in this 59 document; see the reference documents above for details. 60 61 The overall plan is to enhance the existing Solaris dhcpagent so 62 that it is able to process DHCPv6. It would also have been possible 63 to create a new, separate daemon process for this, or to integrate 64 the feature into in.ndpd. These alternatives, and the reason for 65 the chosen design, are discussed in Appendix A. 66 67 This document discusses the internal design issues involved in the 68 protocol implementation, and with the associated components (such as 69 in.ndpd, snoop, and the kernel's source address selection 70 algorithm). It does not discuss the details of the protocol itself, 71 which are more than adequately described in the RFC, nor the 72 individual lines of code, which will be in the code review. 73 74 As a cross-reference, Appendix B has a summary of the components 75 involved and the changes to each. 76 77 78Background 79 80 In order to discuss the design changes for DHCPv6, it's necessary 81 first to talk about the current IPv4-only design, and the 82 assumptions built into that design. 83 84 The main data structure used in dhcpagent is the 'struct ifslist'. 85 Each instance of this structure represents a Solaris logical IP 86 interface under DHCP's control. It also represents the shared state 87 with the DHCP server that granted the address, the address itself, 88 and copies of the negotiated options. 89 90 There is one list in dhcpagent containing all of the IP interfaces 91 that are under DHCP control. IP interfaces not under DHCP control 92 (for example, those that are statically addressed) are not included 93 in this list, even when plumbed on the system. These ifslist 94 entries are chained like this: 95 96 ifsheadp -> ifslist -> ifslist -> ifslist -> NULL 97 net0 net0:1 net1 98 99 Each ifslist entry contains the address, mask, lease information, 100 interface name, hardware information, packets, protocol state, and 101 timers. The name of the logical IP interface under DHCP's control 102 is also the name used in the administrative interfaces (dhcpinfo, 103 ifconfig) and when logging events. 104 105 Each entry holds open a DLPI stream and two sockets. The DLPI 106 stream is nulled-out with a filter when not in use, but still 107 consumes system resources. (Most significantly, it causes data 108 copies in the driver layer that end up sapping performance.) 109 110 The entry storage is managed by a insert/hold/release/remove model 111 and reference counts. In this model, insert_ifs() allocates a new 112 ifslist entry and inserts it into the global list, with the global 113 list holding a reference. remove_ifs() removes it from the global 114 list and drops that reference. hold_ifs() and release_ifs() are 115 used by data structures that refer to ifslist entries, such as timer 116 entries, to make sure that the ifslist entry isn't freed until the 117 timer has been dispatched or deleted. 118 119 The design is single-threaded, so code that walks the global list 120 needn't bother taking holds on the ifslist structure. Only 121 references that may be used at a different time (i.e., pointers 122 stored in other data structures) need to be recorded. 123 124 Packets are handled using PKT (struct dhcp; <netinet/dhcp.h>), 125 PKT_LIST (struct dhcp_list; <dhcp_impl.h>), and dhcp_pkt_t (struct 126 dhcp_pkt; "packet.h"). PKT is just the RFC 2131 DHCP packet 127 structure, and has no additional information, such as packet length. 128 PKT_LIST contains a PKT pointer, length, decoded option arrays, and 129 linkage for putting the packet in a list. Finally, dhcp_pkt_t has a 130 PKT pointer and length values suitable for modifying the packet. 131 132 Essentially, PKT_LIST is a wrapper for received packets, and 133 dhcp_pkt_t is a wrapper for packets to be sent. 134 135 The basic PKT structure is used in dhcpagent, inetboot, in.dhcpd, 136 libdhcpagent, libdhcputil, and others. PKT_LIST is used 137 in a similar set of places, including the kernel NFS modules. 138 dhcp_pkt_t is (as the header file implies) limited to dhcpagent. 139 140 In addition to these structures, dhcpagent maintains a set of 141 internal supporting abstractions. Two key ones involved in this 142 project are the "async operation" and the "IPC action." An async 143 operation encapsulates the actions needed for a given operation, so 144 that if cancellation is needed, there's a single point where the 145 associated resources can be freed. An IPC action represents the 146 user state related to the private interface used by ifconfig. 147 148 149DHCPv6 Inherent Differences 150 151 DHCPv6 naturally has some commonality with IPv4 DHCP, but also has 152 some significant differences. 153 154 Unlike IPv4 DHCP, DHCPv6 relies on link-local IP addresses to do its 155 work. This means that, on Solaris, the client doesn't need DLPI to 156 perform any of the I/O; regular IP sockets will do the job. It also 157 means that, unlike IPv4 DHCP, DHCPv6 does not need to obtain a lease 158 for the address used in its messages to the server. The system 159 provides the address automatically. 160 161 IPv4 DHCP expects some messages from the server to be broadcast. 162 DHCPv6 has no such mechanism; all messages from the server to the 163 client are unicast. In the case where the client and server aren't 164 on the same subnet, a relay agent is used to get the unicast replies 165 back to the client's link-local address. 166 167 With IPv4 DHCP, a single address plus configuration options is 168 leased with a given client ID and a single state machine instance, 169 and the implementation binds that to a single IP logical interface 170 specified by the user. The lease has a "Lease Time," a required 171 option, as well as two timers, called T1 (renew) and T2 (rebind), 172 which are controlled by regular options. 173 174 DHCPv6 uses a single client/server session to control the 175 acquisition of configuration options and "identity associations" 176 (IAs). The identity associations, in turn, contain lists of 177 addresses for the client to use and the T1/T2 timer values. Each 178 individual address has its own preferred and valid lifetime, with 179 the address being marked "deprecated" at the end of the preferred 180 interval, and removed at the end of the valid interval. 181 182 IPv4 DHCP leaves many of the retransmit decisions up to the client, 183 and some things (such as RELEASE and DECLINE) are sent just once. 184 Others (such as the REQUEST message used for renew and rebind) are 185 dealt with by heuristics. DHCPv6 treats each message to the server 186 as a separate transaction, and resends each message using a common 187 retransmission mechanism. DHCPv6 also has separate messages for 188 Renew, Rebind, and Confirm rather than reusing the Request 189 mechanism. 190 191 The set of options (which are used to convey configuration 192 information) for each protocol are distinct. Notably, two of the 193 mistakes from IPv4 DHCP have been fixed: DHCPv6 doesn't carry a 194 client name, and doesn't attempt to impersonate a routing protocol 195 by setting a "default route." 196 197 Another welcome change is the lack of a netmask/prefix length with 198 DHCPv6. Instead, the client uses the Router Advertisement prefixes 199 to set the correct interface netmask. This reduces the number of 200 databases that need to be kept in sync. (The equivalent mechanism 201 in IPv4 would have been the use of ICMP Address Mask Request / 202 Reply, but the BOOTP designers chose to embed it in the address 203 assignment protocol itself.) 204 205 Otherwise, DHCPv6 is similar to IPv4 DHCP. The same overall 206 renew/rebind and lease expiry strategy is used, although the state 207 machine events must now take into account multiple IAs and the fact 208 that each can cause RENEWING or REBINDING state independently. 209 210 211DHCPv6 And Solaris 212 213 The protocol distinctions above have several important implications. 214 For the logical interfaces: 215 216 - Because Solaris uses IP logical interfaces to configure 217 addresses, we must have multiple IP logical interfaces per IA 218 with IPv6. 219 220 - Because we need to support multiple addresses (and thus multiple 221 IP logical interfaces) per IA and multiple IAs per client/server 222 session, the IP logical interface name isn't a unique name for 223 the lease. 224 225 As a result, IP logical interfaces will come and go with DHCPv6, 226 just as happens with the existing stateless address 227 autoconfiguration support in in.ndpd. The logical interface names 228 (visible in ifconfig) have no administrative significance. 229 230 Fortunately, DHCPv6 does end up with one fixed name that can be used 231 to identify a session. Because DHCPv6 uses link local addresses for 232 communication with the server, the name of the IP logical interface 233 that has this link local address (normally the same as the IP 234 physical interface) can be used as an identifier for dhcpinfo and 235 logging purposes. 236 237 238Dhcpagent Redesign Overview 239 240 The redesign starts by refactoring the IP interface representation. 241 Because we need to have multiple IP logical interfaces (LIFs) for a 242 single identity association (IA), we should not store all of the 243 DHCP state information along with the LIF information. 244 245 For DHCPv6, we will need to keep LIFs on a single IP physical 246 interface (PIF) together, so this is probably also a good time to 247 reconsider the way dhcpagent represents physical interfaces. The 248 current design simply replicates the state (notably the DLPI stream, 249 but also the hardware address and other bits) among all of the 250 ifslist entries on the same physical interface. 251 252 The new design creates two lists of dhcp_pif_t entries, one list for 253 IPv4 and the other for IPv6. Each dhcp_pif_t represents a PIF, with 254 a list of dhcp_lif_t entries attached, each of which represents a 255 LIF used by dhcpagent. This structure mirrors the kernel's ill_t 256 and ipif_t interface representations. 257 258 Next, the lease-tracking needs to be refactored. DHCPv6 is the 259 functional superset in this case, as it has two lifetimes per 260 address (LIF) and IA groupings with shared T1/T2 timers. To 261 represent these groupings, we will use a new dhcp_lease_t structure. 262 IPv4 DHCP will have one such structure per state machine, while 263 DHCPv6 will have a list. (Note: the initial implementation will 264 have only one lease per DHCPv6 state machine, because each state 265 machine uses a single link-local address, a single DUID+IAID pair, 266 and supports only Non-temporary Addresses [IA_NA option]. Future 267 enhancements may use multiple leases per DHCPv6 state machine or 268 support other IA types.) 269 270 For all of these new structures, we will use the same insert/hold/ 271 release/remove model as with the original ifslist. 272 273 Finally, the remaining items (and the bulk of the original ifslist 274 members) are kept on a per-state-machine basis. As this is no 275 longer just an "interface," a new dhcp_smach_t structure will hold 276 these, and the ifslist structure is gone. 277 278 279Lease Representation 280 281 For DHCPv6, we need to track multiple LIFs per lease (IA), but we 282 also need multiple LIFs per PIF. Rather than having two sets of 283 list linkage for each LIF, we can observe that a LIF is on exactly 284 one PIF and is a member of at most one lease, and then simplify: the 285 lease structure will use a base pointer for the first LIF in the 286 lease, and a count for the number of consecutive LIFs in the PIF's 287 list of LIFs that belong to the lease. 288 289 When removing a LIF from the system, we need to decrement the count 290 of LIFs in the lease, and advance the base pointer if the LIF being 291 removed is the first one. Inserting a LIF means just moving it into 292 this list and bumping the counter. 293 294 When removing a lease from a state machine, we need to dispose of 295 the LIFs referenced. If the LIF being disposed is the main LIF for 296 a state machine, then all that we can do is canonize the LIF 297 (returning it to a default state); this represents the normal IPv4 298 DHCP operation on lease expiry. Otherwise, the lease is the owner 299 of that LIF (it was created because of a DHCPv6 IA), and disposal 300 means unplumbing the LIF from the actual system and removing the LIF 301 entry from the PIF. 302 303 304Main Structure Linkage 305 306 For IPv4 DHCP, the new linkage is straightforward. Using the same 307 system configuration example as in the initial design discussion: 308 309 +- lease +- lease +- lease 310 | ^ | ^ | ^ 311 | | | | | | 312 \ smach \ smach \ smach 313 \ ^| \ ^| \ ^| 314 v|v v|v v|v 315 lif ----> lif -> NULL lif -> NULL 316 net0 net0:1 net1 317 ^ ^ 318 | | 319 v4root -> pif --------------------> pif -> NULL 320 net0 net1 321 322 This diagram shows three separate state machines running (with 323 backpointers omitted for clarity). Each state machine has a single 324 "main" LIF with which it's associated (and named). Each also has a 325 single lease structure that points back to the same LIF (count of 326 1), because IPv4 DHCP controls a single address allocation per state 327 machine. 328 329 DHCPv6 is a bit more complex. This shows DHCPv6 running on two 330 interfaces (more or fewer interfaces are of course possible) and 331 with multiple leases on the first interface, and each lease with 332 multiple addresses (one with two addresses, the second with one). 333 334 lease ----------------> lease -> NULL lease -> NULL 335 ^ \(2) |(1) ^ \ (1) 336 | \ | | \ 337 smach \ | smach \ 338 ^ | \ | ^ | \ 339 | v v v | v v 340 lif --> lif --> lif --> lif --> NULL lif --> lif -> NULL 341 net0 net0:1 net0:4 net0:2 net1 net1:5 342 ^ ^ 343 | | 344 v6root -> pif ----------------------------------> pif -> NULL 345 net0 net1 346 347 Note that there's intentionally no ordering based on name in the 348 list of LIFs. Instead, the contiguous LIF structures in that list 349 represent the addresses in each lease. The logical interfaces 350 themselves are allocated and numbered by the system kernel, so they 351 may not be sequential, and there may be gaps in the list if other 352 entities (such as in.ndpd) are also configuring interfaces. 353 354 Note also that with IPv4 DHCP, the lease points to the LIF that's 355 also the main LIF for the state machine, because that's the IP 356 interface that dhcpagent controls. With DHCPv6, the lease (one per 357 IA structure) points to a separate set of LIFs that are created just 358 for the leased addresses (one per IA address in an IAADDR option). 359 The state machine alone points to the main LIF. 360 361 362Packet Structure Extensions 363 364 Obviously, we need some DHCPv6 packet data structures and 365 definitions. A new <netinet/dhcp6.h> file will be introduced with 366 the necessary #defines and structures. The key structure there will 367 be: 368 369 struct dhcpv6_message { 370 uint8_t d6m_msg_type; 371 uint8_t d6m_transid_ho; 372 uint16_t d6m_transid_lo; 373 }; 374 typedef struct dhcpv6_message dhcpv6_message_t; 375 376 This defines the usual (non-relay) DHCPv6 packet header, and is 377 roughly equivalent to PKT for IPv4. 378 379 Extending dhcp_pkt_t for DHCPv6 is straightforward, as it's used 380 only within dhcpagent. This structure will be amended to use a 381 union for v4/v6 and include a boolean to flag which version is in 382 use. 383 384 For the PKT_LIST structure, things are more complex. This defines 385 both a queuing mechanism for received packets (typically OFFERs) and 386 a set of packet decoding structures. The decoding structures are 387 highly specific to IPv4 DHCP -- they have no means to handle nested 388 or repeated options (as used heavily in DHCPv6) and make use of the 389 DHCP_OPT structure which is specific to IPv4 DHCP -- and are 390 somewhat expensive in storage, due to the use of arrays indexed by 391 option code number. 392 393 Worse, this structure is used throughout the system, so changes to 394 it need to be made carefully. (For example, the existing 'pkt' 395 member can't just be turned into a union.) 396 397 For an initial prototype, since discarded, I created a new 398 dhcp_plist_t structure to represent packet lists as used inside 399 dhcpagent and made dhcp_pkt_t valid for use on input and output. 400 The result is unsatisfying, though, as it results in code that 401 manipulates far too many data structures in common cases; it's a sea 402 of pointers to pointers. 403 404 The better answer is to use PKT_LIST for both IPv4 and IPv6, adding 405 the few new bits of metadata required to the end (receiving ifIndex, 406 packet source/destination addresses), and staying within the overall 407 existing design. 408 409 For option parsing, dhcpv6_find_option() and dhcpv6_pkt_option() 410 functions will be added to libdhcputil. The former function will 411 walk a DHCPv6 option list, and provide safe (bounds-checked) access 412 to the options inside. The function can be called recursively, so 413 that option nesting can be handled fairly simply by nested loops, 414 and can be called repeatedly to return each instance of a given 415 option code number. The latter function is just a convenience 416 wrapper on dhcpv6_find_option() that starts with a PKT_LIST pointer 417 and iterates over the top-level options with a given code number. 418 419 There are two special considerations for the use of these library 420 interfaces: there's no "pad" option for DHCPv6 or alignment 421 requirements on option headers or contents, and nested options 422 always follow a structure that has type-dependent length. This 423 means that code that handles options must all be written to deal 424 with unaligned data, and suboption code must index the pointer past 425 the type-dependent part. 426 427 428Packet Construction 429 430 Unlike DHCPv4, DHCPv6 places the transaction timer value in an 431 option. The existing code sets the current time value in 432 send_pkt_internal(), which allows it to be updated in a 433 straightforward way when doing retransmits. 434 435 To make this work in a simple manner for DHCPv6, I added a 436 remove_pkt_opt() function. The update logic just does a remove and 437 re-adds the option. We could also just assume the presence of the 438 option, find it, and modify in place, but the remove feature seems 439 more general. 440 441 DHCPv6 uses nesting options. To make this work, two new utility 442 functions are needed. First, an add_pkt_subopt() function will take 443 a pointer to an existing option and add an embedded option within 444 it. The packet length and existing option length are updated. If 445 that existing option isn't a top-level option, though, this means 446 that the caller must update the lengths of all of the enclosing 447 options up to the top level. To do this, update_v6opt_len() will be 448 added. This is used in the special case of adding a Status Code 449 option to an IAADDR option within an IA_NA top-level option. 450 451 452Sockets and I/O Handling 453 454 DHCPv6 doesn't need or use either a DLPI or a broadcast IP socket. 455 Instead, a single unicast-bound IP socket on a link-local address 456 would be the most that is needed. This is roughly equivalent to 457 if_sock_ip_fd in the existing design, but that existing socket is 458 bound only after DHCP reaches BOUND state -- that is, when it 459 switches away from DLPI. We need something different. 460 461 This, along with the excess of open file descriptors in an otherwise 462 idle daemon and the potentially serious performance problems in 463 leaving DLPI open at all times, argues for a larger redesign of the 464 I/O logic in dhcpagent. 465 466 The first thing that we can do is eliminate the need for the 467 per-ifslist if_sock_fd. This is used primarily for issuing ioctls 468 to configure interfaces -- a task that would work as well with any 469 open socket -- and is also registered to receive any ACK/NAK packets 470 that may arrive via broadcast. Both of these can be eliminated by 471 creating a pair of global sockets (IPv4 and IPv6), bound and 472 configured for ACK/NAK reception. The only functional difference is 473 that the list of running state machines must be scanned on reception 474 to find the correct transaction ID, but the existing design 475 effectively already goes to this effort because the kernel 476 replicates received datagrams among all matching sockets, and each 477 ifslist entry has a socket open. 478 479 (The existing code for if_sock_fd makes oblique reference to unknown 480 problems in the system that may prevent binding from working in some 481 cases. The reference dates back some seven years to the original 482 DHCP implementation. I've observed no such problems in extensive 483 testing and if any do show up, they will be dealt with by fixing the 484 underlying bugs.) 485 486 This leads to an important simplification: it's no longer necessary 487 to register, unregister, and re-register for packet reception while 488 changing state -- register_acknak() and unregister_acknak() are 489 gone. Instead, we always receive, and we dispatch the packets as 490 they arrive. As a result, when receiving a DHCPv4 ACK or DHCPv6 491 Reply when in BOUND state, we know it's a duplicate, and we can 492 discard. 493 494 The next part is in minimizing DLPI usage. A DLPI stream is needed 495 at most for each IPv4 PIF, and it's not needed when all of the 496 DHCP instances on that PIF are bound. In fact, the current 497 implementation deals with this in configure_bound() by setting a 498 "blackhole" packet filter. The stream is left open. 499 500 To simplify this, we will open at most one DLPI stream on a PIF, and 501 use reference counts from the state machines to determine when the 502 stream must be open and when it can be closed. This mechanism will 503 be centralized in a set_smach_state() function that changes the 504 state and opens/closes the DLPI stream when needed. 505 506 This leads to another simplification. The I/O logic in the existing 507 dhcpagent makes use of the protocol state to select between DLPI and 508 sockets. Now that we keep track of this in a simpler manner, we no 509 longer need to switch out on state in when sending a packet; just 510 test the dsm_using_dlpi flag instead. 511 512 Still another simplification is in the handling of DHCPv4 INFORM. 513 The current code has separate logic in it for getting the interface 514 state and address information. This is no longer necessary, as the 515 LIF mechanism keeps track of the interface state. And since we have 516 separate lease structures, and INFORM doesn't acquire a lease, we no 517 longer have to be careful about canonizing the interface on 518 shutdown. 519 520 Although the default is to send all client messages to a well-known 521 multicast address for servers and relays, DHCPv6 also has a 522 mechanism that allows the client to send unicast messages to the 523 server. The operation of this mechanism is slightly complex. 524 First, the server sends the client a unicast address via an option. 525 We may use this address as the destination (rather than the 526 well-known multicast address for local DHCPv6 servers and relays) 527 only if we have a viable local source address. This means using 528 SIOCGDSTINFO each time we try to send unicast. Next, the server may 529 send back a special status code: UseMulticast. If this is received, 530 and if we were actually using unicast in our messages to the server, 531 then we need to forget the unicast address, switch back to 532 multicast, and resend our last message. 533 534 Note that it's important to avoid the temptation to resend the last 535 message every time UseMulticast is seen, and do it only once on 536 switching back to multicast: otherwise, a potential feedback loop is 537 created. 538 539 Because IP_PKTINFO (PSARC 2006/466) has integrated, we could go a 540 step further by removing the need for any per-LIF sockets and just 541 use the global sockets for all but DLPI. However, in order to 542 facilitate a Solaris 10 backport, this will be done separately as CR 543 6509317. 544 545 In the case of DHCPv6, we already have IPV6_PKTINFO, so we will pave 546 the way for IPv4 by beginning to using this now, and thus have just 547 a single socket (bound to "::") for all of DHCPv6. Doing this 548 requires switching from the old BSD4.2 -lsocket -lnsl to the 549 standards-compliant -lxnet in order to use ancillary data. 550 551 It may also be possible to remove the need for DLPI for IPv4, and 552 incidentally simplify the code a fair amount, by adding a kernel 553 option to allow transmission and reception of UDP packets over 554 interfaces that are plumbed but not marked IFF_UP. This is left for 555 future work. 556 557 558The State Machine 559 560 Several parts of the existing state machine need additions to handle 561 DHCPv6, which is a superset of DHCPv4. 562 563 First, there are the RENEWING and REBINDING states. For IPv4 DHCP, 564 these states map one-to-one with a single address and single lease 565 that's undergoing renewal. It's a simple progression (on timeout) 566 from BOUND, to RENEWING, to REBINDING and finally back to SELECTING 567 to start over. Each retransmit is done by simply rescheduling the 568 T1 or T2 timer. 569 570 For DHCPv6, things are somewhat more complex. At any one time, 571 there may be multiple IAs (leases) that are effectively in renewing 572 or rebinding state, based on the T1/T2 timers for each IA, and many 573 addresses that have expired. 574 575 However, because all of the leases are related to a single server, 576 and that server either responds to our requests or doesn't, we can 577 simplify the states to be nearly identical to IPv4 DHCP. 578 579 The revised definition for use with DHCPv6 is: 580 581 - Transition from BOUND to RENEWING state when the first T1 timer 582 (of any lease on the state machine) expires. At this point, as 583 an optimization, we should begin attempting to renew any IAs 584 that are within REN_TIMEOUT (10 seconds) of reaching T1 as well. 585 We may as well avoid sending an excess of packets. 586 587 - When a T1 lease timer expires and we're in RENEWING or REBINDING 588 state, just ignore it, because the transaction is already in 589 progress. 590 591 - At each retransmit timeout, we should check to see if there are 592 more IAs that need to join in because they've passed point T1 as 593 well, and, if so, add them. This check isn't necessary at this 594 time, because only a single IA_NA is possible with the initial 595 design. 596 597 - When we reach T2 on any IA and we're in BOUND or RENEWING state, 598 enter REBINDING state. At this point, we have a choice. For 599 those other IAs that are past T1 but not yet at T2, we could 600 ignore them (sending only those that have passed point T2), 601 continue to send separate Renew messages for them, or just 602 include them in the Rebind message. This isn't an issue that 603 must be dealt with for this project, but the plan is to include 604 them in the Rebind message. 605 606 - When a T2 lease timer expires and we're in REBINDING state, just 607 ignore it, as with the corresponding T1 timer. 608 609 - As addresses reach the end of their preferred lifetimes, set the 610 IFF_DEPRECATED flag. As they reach the end of the valid 611 lifetime, remove them from the system. When an IA (lease) 612 becomes empty, just remove it. When there are no more leases 613 left, return to SELECTING state to start over. 614 615 Note that the RFC treats the IAs as separate entities when 616 discussing the renew/rebind T1/T2 timers, but treats them as a unit 617 when doing the initial negotiation. This is, to say the least, 618 confusing, especially so given that there's no reason to expect that 619 after having failed to elicit any responses at all from the server 620 on one IA, the server will suddenly start responding when we attempt 621 to renew some other IA. We rationalize this behavior by using a 622 single renew/rebind state for the entire state machine (and thus 623 client/server pair). 624 625 There's a subtle timing difference here between DHCPv4 and DHCPv6. 626 For DHCPv4, the client just sends packets more and more frequently 627 (shorter timeouts) as the next state gets nearer. DHCPv6 treats 628 each as a transaction, using the same retransmit logic as for other 629 messages. The DHCPv6 method is a cleaner design, so we will change 630 the DHCPv4 implementation to do the same, and compute the new timer 631 values as part of stop_extending(). 632 633 Note that it would be possible to start the SELECTING state earlier 634 than waiting for the last lease to expire, and thus avoid a loss of 635 connectivity. However, it this point, there are other servers on 636 the network that have seen us attempting to Rebind for quite some 637 time, and they have not responded. The likelihood that there's a 638 server that will ignore Rebind but then suddenly spring into action 639 on a Solicit message seems low enough that the optimization won't be 640 done now. (Starting SELECTING state earlier may be done in the 641 future, if it's found to be useful.) 642 643 644Persistent State 645 646 IPv4 DHCP has only minimal need for persistent state, beyond the 647 configuration parameters. The state is stored when "ifconfig dhcp 648 drop" is run or the daemon receives SIGTERM, which is typically done 649 only well after the system is booted and running. 650 651 The daemon stores this state in /etc/dhcp, because it needs to be 652 available when only the root file system has been mounted. 653 654 Moreover, dhcpagent starts very early in the boot process. It runs 655 as part of svc:/network/physical:default, which runs well before 656 root is mounted read/write: 657 658 svc:/system/filesystem/root:default -> 659 svc:/system/metainit:default -> 660 svc:/system/identity:node -> 661 svc:/network/physical:default 662 svc:/network/iscsi_initiator:default -> 663 svc:/network/physical:default 664 665 and, of course, well before either /var or /usr is mounted. This 666 means that any persistent state must be kept in the root file 667 system, and that if we write before shutdown, we have to cope 668 gracefully with the root file system returning EROFS on write 669 attempts. 670 671 For DHCPv6, we need to try to keep our stable DUID and IAID values 672 stable across reboots to fulfill the demands of RFC 3315. 673 674 The DUID is either configured or automatically generated. When 675 configured, it comes from the /etc/default/dhcpagent file, and thus 676 does not need to be saved by the daemon. If automatically 677 generated, there's exactly one of these created, and it will 678 eventually be needed before /usr is mounted, if /usr is mounted over 679 IPv6. This means a new file in the root file system, 680 /etc/dhcp/duid, will be used to hold the automatically generated 681 DUID. 682 683 The determination of whether to use a configured DUID or one saved 684 in a file is made in get_smach_cid(). This function will 685 encapsulate all of the DUID parsing and generation machinery for the 686 rest of dhcpagent. 687 688 If root is not writable at the point when dhcpagent starts, and our 689 attempt fails with EROFS, we will set a timer for 60 second 690 intervals to retry the operation periodically. In the unlikely case 691 that it just never succeeds or that we're rebooted before root 692 becomes writable, then the impact will be that the daemon will wake 693 up once a minute and, ultimately, we'll choose a different DUID on 694 next start-up, and we'll thus lose our leases across a reboot. 695 696 The IAID similarly must be kept stable if at all possible, but 697 cannot be configured by the user. To do make these values stable, 698 we will use two strategies. First the IAID value for a given 699 interface (if not known) will just default to the IP ifIndex value, 700 provided that there's no known saved IAID using that value. Second, 701 we will save off the IAID we choose in a single /etc/dhcp/iaid file, 702 containing an array of entries indexed by logical interface name. 703 Keeping it in a single file allows us to scan for used and unused 704 IAID values when necessary. 705 706 This mechanism depends on the interface name, and thus will need to 707 be revisited when Clearview vanity naming and NWAM are available. 708 709 Currently, the boot system (GRUB, OBP, the miniroot) does not 710 support installing over IPv6. This could change in the future, so 711 one of the goals of the above stability plan is to support that 712 event. 713 714 When running in the miniroot on an x86 system, /etc/dhcp (and the 715 rest of the root) is mounted on a read-only ramdisk. In this case, 716 writing to /etc/dhcp will just never work. A possible solution 717 would be to add a new privileged command in ifconfig that forces 718 dhcpagent to write to an alternate location. The initial install 719 process could then do "ifconfig <x> dhcp write /a" to get the needed 720 state written out to the newly-constructed system root. 721 722 This part (the new write option) won't be implemented as part of 723 this project, because it's not needed yet. 724 725 726Router Advertisements 727 728 IPv6 Router Advertisements perform two functions related to DHCPv6: 729 730 - they specify whether and how to run DHCPv6 on a given interface. 731 - they provide a list of the valid prefixes on an interface. 732 733 For the first function, in.ndpd needs to use the same DHCP control 734 interfaces that ifconfig uses, so that it can launch dhcpagent and 735 trigger DHCPv6 when necessary. Note that it never needs to shut 736 down DHCPv6, as router advertisements can't do that. 737 738 However, launching dhcpagent presents new problems. As a part of 739 the "Quagga SMF Modifications" project (PSARC 2006/552), in.ndpd in 740 Nevada is now privilege-aware and runs with limited privileges, 741 courtesy of SMF. Dhcpagent, on the other hand, must run with all 742 privileges. 743 744 A simple work-around for this issue is to rip out the "privileges=" 745 clause from the method_credential for in.ndpd. I've taken this 746 direction initially, but the right longer-term answer seems to be 747 converting dhcpagent into an SMF service. This is quite a bit more 748 complex, as it means turning the /sbin/dhcpagent command line 749 interface into a utility that manipulates the service and passes the 750 command line options via IPC extensions. 751 752 Such a design also begs the question of whether dhcpagent itself 753 ought to run with reduced privileges. It could, but it still needs 754 the ability to grant "all" (traditional UNIX root) privileges to the 755 eventhook script, if present. There seem to be few ways to do this, 756 though it's a good area for research. 757 758 The second function, prefix handling, is also subtle. Unlike IPv4 759 DHCP, DHCPv6 does not give the netmask or prefix length along with 760 the leased address. The client is on its own to determine the right 761 netmask to use. This is where the advertised prefixes come in: 762 these must be used to finish the interface configuration. 763 764 We will have the DHCPv6 client configure each interface with an 765 all-ones (/128) netmask by default. In.ndpd will be modified so 766 that when it detects a new IFF_DHCPRUNNING IP logical interface, it 767 checks for a known matching prefix, and sets the netmask as 768 necessary. If no matching prefix is known, it will send a new 769 Router Solicitation message to try to find one. 770 771 When in.ndpd learns of a new prefix from a Router Advertisement, it 772 will scan all of the IFF_DHCPRUNNING IP logical interfaces on the 773 same physical interface and set the netmasks when necessary. 774 Dhcpagent, for its part, will ignore the netmask on IPv6 interfaces 775 when checking for changes that would require it to "abandon" the 776 interface. 777 778 Given the way that DHCPv6 and in.ndpd control both the horizontal 779 and the vertical in plumbing and removing logical interfaces, and 780 users do not, it might be worthwhile to consider roping off any 781 direct user changes to IPv6 logical interfaces under control of 782 in.ndpd or dhcpagent, and instead force users through a higher-level 783 interface. This won't be done as part of this project, however. 784 785 786ARP Hardware Types 787 788 There are multiple places within the DHCPv6 client where the mapping 789 of DLPI MAC type to ARP Hardware Type is required: 790 791 - When we are constructing an automatic, stable DUID for our own 792 identity, we prefer to use a DUID-LLT if possible. This is done 793 by finding a link-layer interface, opening it, reading the MAC 794 address and type, and translating in the make_stable_duid() 795 function in libdhcpagent. 796 797 - When we translate a user-configured DUID from 798 /etc/default/dhcpagent into a binary representation, we may have 799 to deal with a physical interface name. In this case, we must 800 open that interface and read the MAC address and type. 801 802 - As part of the PIF data structure initialization, we need to read 803 out the MAC type so that it can be used in the BOOTP/DHCPv4 804 'htype' field. 805 806 Ideally, these would all be provided by a single libdlpi 807 implementation. However, that project is on-going at this time and 808 has not yet integrated. For the time being, a dlpi_to_arp() 809 translation function (taking dl_mac_type and returning an ARP 810 Hardware Type number) will be placed in libdhcputil. 811 812 This temporary function should be removed and this section of the 813 code updated when the new libdlpi from Clearview integrates. 814 815 816Field Mappings 817 818 Old (all in ifslist) New 819 next dhcp_smach_t.dsm_next 820 prev dhcp_smach_t.dsm_prev 821 if_hold_count dhcp_smach_t.dsm_hold_count 822 if_ia dhcp_smach_t.dsm_ia 823 if_async dhcp_smach_t.dsm_async 824 if_state dhcp_smach_t.dsm_state 825 if_dflags dhcp_smach_t.dsm_dflags 826 if_name dhcp_smach_t.dsm_name (see text) 827 if_index dhcp_pif_t.pif_index 828 if_max dhcp_lif_t.lif_max and dhcp_pif_t.pif_max 829 if_min (was unused; removed) 830 if_opt (was unused; removed) 831 if_hwaddr dhcp_pif_t.pif_hwaddr 832 if_hwlen dhcp_pif_t.pif_hwlen 833 if_hwtype dhcp_pif_t.pif_hwtype 834 if_cid dhcp_smach_t.dsm_cid 835 if_cidlen dhcp_smach_t.dsm_cidlen 836 if_prl dhcp_smach_t.dsm_prl 837 if_prllen dhcp_smach_t.dsm_prllen 838 if_daddr dhcp_pif_t.pif_daddr 839 if_dlen dhcp_pif_t.pif_dlen 840 if_saplen dhcp_pif_t.pif_saplen 841 if_sap_before dhcp_pif_t.pif_sap_before 842 if_dlpi_fd dhcp_pif_t.pif_dlpi_fd 843 if_sock_fd v4_sock_fd and v6_sock_fd (globals) 844 if_sock_ip_fd dhcp_lif_t.lif_sock_ip_fd 845 if_timer (see text) 846 if_t1 dhcp_lease_t.dl_t1 847 if_t2 dhcp_lease_t.dl_t2 848 if_lease dhcp_lif_t.lif_expire 849 if_nrouters dhcp_smach_t.dsm_nrouters 850 if_routers dhcp_smach_t.dsm_routers 851 if_server dhcp_smach_t.dsm_server 852 if_addr dhcp_lif_t.lif_v6addr 853 if_netmask dhcp_lif_t.lif_v6mask 854 if_broadcast dhcp_lif_t.lif_v6peer 855 if_ack dhcp_smach_t.dsm_ack 856 if_orig_ack dhcp_smach_t.dsm_orig_ack 857 if_offer_wait dhcp_smach_t.dsm_offer_wait 858 if_offer_timer dhcp_smach_t.dsm_offer_timer 859 if_offer_id dhcp_pif_t.pif_dlpi_id 860 if_acknak_id dhcp_lif_t.lif_acknak_id 861 if_acknak_bcast_id v4_acknak_bcast_id (global) 862 if_neg_monosec dhcp_smach_t.dsm_neg_monosec 863 if_newstart_monosec dhcp_smach_t.dsm_newstart_monosec 864 if_curstart_monosec dhcp_smach_t.dsm_curstart_monosec 865 if_disc_secs dhcp_smach_t.dsm_disc_secs 866 if_reqhost dhcp_smach_t.dsm_reqhost 867 if_recv_pkt_list dhcp_smach_t.dsm_recv_pkt_list 868 if_sent dhcp_smach_t.dsm_sent 869 if_received dhcp_smach_t.dsm_received 870 if_bad_offers dhcp_smach_t.dsm_bad_offers 871 if_send_pkt dhcp_smach_t.dsm_send_pkt 872 if_send_timeout dhcp_smach_t.dsm_send_timeout 873 if_send_dest dhcp_smach_t.dsm_send_dest 874 if_send_stop_func dhcp_smach_t.dsm_send_stop_func 875 if_packet_sent dhcp_smach_t.dsm_packet_sent 876 if_retrans_timer dhcp_smach_t.dsm_retrans_timer 877 if_script_fd dhcp_smach_t.dsm_script_fd 878 if_script_pid dhcp_smach_t.dsm_script_pid 879 if_script_helper_pid dhcp_smach_t.dsm_script_helper_pid 880 if_script_event dhcp_smach_t.dsm_script_event 881 if_script_event_id dhcp_smach_t.dsm_script_event_id 882 if_callback_msg dhcp_smach_t.dsm_callback_msg 883 if_script_callback dhcp_smach_t.dsm_script_callback 884 885 Notes: 886 887 - The dsm_name field currently just points to the lif_name on the 888 controlling LIF. This may need to be named differently in the 889 future; perhaps when Zones are supported. 890 891 - The timer mechanism will be refactored. Rather than using the 892 separate if_timer[] array to hold the timer IDs and 893 if_{t1,t2,lease} to hold the relative timer values, we will 894 gather this information into a dhcp_timer_t structure: 895 896 dt_id timer ID value 897 dt_start relative start time 898 899 New fields not accounted for above: 900 901 dhcp_pif_t.pif_next linkage in global list of PIFs 902 dhcp_pif_t.pif_prev linkage in global list of PIFs 903 dhcp_pif_t.pif_lifs pointer to list of LIFs on this PIF 904 dhcp_pif_t.pif_isv6 IPv6 flag 905 dhcp_pif_t.pif_dlpi_count number of state machines using DLPI 906 dhcp_pif_t.pif_hold_count reference count 907 dhcp_pif_t.pif_name name of physical interface 908 dhcp_lif_t.lif_next linkage in per-PIF list of LIFs 909 dhcp_lif_t.lif_prev linkage in per-PIF list of LIFs 910 dhcp_lif_t.lif_pif backpointer to parent PIF 911 dhcp_lif_t.lif_smachs pointer to list of state machines 912 dhcp_lif_t.lif_lease backpointer to lease holding LIF 913 dhcp_lif_t.lif_flags interface flags (IFF_*) 914 dhcp_lif_t.lif_hold_count reference count 915 dhcp_lif_t.lif_dad_wait waiting for DAD resolution flag 916 dhcp_lif_t.lif_removed removed from list flag 917 dhcp_lif_t.lif_plumbed plumbed by dhcpagent flag 918 dhcp_lif_t.lif_expired lease has expired flag 919 dhcp_lif_t.lif_declined reason to refuse this address (string) 920 dhcp_lif_t.lif_iaid unique and stable 32-bit identifier 921 dhcp_lif_t.lif_iaid_id timer for delayed /etc writes 922 dhcp_lif_t.lif_preferred preferred timer for v6; deprecate after 923 dhcp_lif_t.lif_name name of logical interface 924 dhcp_smach_t.dsm_lif controlling (main) LIF 925 dhcp_smach_t.dsm_leases pointer to list of leases 926 dhcp_smach_t.dsm_lif_wait number of LIFs waiting on DAD 927 dhcp_smach_t.dsm_lif_down number of LIFs that have failed 928 dhcp_smach_t.dsm_using_dlpi currently using DLPI flag 929 dhcp_smach_t.dsm_send_tcenter v4 central timer value; v6 MRT 930 dhcp_lease_t.dl_next linkage in per-state-machine list of leases 931 dhcp_lease_t.dl_prev linkage in per-state-machine list of leases 932 dhcp_lease_t.dl_smach back pointer to state machine 933 dhcp_lease_t.dl_lifs pointer to first LIF configured by lease 934 dhcp_lease_t.dl_nlifs number of configured consecutive LIFs 935 dhcp_lease_t.dl_hold_count reference counter 936 dhcp_lease_t.dl_removed removed from list flag 937 dhcp_lease_t.dl_stale lease was not updated by Renew/Rebind 938 939 940Snoop 941 942 The snoop changes are fairly straightforward. As snoop just decodes 943 the messages, and the message format is quite different between 944 DHCPv4 and DHCPv6, a new module will be created to handle DHCPv6 945 decoding, and will export a interpret_dhcpv6() function. 946 947 The one bit of commonality between the two protocols is the use of 948 ARP Hardware Type numbers, which are found in the underlying BOOTP 949 message format for DHCPv4 and in the DUID-LL and DUID-LLT 950 construction for DHCPv6. To simplify this, the existing static 951 show_htype() function in snoop_dhcp.c will be renamed to arp_htype() 952 (to better reflect its functionality), updated with more modern 953 hardware types, moved to snoop_arp.c (where it belongs), and made a 954 public symbol within snoop. 955 956 While I'm there, I'll update snoop_arp.c so that when it prints an 957 ARP message in verbose mode, it uses arp_htype() to translate the 958 ar_hrd value. 959 960 The snoop updates also involve the addition of a new "dhcp6" keyword 961 for filtering. As a part of this, CR 6487534 will be fixed. 962 963 964IPv6 Source Address Selection 965 966 One of the customer requests for DHCPv6 is to be able to predict the 967 address selection behavior in the presence of both stateful and 968 stateless addresses on the same network. 969 970 Solaris implements RFC 3484 address selection behavior. In this 971 scheme, the first seven rules implement some basic preferences for 972 addresses, with Rule 8 being a deterministic tie breaker. 973 974 Rule 8 relies on a special function, CommonPrefixLen, defined in the 975 RFC, that compares leading bits of the address without regard to 976 configured prefix length. As Rule 1 eliminates equal addresses, 977 this always picks a single address. 978 979 This rule, though, allows for additional checks: 980 981 Rule 8 may be superseded if the implementation has other means of 982 choosing among source addresses. For example, if the implementation 983 somehow knows which source address will result in the "best" 984 communications performance. 985 986 We will thus split Rule 8 into three separate rules: 987 988 - First, compare on configured prefix. The interface with the 989 longest configured prefix length that also matches the candidate 990 address will be preferred. 991 992 - Next, check the type of address. Prefer statically configured 993 addresses above all others. Next, those from DHCPv6. Next, 994 stateless autoconfigured addresses. Finally, temporary addresses. 995 (Note that Rule 7 will take care of temporary address preferences, 996 so that this rule doesn't actually need to look at them.) 997 998 - Finally, run the check-all-bits (CommonPrefixLen) tie breaker. 999 1000 The result of this is that if there's a local address in the same 1001 configured prefix, then we'll prefer that over other addresses. If 1002 there are multiple to choose from, then will pick static first, then 1003 DHCPv6, then dynamic. Finally, if there are still multiples, we'll 1004 use the "closest" address, bitwise. 1005 1006 Also, this basic implementation scheme also addresses CR 6485164, so 1007 a fix for that will be included with this project. 1008 1009 1010Minor Improvements 1011 1012 Various small problems with the system encountered during 1013 development will be fixed along with this project. Some of these 1014 are: 1015 1016 - List of ARPHRD_* types is a bit short; add some new ones. 1017 1018 - List of IPPORT_* values is similarly sparse; add others in use by 1019 snoop. 1020 1021 - dhcpmsg.h lacks PRINTFLIKE for dhcpmsg(); add it. 1022 1023 - CR 6482163 causes excessive lint errors with libxnet; will fix. 1024 1025 - libdhcpagent uses gettimeofday() for I/O timing, and this can 1026 drift on systems with NTP. It should use a stable time source 1027 (gethrtime()) instead, and should return better error values. 1028 1029 - Controlling debug mode in the daemon shouldn't require changing 1030 the command line arguments or jumping through special hoops. I've 1031 added undocumented ".DEBUG_LEVEL=[0-3]" and ".VERBOSE=[01]" 1032 features to /etc/default/dhcpagent. 1033 1034 - The various attributes of the IPC commands (requires privileges, 1035 creates a new session, valid with BOOTP, immediate reply) should 1036 be gathered together into one look-up table rather than scattered 1037 as hard-coded tests. 1038 1039 - Remove the event unregistration from the command dispatch loop and 1040 get rid of the ipc_action_pending() botch. We'll get a 1041 zero-length read any time the client goes away, and that will be 1042 enough to trigger termination. This fix removes async_pending() 1043 and async_timeout() as well, and fixes CR 6487958 as a 1044 side-effect. 1045 1046 - Throughout the dhcpagent code, there are private implementations 1047 of doubly-linked and singly-linked lists for each data type. 1048 These will all be removed and replaced with insque(3C) and 1049 remque(3C). 1050 1051 1052Testing 1053 1054 The implementation was tested using the TAHI test suite for DHCPv6 1055 (www.tahi.org). There are some peculiar aspects to this test suite, 1056 and these issues directed some of the design. In particular: 1057 1058 - If Renew/Rebind doesn't mention one of our leases, then we need to 1059 allow the message to be retransmitted. Real servers are unlikely 1060 to do this. 1061 1062 - We must look for a status code within IAADDR and within IA_NA, and 1063 handle the paradoxical case of "NoAddrAvail." That doesn't make 1064 sense, as a server with no addresses wouldn't use those options. 1065 That option makes more sense at the top level of the message. 1066 1067 - If we get "UseMulticast" when we were already using multicast, 1068 then ignore the error code. Sending another request would cause a 1069 loop. 1070 1071 - TAHI uses "NoBinding" at the top level of the message. This 1072 status code only makes sense within an IA, as it refers to the 1073 GUID:IAID binding, which doesn't exist outside an IA. We must 1074 ignore such errors -- treat them as success. 1075 1076 1077Interactions With Other Projects 1078 1079 Clearview UV (vanity naming) will cause link names, and thus IP 1080 interface names, to become changeable over time. This will break 1081 the IAID stability mechanism if UV is used for arbitrary renaming, 1082 rather than as just a DR enhancement. 1083 1084 When this portion of Clearview integrates, this part of the DHCPv6 1085 design may need to be revisited. (The solution will likely be 1086 handled at some higher layer, such as within Network Automagic.) 1087 1088 Clearview is also contributing a new libdlpi that will work for 1089 dhcpagent, and is thus removing the private dlpi_io.[ch] functions 1090 from this daemon. When that Clearview project integrates, the 1091 DHCPv6 project will need to adjust to the new interfaces, and remove 1092 or relocate the dlpi_to_arp() function. 1093 1094 1095Futures 1096 1097 Zones currently cannot address any IP interfaces by way of DHCP. 1098 This project will not fix that problem, but the DUID/IAID could be 1099 used to help fix it in the future. 1100 1101 In particular, the DUID allows the client to obtain separate sets of 1102 addresses and configuration parameters on a single interface, just 1103 like an IPv4 Client ID, but it includes a clean mechanism for vendor 1104 extensions. If we associate the DUID with the zone identifier or 1105 name through an extension, then we have a really simple way of 1106 allocating per-zone addresses. 1107 1108 Moreover, RFC 4361 describes a handy way of using DHCPv6 DUID/IAID 1109 values with IPv4 DHCP, which would quickly solve the problem of 1110 using DHCP for IPv4 address assignment in non-global zones as well. 1111 1112 (One potential risk with this plan is that there may be server 1113 implementations that either do not implement the RFC correctly or 1114 otherwise mishandle the DUID. This has apparently bitten some early 1115 adopters.) 1116 1117 Implementing the FQDN option for DHCPv6 would, given the current 1118 libdhcputil design, require a new 'type' of entry for the inittab6 1119 file. This is because the design does not allow for any simple 1120 means to ``compose'' a sequence of basic types together. Thus, 1121 every type of option must either be a basic type, or an array of 1122 multiple instances of the same basic type. 1123 1124 If we implement FQDN in the future, it may be useful to explore some 1125 means of allowing a given option instance to be a sequence of basic 1126 types. 1127 1128 This project does not make the DNS resolver or any other subsystem 1129 use the data gathered by DHCPv6. It just makes the data available 1130 through dhcpinfo(1). Future projects should modify those services 1131 to use configuration data learned via DHCPv6. (One of the reasons 1132 this is not being done now is that Network Automagic [NWAM] will 1133 likely be changing this area substantially in the very near future, 1134 and thus the effort would be largely wasted.) 1135 1136 1137Appendix A - Choice of Venue 1138 1139 There are three logical places to implement DHCPv6: 1140 1141 - in dhcpagent 1142 - in in.ndpd 1143 - in a new daemon (say, 'dhcp6agent') 1144 1145 We need to access parameters via dhcpinfo, and should provide the 1146 same set of status and control features via ifconfig as are present 1147 for IPv4. (For the latter, if we fail to do that, it will likely 1148 confuse users. The expense for doing it is comparatively small, and 1149 it will be useful for testing, even though it should not be needed 1150 in normal operation.) 1151 1152 If we implement somewhere other than dhcpagent, then we need to give 1153 that new daemon (in.ndpd or dhcp6agent) the same basic IPC features 1154 as dhcpagent already has. This means either extracting those bits 1155 (async.c and ipc_action.c) into a shared library or just copying 1156 them. Obviously, the former would be preferred, but as those bits 1157 depend on the rest of the dhcpagent infrastructure for timers and 1158 state handling, this means that the new process would have to look a 1159 lot like dhcpagent. 1160 1161 Implementing DHCPv6 as part of in.ndpd is attractive, as it 1162 eliminates the confusion that the router discovery process for 1163 determining interface netmasks can cause, along with the need to do 1164 any signaling at all to bring DHCPv6 up. However, the need to make 1165 in.ndpd more like dhcpagent is unattractive. 1166 1167 Having a new dhcp6agent daemon seems to have little to recommend it, 1168 other than leaving the existing dhcpagent code untouched. If we do 1169 that, then we end up with two implementations that do many similar 1170 things, and must be maintained in parallel. 1171 1172 Thus, although it leads to some complexity in reworking the data 1173 structures to fit both protocols, on balance the simplest solution 1174 is to extend dhcpagent. 1175 1176 1177Appendix B - Cross-Reference 1178 1179 in.ndpd 1180 1181 - Start dhcpagent and issue "dhcp start" command via libdhcpagent 1182 - Parse StatefulAddrConf interface option from ndpd.conf 1183 - Watch for M and O bits to trigger DHCPv6 1184 - Handle "no routers found" case and start DHCPv6 1185 - Track prefixes and set prefix length on IFF_DHCPRUNNING aliases 1186 - Send new Router Solicitation when prefix unknown 1187 - Change privileges so that dhcpagent can be launched successfully 1188 1189 libdhcputil 1190 1191 - Parse new /etc/dhcp/inittab6 file 1192 - Handle new UNUMBER24, SNUMBER64, IPV6, DUID and DOMAIN types 1193 - Add DHCPv6 option iterators (dhcpv6_find_option and 1194 dhcpv6_pkt_option) 1195 - Add dlpi_to_arp function (temporary) 1196 1197 libdhcpagent 1198 1199 - Add stable DUID and IAID creation and storage support 1200 functions and add new dhcp_stable.h include file 1201 - Support new DECLINING and RELEASING states introduced by DHCPv6. 1202 - Update implementation so that it doesn't rely on gettimeofday() 1203 for I/O timeouts 1204 - Extend the hostconf functions to support DHCPv6, using a new 1205 ".dh6" file 1206 1207 snoop 1208 1209 - Add support for DHCPv6 packet decoding (all types) 1210 - Add "dhcp6" filter keyword 1211 - Fix known bugs in DHCP filtering 1212 1213 ifconfig 1214 1215 - Remove inet-only restriction on "dhcp" keyword 1216 1217 netstat 1218 1219 - Remove strange "-I list" feature. 1220 - Add support for DHCPv6 and iterating over IPv6 interfaces. 1221 1222 ip 1223 1224 - Add extensions to IPv6 source address selection to prefer DHCPv6 1225 addresses when all else is equal 1226 - Fix known bugs in source address selection (remaining from TX 1227 integration) 1228 1229 other 1230 1231 - Add ifindex and source/destination address into PKT_LIST. 1232 - Add more ARPHDR_* and IPPORT_* values. 1233