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1391 lines
52 KiB
1391 lines
52 KiB
/* |
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* ZeroTier One - Network Virtualization Everywhere |
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* Copyright (C) 2011-2016 ZeroTier, Inc. https://www.zerotier.com/ |
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* |
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* This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify |
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* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by |
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* the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or |
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* (at your option) any later version. |
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* |
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* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
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* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of |
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* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the |
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* GNU General Public License for more details. |
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* |
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* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License |
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* along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. |
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*/ |
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#ifndef ZT_N_PACKET_HPP |
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#define ZT_N_PACKET_HPP |
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#include <stdint.h> |
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#include <string.h> |
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#include <stdio.h> |
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#include <string> |
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#include <iostream> |
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#include "Constants.hpp" |
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#include "Address.hpp" |
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#include "Poly1305.hpp" |
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#include "Salsa20.hpp" |
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#include "Utils.hpp" |
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#include "Buffer.hpp" |
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#ifdef ZT_USE_SYSTEM_LZ4 |
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#include <lz4.h> |
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#else |
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#include "../ext/lz4/lz4.h" |
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#endif |
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/** |
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* Protocol version -- incremented only for major changes |
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* |
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* 1 - 0.2.0 ... 0.2.5 |
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* 2 - 0.3.0 ... 0.4.5 |
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* + Added signature and originating peer to multicast frame |
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* + Double size of multicast frame bloom filter |
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* 3 - 0.5.0 ... 0.6.0 |
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* + Yet another multicast redesign |
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* + New crypto completely changes key agreement cipher |
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* 4 - 0.6.0 ... 1.0.6 |
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* + BREAKING CHANGE: New identity format based on hashcash design |
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* 5 - 1.1.0 ... 1.1.5 |
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* + Supports circuit test, proof of work, and echo |
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* + Supports in-band world (root server definition) updates |
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* + Clustering! (Though this will work with protocol v4 clients.) |
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* + Otherwise backward compatible with protocol v4 |
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* 6 - 1.1.5 ... 1.1.10 |
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* + Network configuration format revisions including binary values |
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* 7 - 1.1.10 -- 1.2.0 |
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* + Introduce trusted paths for local SDN use |
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* 8 - 1.2.0 -- CURRENT |
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* + Multipart network configurations for large network configs |
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* + Tags and Capabilities |
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* + Inline push of CertificateOfMembership deprecated |
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* + Certificates of representation for federation and mesh |
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*/ |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERSION 8 |
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/** |
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* Minimum supported protocol version |
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*/ |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERSION_MIN 4 |
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/** |
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* Maximum hop count allowed by packet structure (3 bits, 0-7) |
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* |
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* This is a protocol constant. It's the maximum allowed by the length |
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* of the hop counter -- three bits. See node/Constants.hpp for the |
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* pragmatic forwarding limit, which is typically lower. |
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*/ |
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#define ZT_PROTO_MAX_HOPS 7 |
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/** |
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* Cipher suite: Curve25519/Poly1305/Salsa20/12/NOCRYPT |
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* |
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* This specifies Poly1305 MAC using a 32-bit key derived from the first |
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* 32 bytes of a Salsa20/12 keystream as in the Salsa20/12 cipher suite, |
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* but the payload is not encrypted. This is currently only used to send |
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* HELLO since that's the public key specification packet and must be |
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* sent in the clear. Key agreement is performed using Curve25519 elliptic |
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* curve Diffie-Hellman. |
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*/ |
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#define ZT_PROTO_CIPHER_SUITE__C25519_POLY1305_NONE 0 |
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/** |
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* Cipher suite: Curve25519/Poly1305/Salsa20/12 |
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* |
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* This specifies Poly1305 using the first 32 bytes of a Salsa20/12 key |
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* stream as its one-time-use key followed by payload encryption with |
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* the remaining Salsa20/12 key stream. Key agreement is performed using |
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* Curve25519 elliptic curve Diffie-Hellman. |
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*/ |
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#define ZT_PROTO_CIPHER_SUITE__C25519_POLY1305_SALSA2012 1 |
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/** |
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* Cipher suite: NONE |
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* |
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* This differs from POLY1305/NONE in that *no* crypto is done, not even |
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* authentication. This is for trusted local LAN interconnects for internal |
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* SDN use within a data center. |
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* |
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* For this mode the MAC field becomes a trusted path ID and must match the |
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* configured ID of a trusted path or the packet is discarded. |
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*/ |
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#define ZT_PROTO_CIPHER_SUITE__NO_CRYPTO_TRUSTED_PATH 2 |
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/** |
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* DEPRECATED payload encrypted flag, may be re-used in the future. |
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* |
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* This has been replaced by the three-bit cipher suite selection field. |
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*/ |
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#define ZT_PROTO_FLAG_ENCRYPTED 0x80 |
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/** |
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* Header flag indicating that a packet is fragmented |
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* |
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* If this flag is set, the receiver knows to expect more than one fragment. |
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* See Packet::Fragment for details. |
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*/ |
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#define ZT_PROTO_FLAG_FRAGMENTED 0x40 |
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/** |
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* Verb flag indicating payload is compressed with LZ4 |
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*/ |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_FLAG_COMPRESSED 0x80 |
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/** |
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* Rounds used for Salsa20 encryption in ZT |
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* |
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* Discussion: |
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* |
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* DJB (Salsa20's designer) designed Salsa20 with a significant margin of 20 |
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* rounds, but has said repeatedly that 12 is likely sufficient. So far (as of |
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* July 2015) there are no published attacks against 12 rounds, let alone 20. |
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* |
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* In cryptography, a "break" means something different from what it means in |
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* common discussion. If a cipher is 256 bits strong and someone finds a way |
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* to reduce key search to 254 bits, this constitues a "break" in the academic |
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* literature. 254 bits is still far beyond what can be leveraged to accomplish |
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* a "break" as most people would understand it -- the actual decryption and |
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* reading of traffic. |
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* |
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* Nevertheless, "attacks only get better" as cryptographers like to say. As |
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* a result, they recommend not using anything that's shown any weakness even |
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* if that weakness is so far only meaningful to academics. It may be a sign |
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* of a deeper problem. |
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* |
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* So why choose a lower round count? |
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* |
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* Turns out the speed difference is nontrivial. On a Macbook Pro (Core i3) 20 |
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* rounds of SSE-optimized Salsa20 achieves ~508mb/sec/core, while 12 rounds |
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* hits ~832mb/sec/core. ZeroTier is designed for multiple objectives: |
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* security, simplicity, and performance. In this case a deference was made |
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* for performance. |
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* |
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* Meta discussion: |
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* |
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* The cipher is not the thing you should be paranoid about. |
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* |
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* I'll qualify that. If the cipher is known to be weak, like RC4, or has a |
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* key size that is too small, like DES, then yes you should worry about |
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* the cipher. |
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* |
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* But if the cipher is strong and your adversary is anyone other than the |
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* intelligence apparatus of a major superpower, you are fine in that |
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* department. |
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* |
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* Go ahead. Search for the last ten vulnerabilities discovered in SSL. Not |
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* a single one involved the breaking of a cipher. Now broaden your search. |
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* Look for issues with SSH, IPSec, etc. The only cipher-related issues you |
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* will find might involve the use of RC4 or MD5, algorithms with known |
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* issues or small key/digest sizes. But even weak ciphers are difficult to |
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* exploit in the real world -- you usually need a lot of data and a lot of |
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* compute time. No, virtually EVERY security vulnerability you will find |
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* involves a problem with the IMPLEMENTATION not with the cipher. |
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* |
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* A flaw in ZeroTier's protocol or code is incredibly, unbelievably |
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* more likely than a flaw in Salsa20 or any other cipher or cryptographic |
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* primitive it uses. We're talking odds of dying in a car wreck vs. odds of |
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* being personally impacted on the head by a meteorite. Nobody without a |
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* billion dollar budget is going to break into your network by actually |
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* cracking Salsa20/12 (or even /8) in the field. |
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* |
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* So stop worrying about the cipher unless you are, say, the Kremlin and your |
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* adversary is the NSA and the GCHQ. In that case... well that's above my |
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* pay grade. I'll just say defense in depth. |
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*/ |
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#define ZT_PROTO_SALSA20_ROUNDS 12 |
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/** |
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* PUSH_DIRECT_PATHS flag: forget path |
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*/ |
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#define ZT_PUSH_DIRECT_PATHS_FLAG_FORGET_PATH 0x01 |
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/** |
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* PUSH_DIRECT_PATHS flag: cluster redirect |
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*/ |
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#define ZT_PUSH_DIRECT_PATHS_FLAG_CLUSTER_REDIRECT 0x02 |
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// Field indexes in packet header |
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#define ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV 0 |
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#define ZT_PACKET_IDX_DEST 8 |
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#define ZT_PACKET_IDX_SOURCE 13 |
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#define ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS 18 |
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#define ZT_PACKET_IDX_MAC 19 |
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#define ZT_PACKET_IDX_VERB 27 |
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#define ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD 28 |
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/** |
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* Packet buffer size (can be changed) |
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* |
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* The current value is big enough for ZT_MAX_PACKET_FRAGMENTS, the pragmatic |
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* packet fragment limit, times the default UDP MTU. Most packets won't be |
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* this big. |
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*/ |
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#define ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH (ZT_MAX_PACKET_FRAGMENTS * ZT_UDP_DEFAULT_PAYLOAD_MTU) |
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/** |
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* Minimum viable packet length (a.k.a. header length) |
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*/ |
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#define ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD |
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// Indexes of fields in fragment header |
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#define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PACKET_ID 0 |
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#define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_DEST 8 |
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#define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_INDICATOR 13 |
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#define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_NO 14 |
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#define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_HOPS 15 |
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#define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD 16 |
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/** |
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* Magic number found at ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_INDICATOR |
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*/ |
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#define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_INDICATOR ZT_ADDRESS_RESERVED_PREFIX |
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/** |
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* Minimum viable fragment length |
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*/ |
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#define ZT_PROTO_MIN_FRAGMENT_LENGTH ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD |
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// Field incides for parsing verbs ------------------------------------------- |
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// Some verbs have variable-length fields. Those aren't fully defined here |
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// yet-- instead they are parsed using relative indexes in IncomingPacket. |
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// See their respective handler functions. |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_PROTOCOL_VERSION (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_MAJOR_VERSION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_PROTOCOL_VERSION + 1) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_MINOR_VERSION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_MAJOR_VERSION + 1) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_REVISION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_MINOR_VERSION + 1) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_TIMESTAMP (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_REVISION + 2) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_IDENTITY (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_TIMESTAMP + 8) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_IN_RE_VERB (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_IN_RE_PACKET_ID (ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_IN_RE_VERB + 1) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_ERROR_CODE (ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_IN_RE_PACKET_ID + 8) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_PAYLOAD (ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_ERROR_CODE + 1) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_IN_RE_VERB (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_IN_RE_PACKET_ID (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_IN_RE_VERB + 1) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_PAYLOAD (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_IN_RE_PACKET_ID + 8) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_WHOIS_IDX_ZTADDRESS (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_FLAGS (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_ZTADDRESS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_FLAGS + 1) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_PORT (ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_ZTADDRESS + 5) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_ADDRLEN (ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_PORT + 2) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_ADDRESS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_ADDRLEN + 1) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_FRAME_IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_FRAME_IDX_ETHERTYPE (ZT_PROTO_VERB_FRAME_IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_FRAME_IDX_PAYLOAD (ZT_PROTO_VERB_FRAME_IDX_ETHERTYPE + 2) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_NETWORK_ID 8 |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_NETWORK_ID + ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_NETWORK_ID) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_FLAGS 1 |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_COM (ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS + ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_FLAGS) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_TO (ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS + ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_FLAGS) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_TO 6 |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_FROM (ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_TO + ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_TO) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_FROM 6 |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_ETHERTYPE (ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_FROM + ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_FROM) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_ETHERTYPE 2 |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_PAYLOAD (ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_ETHERTYPE + ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_ETHERTYPE) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST_IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST_IDX_DICT_LEN (ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST_IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST_IDX_DICT (ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST_IDX_DICT_LEN + 2) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_FLAGS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_MAC (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_FLAGS + 1) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_ADI (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_MAC + 6) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_GATHER_LIMIT (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_ADI + 4) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_COM (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_GATHER_LIMIT + 4) |
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// Note: COM, GATHER_LIMIT, and SOURCE_MAC are optional, and so are specified without size |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_COM (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS + 1) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_GATHER_LIMIT (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS + 1) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_SOURCE_MAC (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS + 1) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_DEST_MAC (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS + 1) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_DEST_ADI (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_DEST_MAC + 6) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_ETHERTYPE (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_DEST_ADI + 4) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_FRAME (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_ETHERTYPE + 2) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_TIMESTAMP (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_PAYLOAD) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_PROTOCOL_VERSION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_TIMESTAMP + 8) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_MAJOR_VERSION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_PROTOCOL_VERSION + 1) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_MINOR_VERSION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_MAJOR_VERSION + 1) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_REVISION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_MINOR_VERSION + 1) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_WHOIS__OK__IDX_IDENTITY (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_PAYLOAD) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST__OK__IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_PAYLOAD) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST__OK__IDX_DICT_LEN (ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST__OK__IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST__OK__IDX_DICT (ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST__OK__IDX_DICT_LEN + 2) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_PAYLOAD) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_MAC (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_ADI (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_MAC + 6) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_GATHER_RESULTS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_ADI + 4) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_PAYLOAD) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_MAC (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_ADI (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_MAC + 6) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_FLAGS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_ADI + 4) |
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#define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_COM_AND_GATHER_RESULTS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_FLAGS + 1) |
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// --------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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|
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namespace ZeroTier { |
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/** |
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* ZeroTier packet |
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* |
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* Packet format: |
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* <[8] 64-bit random packet ID and crypto initialization vector> |
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* <[5] destination ZT address> |
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* <[5] source ZT address> |
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* <[1] flags/cipher/hops> |
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* <[8] 64-bit MAC (or trusted path ID in trusted path mode)> |
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* [... -- begin encryption envelope -- ...] |
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* <[1] encrypted flags (MS 3 bits) and verb (LS 5 bits)> |
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* [... verb-specific payload ...] |
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* |
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* Packets smaller than 28 bytes are invalid and silently discarded. |
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* |
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* The flags/cipher/hops bit field is: FFCCCHHH where C is a 3-bit cipher |
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* selection allowing up to 7 cipher suites, F is outside-envelope flags, |
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* and H is hop count. |
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* |
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* The three-bit hop count is the only part of a packet that is mutable in |
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* transit without invalidating the MAC. All other bits in the packet are |
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* immutable. This is because intermediate nodes can increment the hop |
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* count up to 7 (protocol max). |
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* |
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* For unencrypted packets, MAC is computed on plaintext. Only HELLO is ever |
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* sent in the clear, as it's the "here is my public key" message. |
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*/ |
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class Packet : public Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH> |
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{ |
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public: |
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/** |
|
* A packet fragment |
|
* |
|
* Fragments are sent if a packet is larger than UDP MTU. The first fragment |
|
* is sent with its normal header with the fragmented flag set. Remaining |
|
* fragments are sent this way. |
|
* |
|
* The fragmented bit indicates that there is at least one fragment. Fragments |
|
* themselves contain the total, so the receiver must "learn" this from the |
|
* first fragment it receives. |
|
* |
|
* Fragments are sent with the following format: |
|
* <[8] packet ID of packet whose fragment this belongs to> |
|
* <[5] destination ZT address> |
|
* <[1] 0xff, a reserved address, signals that this isn't a normal packet> |
|
* <[1] total fragments (most significant 4 bits), fragment no (LS 4 bits)> |
|
* <[1] ZT hop count (top 5 bits unused and must be zero)> |
|
* <[...] fragment data> |
|
* |
|
* The protocol supports a maximum of 16 fragments. If a fragment is received |
|
* before its main packet header, it should be cached for a brief period of |
|
* time to see if its parent arrives. Loss of any fragment constitutes packet |
|
* loss; there is no retransmission mechanism. The receiver must wait for full |
|
* receipt to authenticate and decrypt; there is no per-fragment MAC. (But if |
|
* fragments are corrupt, the MAC will fail for the whole assembled packet.) |
|
*/ |
|
class Fragment : public Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH> |
|
{ |
|
public: |
|
Fragment() : |
|
Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>() |
|
{ |
|
} |
|
|
|
template<unsigned int C2> |
|
Fragment(const Buffer<C2> &b) |
|
throw(std::out_of_range) : |
|
Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(b) |
|
{ |
|
} |
|
|
|
Fragment(const void *data,unsigned int len) : |
|
Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(data,len) |
|
{ |
|
} |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Initialize from a packet |
|
* |
|
* @param p Original assembled packet |
|
* @param fragStart Start of fragment (raw index in packet data) |
|
* @param fragLen Length of fragment in bytes |
|
* @param fragNo Which fragment (>= 1, since 0 is Packet with end chopped off) |
|
* @param fragTotal Total number of fragments (including 0) |
|
* @throws std::out_of_range Packet size would exceed buffer |
|
*/ |
|
Fragment(const Packet &p,unsigned int fragStart,unsigned int fragLen,unsigned int fragNo,unsigned int fragTotal) |
|
throw(std::out_of_range) |
|
{ |
|
init(p,fragStart,fragLen,fragNo,fragTotal); |
|
} |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Initialize from a packet |
|
* |
|
* @param p Original assembled packet |
|
* @param fragStart Start of fragment (raw index in packet data) |
|
* @param fragLen Length of fragment in bytes |
|
* @param fragNo Which fragment (>= 1, since 0 is Packet with end chopped off) |
|
* @param fragTotal Total number of fragments (including 0) |
|
* @throws std::out_of_range Packet size would exceed buffer |
|
*/ |
|
inline void init(const Packet &p,unsigned int fragStart,unsigned int fragLen,unsigned int fragNo,unsigned int fragTotal) |
|
throw(std::out_of_range) |
|
{ |
|
if ((fragStart + fragLen) > p.size()) |
|
throw std::out_of_range("Packet::Fragment: tried to construct fragment of packet past its length"); |
|
setSize(fragLen + ZT_PROTO_MIN_FRAGMENT_LENGTH); |
|
|
|
// NOTE: this copies both the IV/packet ID and the destination address. |
|
memcpy(field(ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PACKET_ID,13),p.field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV,13),13); |
|
|
|
(*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_INDICATOR] = ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_INDICATOR; |
|
(*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_NO] = (char)(((fragTotal & 0xf) << 4) | (fragNo & 0xf)); |
|
(*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_HOPS] = 0; |
|
|
|
memcpy(field(ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD,fragLen),p.field(fragStart,fragLen),fragLen); |
|
} |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Get this fragment's destination |
|
* |
|
* @return Destination ZT address |
|
*/ |
|
inline Address destination() const { return Address(field(ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_DEST,ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH),ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @return True if fragment is of a valid length |
|
*/ |
|
inline bool lengthValid() const { return (size() >= ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @return ID of packet this is a fragment of |
|
*/ |
|
inline uint64_t packetId() const { return at<uint64_t>(ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PACKET_ID); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @return Total number of fragments in packet |
|
*/ |
|
inline unsigned int totalFragments() const { return (((unsigned int)((*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_NO]) >> 4) & 0xf); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @return Fragment number of this fragment |
|
*/ |
|
inline unsigned int fragmentNumber() const { return ((unsigned int)((*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_NO]) & 0xf); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @return Fragment ZT hop count |
|
*/ |
|
inline unsigned int hops() const { return (unsigned int)((*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_HOPS]); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Increment this packet's hop count |
|
*/ |
|
inline void incrementHops() |
|
{ |
|
(*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_HOPS] = (((*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_HOPS]) + 1) & ZT_PROTO_MAX_HOPS; |
|
} |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @return Length of payload in bytes |
|
*/ |
|
inline unsigned int payloadLength() const { return ((size() > ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD) ? (size() - ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD) : 0); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @return Raw packet payload |
|
*/ |
|
inline const unsigned char *payload() const |
|
{ |
|
return field(ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD,size() - ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD); |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* ZeroTier protocol verbs |
|
*/ |
|
enum Verb /* Max value: 32 (5 bits) */ |
|
{ |
|
/** |
|
* No operation (ignored, no reply) |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_NOP = 0x00, |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Announcement of a node's existence: |
|
* <[1] protocol version> |
|
* <[1] software major version> |
|
* <[1] software minor version> |
|
* <[2] software revision> |
|
* <[8] timestamp (ms since epoch)> |
|
* <[...] binary serialized identity (see Identity)> |
|
* <[1] destination address type> |
|
* [<[...] destination address to which packet was sent>] |
|
* <[8] 64-bit world ID of current world> |
|
* <[8] 64-bit timestamp of current world> |
|
* |
|
* This is the only message that ever must be sent in the clear, since it |
|
* is used to push an identity to a new peer. |
|
* |
|
* The destination address is the wire address to which this packet is |
|
* being sent, and in OK is *also* the destination address of the OK |
|
* packet. This can be used by the receiver to detect NAT, learn its real |
|
* external address if behind NAT, and detect changes to its external |
|
* address that require re-establishing connectivity. |
|
* |
|
* Destination address types and formats (not all of these are used now): |
|
* 0x00 - None -- no destination address data present |
|
* 0x01 - Ethernet address -- format: <[6] Ethernet MAC> |
|
* 0x04 - 6-byte IPv4 UDP address/port -- format: <[4] IP>, <[2] port> |
|
* 0x06 - 18-byte IPv6 UDP address/port -- format: <[16] IP>, <[2] port> |
|
* |
|
* OK payload: |
|
* <[8] timestamp (echoed from original HELLO)> |
|
* <[1] protocol version (of responder)> |
|
* <[1] software major version (of responder)> |
|
* <[1] software minor version (of responder)> |
|
* <[2] software revision (of responder)> |
|
* <[1] destination address type (for this OK, not copied from HELLO)> |
|
* [<[...] destination address>] |
|
* <[2] 16-bit length of world update or 0 if none> |
|
* [[...] world update] |
|
* |
|
* ERROR has no payload. |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_HELLO = 0x01, |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Error response: |
|
* <[1] in-re verb> |
|
* <[8] in-re packet ID> |
|
* <[1] error code> |
|
* <[...] error-dependent payload> |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_ERROR = 0x02, |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Success response: |
|
* <[1] in-re verb> |
|
* <[8] in-re packet ID> |
|
* <[...] request-specific payload> |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_OK = 0x03, |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Query an identity by address: |
|
* <[5] address to look up> |
|
* [<[...] additional addresses to look up> |
|
* |
|
* OK response payload: |
|
* <[...] binary serialized identity> |
|
* [<[...] additional binary serialized identities>] |
|
* |
|
* If querying a cluster, duplicate OK responses may occasionally occur. |
|
* These must be tolerated, which is easy since they'll have info you |
|
* already have. |
|
* |
|
* If the address is not found, no response is generated. The semantics |
|
* of WHOIS is similar to ARP and NDP in that persistent retrying can |
|
* be performed. |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_WHOIS = 0x04, |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Relay-mediated NAT traversal or firewall punching initiation: |
|
* <[1] flags (unused, currently 0)> |
|
* <[5] ZeroTier address of peer that might be found at this address> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit protocol address port> |
|
* <[1] protocol address length (4 for IPv4, 16 for IPv6)> |
|
* <[...] protocol address (network byte order)> |
|
* |
|
* This is sent by a relaying node to initiate NAT traversal between two |
|
* peers that are communicating by way of indirect relay. The relay will |
|
* send this to both peers at the same time on a periodic basis, telling |
|
* each where it might find the other on the network. |
|
* |
|
* Upon receipt a peer sends HELLO to establish a direct link. |
|
* |
|
* No OK or ERROR is generated. |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_RENDEZVOUS = 0x05, |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* ZT-to-ZT unicast ethernet frame (shortened EXT_FRAME): |
|
* <[8] 64-bit network ID> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit ethertype> |
|
* <[...] ethernet payload> |
|
* |
|
* MAC addresses are derived from the packet's source and destination |
|
* ZeroTier addresses. This is a shortened EXT_FRAME that elides full |
|
* Ethernet framing and other optional flags and features when they |
|
* are not necessary. |
|
* |
|
* ERROR may be generated if a membership certificate is needed for a |
|
* closed network. Payload will be network ID. |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_FRAME = 0x06, |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Full Ethernet frame with MAC addressing and optional fields: |
|
* <[8] 64-bit network ID> |
|
* <[1] flags> |
|
* <[6] destination MAC or all zero for destination node> |
|
* <[6] source MAC or all zero for node of origin> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit ethertype> |
|
* <[...] ethernet payload> |
|
* |
|
* Flags: |
|
* 0x01 - Certificate of network membership attached (DEPRECATED) |
|
* 0x02 - This is a TEE'd or REDIRECT'ed packet |
|
* 0x04 - TEE/REDIRECT'ed packet is from inbound side |
|
* |
|
* An extended frame carries full MAC addressing, making them a |
|
* superset of VERB_FRAME. They're used for bridging or when we |
|
* want to attach a certificate since FRAME does not support that. |
|
* |
|
* ERROR may be generated if a membership certificate is needed for a |
|
* closed network. Payload will be network ID. |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_EXT_FRAME = 0x07, |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* ECHO request (a.k.a. ping): |
|
* <[...] arbitrary payload> |
|
* |
|
* This generates OK with a copy of the transmitted payload. No ERROR |
|
* is generated. Response to ECHO requests is optional and ECHO may be |
|
* ignored if a node detects a possible flood. |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_ECHO = 0x08, |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Announce interest in multicast group(s): |
|
* <[8] 64-bit network ID> |
|
* <[6] multicast Ethernet address> |
|
* <[4] multicast additional distinguishing information (ADI)> |
|
* [... additional tuples of network/address/adi ...] |
|
* |
|
* LIKEs may be sent to any peer, though a good implementation should |
|
* restrict them to peers on the same network they're for and to network |
|
* controllers and root servers. In the current network, root servers |
|
* will provide the service of final multicast cache. |
|
* |
|
* VERB_NETWORK_CREDENTIALS should be pushed along with this, especially |
|
* if using upstream (e.g. root) nodes as multicast databases. This allows |
|
* GATHERs to be authenticated. |
|
* |
|
* OK/ERROR are not generated. |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_MULTICAST_LIKE = 0x09, |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Network membership credential push: |
|
* <[...] serialized certificate of membership> |
|
* [<[...] additional certificates of membership>] |
|
* <[1] 0x00, null byte marking end of COM array> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit number of capabilities> |
|
* <[...] one or more serialized Capability> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit number of tags> |
|
* <[...] one or more serialized Tags> |
|
* |
|
* This is sent in response to ERROR_NEED_MEMBERSHIP_CERTIFICATE and may |
|
* be pushed at any other time to keep exchanged certificates up to date. |
|
* |
|
* COMs and other credentials need not be for the same network, since each |
|
* includes its own network ID and signature. |
|
* |
|
* OK/ERROR are not generated. |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_NETWORK_CREDENTIALS = 0x0a, |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Network configuration request: |
|
* <[8] 64-bit network ID> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit length of request meta-data dictionary> |
|
* <[...] string-serialized request meta-data> |
|
* <[8] 64-bit revision of netconf we currently have> |
|
* <[8] 64-bit timestamp of netconf we currently have> |
|
* |
|
* This message requests network configuration from a node capable of |
|
* providing it. If the optional revision is included, a response is |
|
* only generated if there is a newer network configuration available. |
|
* |
|
* OK response payload: |
|
* <[8] 64-bit network ID> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit length of network configuration dictionary chunk> |
|
* <[...] network configuration dictionary (may be incomplete)> |
|
* <[4] 32-bit total length of assembled dictionary> |
|
* <[4] 32-bit index of chunk in this reply> |
|
* |
|
* ERROR response payload: |
|
* <[8] 64-bit network ID> |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST = 0x0b, |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Network configuration update push: |
|
* <[8] network ID to refresh> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit number of address/timestamp pairs to blacklist> |
|
* [<[5] ZeroTier address of peer being revoked>] |
|
* [<[8] blacklist credentials older than this timestamp>] |
|
* [<[...] additional address/timestamp pairs>] |
|
* |
|
* This can be sent by a network controller to both request that a network |
|
* config be updated and push instantaneous revocations of specific peers |
|
* or peer credentials. |
|
* |
|
* Specific revocations can be pushed to blacklist a specific peer's |
|
* credentials (COM, tags, and capabilities) if older than a specified |
|
* timestamp. This can be used to accomplish expedited revocation of |
|
* a peer's access to things on a network or to the network itself among |
|
* those other peers that can currently reach the controller. This is not |
|
* the only mechanism for revocation of course, but it's the fastest. |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REFRESH = 0x0c, |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Request endpoints for multicast distribution: |
|
* <[8] 64-bit network ID> |
|
* <[1] flags> |
|
* <[6] MAC address of multicast group being queried> |
|
* <[4] 32-bit ADI for multicast group being queried> |
|
* <[4] 32-bit requested max number of multicast peers> |
|
* [<[...] network certificate of membership>] |
|
* |
|
* Flags: |
|
* 0x01 - COM is attached |
|
* |
|
* This message asks a peer for additional known endpoints that have |
|
* LIKEd a given multicast group. It's sent when the sender wishes |
|
* to send multicast but does not have the desired number of recipient |
|
* peers. |
|
* |
|
* More than one OK response can occur if the response is broken up across |
|
* multiple packets or if querying a clustered node. |
|
* |
|
* The COM should be included so that upstream nodes that are not |
|
* members of our network can validate our request. |
|
* |
|
* OK response payload: |
|
* <[8] 64-bit network ID> |
|
* <[6] MAC address of multicast group being queried> |
|
* <[4] 32-bit ADI for multicast group being queried> |
|
* [begin gather results -- these same fields can be in OK(MULTICAST_FRAME)] |
|
* <[4] 32-bit total number of known members in this multicast group> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit number of members enumerated in this packet> |
|
* <[...] series of 5-byte ZeroTier addresses of enumerated members> |
|
* |
|
* ERROR is not generated; queries that return no response are dropped. |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER = 0x0d, |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Multicast frame: |
|
* <[8] 64-bit network ID> |
|
* <[1] flags> |
|
* [<[4] 32-bit implicit gather limit>] |
|
* [<[6] source MAC>] |
|
* <[6] destination MAC (multicast address)> |
|
* <[4] 32-bit multicast ADI (multicast address extension)> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit ethertype> |
|
* <[...] ethernet payload> |
|
* |
|
* Flags: |
|
* 0x01 - Network certificate of membership attached (DEPRECATED) |
|
* 0x02 - Implicit gather limit field is present |
|
* 0x04 - Source MAC is specified -- otherwise it's computed from sender |
|
* |
|
* OK and ERROR responses are optional. OK may be generated if there are |
|
* implicit gather results or if the recipient wants to send its own |
|
* updated certificate of network membership to the sender. ERROR may be |
|
* generated if a certificate is needed or if multicasts to this group |
|
* are no longer wanted (multicast unsubscribe). |
|
* |
|
* OK response payload: |
|
* <[8] 64-bit network ID> |
|
* <[6] MAC address of multicast group> |
|
* <[4] 32-bit ADI for multicast group> |
|
* <[1] flags> |
|
* [<[...] network certficate of membership (DEPRECATED)>] |
|
* [<[...] implicit gather results if flag 0x01 is set>] |
|
* |
|
* OK flags (same bits as request flags): |
|
* 0x01 - OK includes certificate of network membership (DEPRECATED) |
|
* 0x02 - OK includes implicit gather results |
|
* |
|
* ERROR response payload: |
|
* <[8] 64-bit network ID> |
|
* <[6] multicast group MAC> |
|
* <[4] 32-bit multicast group ADI> |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME = 0x0e, |
|
|
|
// 0x0f is reserved for an old deprecated message |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Push of potential endpoints for direct communication: |
|
* <[2] 16-bit number of paths> |
|
* <[...] paths> |
|
* |
|
* Path record format: |
|
* <[1] 8-bit path flags> |
|
* <[2] length of extended path characteristics or 0 for none> |
|
* <[...] extended path characteristics> |
|
* <[1] address type> |
|
* <[1] address length in bytes> |
|
* <[...] address> |
|
* |
|
* Path record flags: |
|
* 0x01 - Forget this path if currently known (not implemented yet) |
|
* 0x02 - Cluster redirect -- use this in preference to others |
|
* |
|
* The receiver may, upon receiving a push, attempt to establish a |
|
* direct link to one or more of the indicated addresses. It is the |
|
* responsibility of the sender to limit which peers it pushes direct |
|
* paths to to those with whom it has a trust relationship. The receiver |
|
* must obey any restrictions provided such as exclusivity or blacklists. |
|
* OK responses to this message are optional. |
|
* |
|
* Note that a direct path push does not imply that learned paths can't |
|
* be used unless they are blacklisted explicitly or unless flag 0x01 |
|
* is set. |
|
* |
|
* Only a subset of this functionality is currently implemented: basic |
|
* path pushing and learning. Blacklisting and trust are not fully |
|
* implemented yet (encryption is still always used). |
|
* |
|
* OK and ERROR are not generated. |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_PUSH_DIRECT_PATHS = 0x10, |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Source-routed circuit test message: |
|
* <[5] address of originator of circuit test> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit flags> |
|
* <[8] 64-bit timestamp> |
|
* <[8] 64-bit test ID (arbitrary, set by tester)> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit originator credential length (includes type)> |
|
* [[1] originator credential type (for authorizing test)] |
|
* [[...] originator credential] |
|
* <[2] 16-bit length of additional fields> |
|
* [[...] additional fields] |
|
* [ ... end of signed portion of request ... ] |
|
* <[2] 16-bit length of signature of request> |
|
* <[...] signature of request by originator> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit length of additional fields> |
|
* [[...] additional fields] |
|
* <[...] next hop(s) in path> |
|
* |
|
* Flags: |
|
* 0x01 - Report back to originator at all hops |
|
* 0x02 - Report back to originator at last hop |
|
* |
|
* Originator credential types: |
|
* 0x01 - 64-bit network ID for which originator is controller |
|
* |
|
* Path record format: |
|
* <[1] 8-bit flags (unused, must be zero)> |
|
* <[1] 8-bit breadth (number of next hops)> |
|
* <[...] one or more ZeroTier addresses of next hops> |
|
* |
|
* The circuit test allows a device to send a message that will traverse |
|
* the network along a specified path, with each hop optionally reporting |
|
* back to the tester via VERB_CIRCUIT_TEST_REPORT. |
|
* |
|
* Each circuit test packet includes a digital signature by the originator |
|
* of the request, as well as a credential by which that originator claims |
|
* authorization to perform the test. Currently this signature is ed25519, |
|
* but in the future flags might be used to indicate an alternative |
|
* algorithm. For example, the originator might be a network controller. |
|
* In this case the test might be authorized if the recipient is a member |
|
* of a network controlled by it, and if the previous hop(s) are also |
|
* members. Each hop may include its certificate of network membership. |
|
* |
|
* Circuit test paths consist of a series of records. When a node receives |
|
* an authorized circuit test, it: |
|
* |
|
* (1) Reports back to circuit tester as flags indicate |
|
* (2) Reads and removes the next hop from the packet's path |
|
* (3) Sends the packet along to next hop(s), if any. |
|
* |
|
* It is perfectly legal for a path to contain the same hop more than |
|
* once. In fact, this can be a very useful test to determine if a hop |
|
* can be reached bidirectionally and if so what that connectivity looks |
|
* like. |
|
* |
|
* The breadth field in source-routed path records allows a hop to forward |
|
* to more than one recipient, allowing the tester to specify different |
|
* forms of graph traversal in a test. |
|
* |
|
* There is no hard limit to the number of hops in a test, but it is |
|
* practically limited by the maximum size of a (possibly fragmented) |
|
* ZeroTier packet. |
|
* |
|
* Support for circuit tests is optional. If they are not supported, the |
|
* node should respond with an UNSUPPORTED_OPERATION error. If a circuit |
|
* test request is not authorized, it may be ignored or reported as |
|
* an INVALID_REQUEST. No OK messages are generated, but TEST_REPORT |
|
* messages may be sent (see below). |
|
* |
|
* ERROR packet format: |
|
* <[8] 64-bit timestamp (echoed from original> |
|
* <[8] 64-bit test ID (echoed from original)> |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_CIRCUIT_TEST = 0x11, |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Circuit test hop report: |
|
* <[8] 64-bit timestamp (echoed from original test)> |
|
* <[8] 64-bit test ID (echoed from original test)> |
|
* <[8] 64-bit reserved field (set to 0, currently unused)> |
|
* <[1] 8-bit vendor ID (set to 0, currently unused)> |
|
* <[1] 8-bit reporter protocol version> |
|
* <[1] 8-bit reporter software major version> |
|
* <[1] 8-bit reporter software minor version> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit reporter software revision> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit reporter OS/platform or 0 if not specified> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit reporter architecture or 0 if not specified> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit error code (set to 0, currently unused)> |
|
* <[8] 64-bit report flags (set to 0, currently unused)> |
|
* <[8] 64-bit packet ID of received CIRCUIT_TEST packet> |
|
* <[5] upstream ZeroTier address from which CIRCUIT_TEST was received> |
|
* <[1] 8-bit packet hop count of received CIRCUIT_TEST> |
|
* <[...] local wire address on which packet was received> |
|
* <[...] remote wire address from which packet was received> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit length of additional fields> |
|
* <[...] additional fields> |
|
* <[1] 8-bit number of next hops (breadth)> |
|
* <[...] next hop information> |
|
* |
|
* Next hop information record format: |
|
* <[5] ZeroTier address of next hop> |
|
* <[...] current best direct path address, if any, 0 if none> |
|
* |
|
* Circuit test reports can be sent by hops in a circuit test to report |
|
* back results. They should include information about the sender as well |
|
* as about the paths to which next hops are being sent. |
|
* |
|
* If a test report is received and no circuit test was sent, it should be |
|
* ignored. This message generates no OK or ERROR response. |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_CIRCUIT_TEST_REPORT = 0x12, |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Request proof of work: |
|
* <[1] 8-bit proof of work type> |
|
* <[1] 8-bit proof of work difficulty> |
|
* <[2] 16-bit length of proof of work challenge> |
|
* <[...] proof of work challenge> |
|
* |
|
* This requests that a peer perform a proof of work calucation. It can be |
|
* sent by highly trusted peers (e.g. root servers, network controllers) |
|
* under suspected denial of service conditions in an attempt to filter |
|
* out "non-serious" peers and remain responsive to those proving their |
|
* intent to actually communicate. |
|
* |
|
* If the peer obliges to perform the work, it does so and responds with |
|
* an OK containing the result. Otherwise it may ignore the message or |
|
* response with an ERROR_INVALID_REQUEST or ERROR_UNSUPPORTED_OPERATION. |
|
* |
|
* Proof of work type IDs: |
|
* 0x01 - Salsa20/12+SHA512 hashcash function |
|
* |
|
* Salsa20/12+SHA512 is based on the following composite hash function: |
|
* |
|
* (1) Compute SHA512(candidate) |
|
* (2) Use the first 256 bits of the result of #1 as a key to encrypt |
|
* 131072 zero bytes with Salsa20/12 (with a zero IV). |
|
* (3) Compute SHA512(the result of step #2) |
|
* (4) Accept this candiate if the first [difficulty] bits of the result |
|
* from step #3 are zero. Otherwise generate a new candidate and try |
|
* again. |
|
* |
|
* This is performed repeatedly on candidates generated by appending the |
|
* supplied challenge to an arbitrary nonce until a valid candidate |
|
* is found. This chosen prepended nonce is then returned as the result |
|
* in OK. |
|
* |
|
* OK payload: |
|
* <[2] 16-bit length of result> |
|
* <[...] computed proof of work> |
|
* |
|
* ERROR has no payload. |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_REQUEST_PROOF_OF_WORK = 0x13, |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* A message with arbitrary user-definable content: |
|
* <[8] 64-bit arbitrary message type ID> |
|
* [<[...] message payload>] |
|
* |
|
* This can be used to send arbitrary messages over VL1. It generates no |
|
* OK or ERROR and has no special semantics outside of whatever the user |
|
* (via the ZeroTier core API) chooses to give it. |
|
*/ |
|
VERB_USER_MESSAGE = 0x14 |
|
}; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Error codes for VERB_ERROR |
|
*/ |
|
enum ErrorCode |
|
{ |
|
/* No error, not actually used in transit */ |
|
ERROR_NONE = 0x00, |
|
|
|
/* Invalid request */ |
|
ERROR_INVALID_REQUEST = 0x01, |
|
|
|
/* Bad/unsupported protocol version */ |
|
ERROR_BAD_PROTOCOL_VERSION = 0x02, |
|
|
|
/* Unknown object queried */ |
|
ERROR_OBJ_NOT_FOUND = 0x03, |
|
|
|
/* HELLO pushed an identity whose address is already claimed */ |
|
ERROR_IDENTITY_COLLISION = 0x04, |
|
|
|
/* Verb or use case not supported/enabled by this node */ |
|
ERROR_UNSUPPORTED_OPERATION = 0x05, |
|
|
|
/* Tried to join network, but you're not a member */ |
|
ERROR_NETWORK_ACCESS_DENIED_ = 0x07, /* extra _ at end to avoid Windows name conflict */ |
|
|
|
/* Multicasts to this group are not wanted */ |
|
ERROR_UNWANTED_MULTICAST = 0x08 |
|
}; |
|
|
|
#ifdef ZT_TRACE |
|
static const char *verbString(Verb v) |
|
throw(); |
|
static const char *errorString(ErrorCode e) |
|
throw(); |
|
#endif |
|
|
|
template<unsigned int C2> |
|
Packet(const Buffer<C2> &b) : |
|
Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(b) |
|
{ |
|
} |
|
|
|
Packet(const void *data,unsigned int len) : |
|
Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(data,len) |
|
{ |
|
} |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Construct a new empty packet with a unique random packet ID |
|
* |
|
* Flags and hops will be zero. Other fields and data region are undefined. |
|
* Use the header access methods (setDestination() and friends) to fill out |
|
* the header. Payload should be appended; initial size is header size. |
|
*/ |
|
Packet() : |
|
Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH) |
|
{ |
|
Utils::getSecureRandom(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV,8),8); |
|
(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] = 0; // zero flags, cipher ID, and hops |
|
} |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Make a copy of a packet with a new initialization vector and destination address |
|
* |
|
* This can be used to take one draft prototype packet and quickly make copies to |
|
* encrypt for different destinations. |
|
* |
|
* @param prototype Prototype packet |
|
* @param dest Destination ZeroTier address for new packet |
|
*/ |
|
Packet(const Packet &prototype,const Address &dest) : |
|
Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(prototype) |
|
{ |
|
Utils::getSecureRandom(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV,8),8); |
|
setDestination(dest); |
|
} |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Construct a new empty packet with a unique random packet ID |
|
* |
|
* @param dest Destination ZT address |
|
* @param source Source ZT address |
|
* @param v Verb |
|
*/ |
|
Packet(const Address &dest,const Address &source,const Verb v) : |
|
Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH) |
|
{ |
|
Utils::getSecureRandom(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV,8),8); |
|
setDestination(dest); |
|
setSource(source); |
|
(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] = 0; // zero flags and hops |
|
setVerb(v); |
|
} |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Reset this packet structure for reuse in place |
|
* |
|
* @param dest Destination ZT address |
|
* @param source Source ZT address |
|
* @param v Verb |
|
*/ |
|
inline void reset(const Address &dest,const Address &source,const Verb v) |
|
{ |
|
setSize(ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH); |
|
Utils::getSecureRandom(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV,8),8); |
|
setDestination(dest); |
|
setSource(source); |
|
(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] = 0; // zero flags, cipher ID, and hops |
|
setVerb(v); |
|
} |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Generate a new IV / packet ID in place |
|
* |
|
* This can be used to re-use a packet buffer multiple times to send |
|
* technically different but otherwise identical copies of the same |
|
* packet. |
|
*/ |
|
inline void newInitializationVector() { Utils::getSecureRandom(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV,8),8); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Set this packet's destination |
|
* |
|
* @param dest ZeroTier address of destination |
|
*/ |
|
inline void setDestination(const Address &dest) { dest.copyTo(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_DEST,ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH),ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Set this packet's source |
|
* |
|
* @param source ZeroTier address of source |
|
*/ |
|
inline void setSource(const Address &source) { source.copyTo(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_SOURCE,ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH),ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Get this packet's destination |
|
* |
|
* @return Destination ZT address |
|
*/ |
|
inline Address destination() const { return Address(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_DEST,ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH),ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Get this packet's source |
|
* |
|
* @return Source ZT address |
|
*/ |
|
inline Address source() const { return Address(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_SOURCE,ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH),ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @return True if packet is of valid length |
|
*/ |
|
inline bool lengthValid() const { return (size() >= ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @return True if packet is fragmented (expect fragments) |
|
*/ |
|
inline bool fragmented() const { return (((unsigned char)(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] & ZT_PROTO_FLAG_FRAGMENTED) != 0); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Set this packet's fragmented flag |
|
* |
|
* @param f Fragmented flag value |
|
*/ |
|
inline void setFragmented(bool f) |
|
{ |
|
if (f) |
|
(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] |= (char)ZT_PROTO_FLAG_FRAGMENTED; |
|
else (*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] &= (char)(~ZT_PROTO_FLAG_FRAGMENTED); |
|
} |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @return True if compressed (result only valid if unencrypted) |
|
*/ |
|
inline bool compressed() const { return (((unsigned char)(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_VERB] & ZT_PROTO_VERB_FLAG_COMPRESSED) != 0); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @return ZeroTier forwarding hops (0 to 7) |
|
*/ |
|
inline unsigned int hops() const { return ((unsigned int)(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] & 0x07); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Increment this packet's hop count |
|
*/ |
|
inline void incrementHops() |
|
{ |
|
unsigned char &b = (*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS]; |
|
b = (b & 0xf8) | ((b + 1) & 0x07); |
|
} |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @return Cipher suite selector: 0 - 7 (see #defines) |
|
*/ |
|
inline unsigned int cipher() const |
|
{ |
|
return (((unsigned int)(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] & 0x38) >> 3); |
|
} |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Set this packet's cipher suite |
|
*/ |
|
inline void setCipher(unsigned int c) |
|
{ |
|
unsigned char &b = (*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS]; |
|
b = (b & 0xc7) | (unsigned char)((c << 3) & 0x38); // bits: FFCCCHHH |
|
// Set DEPRECATED "encrypted" flag -- used by pre-1.0.3 peers |
|
if (c == ZT_PROTO_CIPHER_SUITE__C25519_POLY1305_SALSA2012) |
|
b |= ZT_PROTO_FLAG_ENCRYPTED; |
|
else b &= (~ZT_PROTO_FLAG_ENCRYPTED); |
|
} |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Get the trusted path ID for this packet (only meaningful if cipher is trusted path) |
|
* |
|
* @return Trusted path ID (from MAC field) |
|
*/ |
|
inline uint64_t trustedPathId() const { return at<uint64_t>(ZT_PACKET_IDX_MAC); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Set this packet's trusted path ID and set the cipher spec to trusted path |
|
* |
|
* @param tpid Trusted path ID |
|
*/ |
|
inline void setTrusted(const uint64_t tpid) |
|
{ |
|
setCipher(ZT_PROTO_CIPHER_SUITE__NO_CRYPTO_TRUSTED_PATH); |
|
setAt(ZT_PACKET_IDX_MAC,tpid); |
|
} |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Get this packet's unique ID (the IV field interpreted as uint64_t) |
|
* |
|
* @return Packet ID |
|
*/ |
|
inline uint64_t packetId() const { return at<uint64_t>(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Set packet verb |
|
* |
|
* This also has the side-effect of clearing any verb flags, such as |
|
* compressed, and so must only be done during packet composition. |
|
* |
|
* @param v New packet verb |
|
*/ |
|
inline void setVerb(Verb v) { (*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_VERB] = (char)v; } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @return Packet verb (not including flag bits) |
|
*/ |
|
inline Verb verb() const { return (Verb)((*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_VERB] & 0x1f); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @return Length of packet payload |
|
*/ |
|
inline unsigned int payloadLength() const { return ((size() < ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH) ? 0 : (size() - ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH)); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* @return Raw packet payload |
|
*/ |
|
inline const unsigned char *payload() const { return field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD,size() - ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD); } |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Armor packet for transport |
|
* |
|
* @param key 32-byte key |
|
* @param encryptPayload If true, encrypt packet payload, else just MAC |
|
*/ |
|
void armor(const void *key,bool encryptPayload); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Verify and (if encrypted) decrypt packet |
|
* |
|
* This does not handle trusted path mode packets and will return false |
|
* for these. These are handled in IncomingPacket if the sending physical |
|
* address and MAC field match a trusted path. |
|
* |
|
* @param key 32-byte key |
|
* @return False if packet is invalid or failed MAC authenticity check |
|
*/ |
|
bool dearmor(const void *key); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Attempt to compress payload if not already (must be unencrypted) |
|
* |
|
* This requires that the payload at least contain the verb byte already |
|
* set. The compressed flag in the verb is set if compression successfully |
|
* results in a size reduction. If no size reduction occurs, compression |
|
* is not done and the flag is left cleared. |
|
* |
|
* @return True if compression occurred |
|
*/ |
|
bool compress(); |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Attempt to decompress payload if it is compressed (must be unencrypted) |
|
* |
|
* If payload is compressed, it is decompressed and the compressed verb |
|
* flag is cleared. Otherwise nothing is done and true is returned. |
|
* |
|
* @return True if data is now decompressed and valid, false on error |
|
*/ |
|
bool uncompress(); |
|
|
|
private: |
|
static const unsigned char ZERO_KEY[32]; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Deterministically mangle a 256-bit crypto key based on packet |
|
* |
|
* This uses extra data from the packet to mangle the secret, giving us an |
|
* effective IV that is somewhat more than 64 bits. This is "free" for |
|
* Salsa20 since it has negligible key setup time so using a different |
|
* key each time is fine. |
|
* |
|
* @param in Input key (32 bytes) |
|
* @param out Output buffer (32 bytes) |
|
*/ |
|
inline void _salsa20MangleKey(const unsigned char *in,unsigned char *out) const |
|
{ |
|
const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)data(); |
|
|
|
// IV and source/destination addresses. Using the addresses divides the |
|
// key space into two halves-- A->B and B->A (since order will change). |
|
for(unsigned int i=0;i<18;++i) // 8 + (ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH * 2) == 18 |
|
out[i] = in[i] ^ d[i]; |
|
|
|
// Flags, but with hop count masked off. Hop count is altered by forwarding |
|
// nodes. It's one of the only parts of a packet modifiable by people |
|
// without the key. |
|
out[18] = in[18] ^ (d[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] & 0xf8); |
|
|
|
// Raw packet size in bytes -- thus each packet size defines a new |
|
// key space. |
|
out[19] = in[19] ^ (unsigned char)(size() & 0xff); |
|
out[20] = in[20] ^ (unsigned char)((size() >> 8) & 0xff); // little endian |
|
|
|
// Rest of raw key is used unchanged |
|
for(unsigned int i=21;i<32;++i) |
|
out[i] = in[i]; |
|
} |
|
}; |
|
|
|
} // namespace ZeroTier |
|
|
|
#endif
|
|
|