This avoids waiting until next ping and timeout until the connection is actually
closed both by notifying the peer of the disconnect and by immediately closing
the local end of the connection after that. As a nice side effect, info level
logging about dropped connections now have the actual reason in it, not a generic
timeout error which looks like a real problem with the connection.
Two small behavior changes: don't "charge" the data to the global rate
limit until it's been accepted by the device specific limiter, and fix
the send/recv direction in the log print on per device rate limits.
This should address issue as described in https://forum.syncthing.net/t/stun-nig-party-with-paused-devices/10942/13
Essentially the model and the connection service goes out of sync in terms of thinking if we are connected or not.
Resort to model as being the ultimate source of truth.
I can't immediately pin down how this happens, yet some ideas.
ConfigSaved happens in separate routine, so it's possbile that we have some sort of device removed yet connection comes in parallel kind of thing.
However, in this case the connection exists in the model, and does not exist in the connection service and the only way for the connection to be removed
in the connection service is device removal from the config.
Given the subject, this might also be related to the device being paused.
Also, adds more info to the logs
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/4533
This makes it OK to not have any listeners working. Specifically,
- We don't complain about an empty listener address
- We don't complain about not having anything to announce to global
discovery servers
- We don't send local discovery packets when there is nothing to
announce.
The last point also fixes a thing where the list of addresses for local
discovery was set at startup time and never refreshed.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/4517
Well Tested(TM)
Introduces a potential issue where we always pick some connectable but dodgy connection that breaks
soon after the TLS handshake.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/4489
This updates kcp and uses our own fork which:
1. Keys sessions not just by remote address, but by remote address +
conversation id 2. Allows not to close connections that were passed directly
to the library. 3. Resets cache key if the session gets terminated.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/4339
LGTM: calmh
This adds a new config AllowedNetworks per device, which when set should
contain a list of network prefixes (192.168.0.0/126 etc) that are
allowed for the given device. The connection service will not attempt
connections to addresses outside of the given networks and incoming
connections will be rejected as well.
I've added the config to the normal device editor and shown it (when
set) in the device summary on the main screen.
There's a unit test for the IsAllowedNetwork method, I've done some
manual sanity testing on top of that.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/4073
This adds support for AES_256_GCM_SHA384 (in there since Go 1.5, a bit
of a shame we missed it) and ChaCha20-Poly1305 (if built with Go 1.8;
ignored on older Gos).
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/3822