This was misleading 'configure' into thinking we actually support AF_LINK,
but we're Linux, so we don't, and we never implemented the functions we
declared here either.
Reported to AOSP by Jun-ya Kato.
Change-Id: I111f9887f3812469b411b9cf5124d9dd624f19f7
Update wire protocol to return and process error code first.
This will make sure dns proxy operations do not stall when
an internal error happens.
Also fix a compiler warning.
Also fix a potential buffer overflow.
And use correct types (uint32_t) rather than int when reading from network.
Change-Id: I9f99c16d6fd5e9137491a4d1b293a7c78e31b9c3
Prepend a 0 to match the new sequence-number style, though this module
doesn't really need/use it.
bug:5864209
Change-Id: Iacbcddaced6fe8bb01d186596a916e4fb4805fef
We can't easily tell the protocol family of the secondary network,
so try both and trust that the carrier has configured dns servers
according to the protocols supported on its network.
bug:5468224
Change-Id: If4f017573d313a6ad8354574076de6d63d43b444
AI_ADDRCONFIG is currently implemented by trying to connect
to well-known addresses in order to see if IPv4 and/or IPv6
connectivity is available.
In some cases (e.g., walled gardens with no global
connectivity) both probes can fail. If this happens,
query for both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses instead of doing
nothing and failing the query.
Bug: 5284168
Change-Id: I4e3a69ea86fb6d839a6bd31236b98da81e5cbf45
Change Ife82a8d8 broke IPv6 on wifi. Change I4e3a69ea is
an alternate approach that does not require any framework
changes.
Bug: 5284168
Change-Id: Ib52614be3875a2ae2eaedd1be265f90e506eda41
Instead of checking for IPv4 or IPv6 connectivity, try using pid-specific
hints the framework has left for us.
bug:5284168
Change-Id: Id64d48db3900865a7d58ada8309870c63d6eab12
The gethostbyaddr code in system/netd now expects a string address
from inet_ntop, not raw bytes, in order to properly pass addresses
containing null and probably spaces and newlines characeters as well.
Bug: 4344448
Change-Id: I935abbbe522d96b64a5f975c7937e3aed3f7b335
The length of the cname is sent in big-endian
order. Thus, it has to be converted before used
in android_getaddrinfo_proxy
Change-Id: I1a0cc12780c47f7493fcf06f690515829f88c01e
getaddrinfo only asks DNS for IPv6 addresses if the system
has IPv6 connectivity, but always asks for IPv4 addresses.
Don't ask for IPv4 addresses if there is no IPv4
connectivity.
Change-Id: Iefe9fcb006fabe60b4b11dd4653a7c4a406506f4
to gingerbread.
Implement RFC3484 policy table changes from draft-ietf-6man-rfc3484-revise-01.
The changes in a nutshell:
- Handle v4-mapped as different from v4-compat (this was probably
an existing bug in our code).
- Add policy entries for ULA, above most everything else.
- Put v4-compat, old-style IPv6 site-local and 6bone addresses
way down in the preference table.
The rest is just shuffling numbers around (no actual changes to
priority).
to gingerbread.
Don't treat private IPv4 addresses as being in a non-global scope. The effect of this change is essentially to prefer NATed IPv4 over 6to4.
Will also need to do gethostinfo, but that's probably about it.
It was cleaner to do it at this level, rather than speaking in terms
of DNS packets.
Change-Id: I047cc459979ffb0170a3eb0d432a7e827fb71c26
Also add missing declarations to misc. functions.
Fix clearerr() implementation (previous was broken).
Handle feature test macros like _POSIX_C_SOURCE properly.
Change-Id: Icdc973a6b9d550a166fc2545f727ea837fe800c4
Typo assigned prefixlen1 twice instead of to the two different variables
for comparison and difference computation.
Change-Id: I6631b8269ca6aae264c8d7d414127b756838df96
Java changes required not to mess up the ordering from bionic will arrive in a
later commit.) In particular, this will give us more correct behavior when on a
6to4 network, in that IPv4 will usually be preferred over 6to4.
Most of RFC 3484 is implemented -- what's not is rule 3 (avoid deprecated
addresses), 4 (prefer home addresses) and 7 (prefer native transport) as they
require low-level access to the kernel routing table via netlink. (glibc also
started out this way, and these rules are primarily useful in pretty obscure
circumstances, so we should be fine for the time being.)
Also, rule 9 (use longest matching prefix) has been modified so it does not try
to sort IPv4 addresses; given current IPv4 addressing practice these rules are
pretty much meaningless. Finally, I've added support for Teredo as a separate
label, with slightly lower preference than 6to4. (Vista puts the preference
below IPv4 by default. glibc puts the preference together with non-tunneled
IPv6.)
Note that this patch removes support for the "sortlist" directive in
resolv.conf; I've never seen it in actual use, it's irrelevant for Android
(since we don't use resolv.conf anyway), and it's not clear how it would be
implemented alongside RFC 3484.
the issue is that the BSD implementation doesn't accept a call like:
getaddrinfo(SERVER_NAME, "9999", NULL, &res);
because if will reject a numerical string in the second parameter if no hints are explicitely
provided. This technically doesn't violate POSIX but might make porting Linux software a bit
difficult. For more details see:
http://groups.google.com/group/android-ndk/browse_thread/thread/818ab9c53f24c87
also comment debugging printf() calls which shouldn't be there.