Packet.hpp 48 KB

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  1. /*
  2. * ZeroTier One - Network Virtualization Everywhere
  3. * Copyright (C) 2011-2018 ZeroTier, Inc. https://www.zerotier.com/
  4. *
  5. * This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
  6. * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
  7. * the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
  8. * (at your option) any later version.
  9. *
  10. * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
  11. * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
  12. * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
  13. * GNU General Public License for more details.
  14. *
  15. * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
  16. * along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
  17. *
  18. * --
  19. *
  20. * You can be released from the requirements of the license by purchasing
  21. * a commercial license. Buying such a license is mandatory as soon as you
  22. * develop commercial closed-source software that incorporates or links
  23. * directly against ZeroTier software without disclosing the source code
  24. * of your own application.
  25. */
  26. #ifndef ZT_N_PACKET_HPP
  27. #define ZT_N_PACKET_HPP
  28. #include <stdint.h>
  29. #include <string.h>
  30. #include <stdio.h>
  31. #include <string>
  32. #include <iostream>
  33. #include "Constants.hpp"
  34. #include "Address.hpp"
  35. #include "Poly1305.hpp"
  36. #include "Salsa20.hpp"
  37. #include "Utils.hpp"
  38. #include "Buffer.hpp"
  39. /**
  40. * Protocol version -- incremented only for major changes
  41. *
  42. * 1 - 0.2.0 ... 0.2.5
  43. * 2 - 0.3.0 ... 0.4.5
  44. * + Added signature and originating peer to multicast frame
  45. * + Double size of multicast frame bloom filter
  46. * 3 - 0.5.0 ... 0.6.0
  47. * + Yet another multicast redesign
  48. * + New crypto completely changes key agreement cipher
  49. * 4 - 0.6.0 ... 1.0.6
  50. * + BREAKING CHANGE: New identity format based on hashcash design
  51. * 5 - 1.1.0 ... 1.1.5
  52. * + Supports echo
  53. * + Supports in-band world (root server definition) updates
  54. * + Clustering! (Though this will work with protocol v4 clients.)
  55. * + Otherwise backward compatible with protocol v4
  56. * 6 - 1.1.5 ... 1.1.10
  57. * + Network configuration format revisions including binary values
  58. * 7 - 1.1.10 ... 1.1.17
  59. * + Introduce trusted paths for local SDN use
  60. * 8 - 1.1.17 ... 1.2.0
  61. * + Multipart network configurations for large network configs
  62. * + Tags and Capabilities
  63. * + Inline push of CertificateOfMembership deprecated
  64. * 9 - 1.2.0 ... CURRENT
  65. */
  66. #define ZT_PROTO_VERSION 9
  67. /**
  68. * Minimum supported protocol version
  69. */
  70. #define ZT_PROTO_VERSION_MIN 4
  71. /**
  72. * Maximum hop count allowed by packet structure (3 bits, 0-7)
  73. *
  74. * This is a protocol constant. It's the maximum allowed by the length
  75. * of the hop counter -- three bits. See node/Constants.hpp for the
  76. * pragmatic forwarding limit, which is typically lower.
  77. */
  78. #define ZT_PROTO_MAX_HOPS 7
  79. /**
  80. * Cipher suite: Curve25519/Poly1305/Salsa20/12/NOCRYPT
  81. *
  82. * This specifies Poly1305 MAC using a 32-bit key derived from the first
  83. * 32 bytes of a Salsa20/12 keystream as in the Salsa20/12 cipher suite,
  84. * but the payload is not encrypted. This is currently only used to send
  85. * HELLO since that's the public key specification packet and must be
  86. * sent in the clear. Key agreement is performed using Curve25519 elliptic
  87. * curve Diffie-Hellman.
  88. */
  89. #define ZT_PROTO_CIPHER_SUITE__C25519_POLY1305_NONE 0
  90. /**
  91. * Cipher suite: Curve25519/Poly1305/Salsa20/12
  92. *
  93. * This specifies Poly1305 using the first 32 bytes of a Salsa20/12 key
  94. * stream as its one-time-use key followed by payload encryption with
  95. * the remaining Salsa20/12 key stream. Key agreement is performed using
  96. * Curve25519 elliptic curve Diffie-Hellman.
  97. */
  98. #define ZT_PROTO_CIPHER_SUITE__C25519_POLY1305_SALSA2012 1
  99. /**
  100. * Cipher suite: NONE
  101. *
  102. * This differs from POLY1305/NONE in that *no* crypto is done, not even
  103. * authentication. This is for trusted local LAN interconnects for internal
  104. * SDN use within a data center.
  105. *
  106. * For this mode the MAC field becomes a trusted path ID and must match the
  107. * configured ID of a trusted path or the packet is discarded.
  108. */
  109. #define ZT_PROTO_CIPHER_SUITE__NO_CRYPTO_TRUSTED_PATH 2
  110. /**
  111. * DEPRECATED payload encrypted flag, may be re-used in the future.
  112. *
  113. * This has been replaced by the three-bit cipher suite selection field.
  114. */
  115. #define ZT_PROTO_FLAG_ENCRYPTED 0x80
  116. /**
  117. * Header flag indicating that a packet is fragmented
  118. *
  119. * If this flag is set, the receiver knows to expect more than one fragment.
  120. * See Packet::Fragment for details.
  121. */
  122. #define ZT_PROTO_FLAG_FRAGMENTED 0x40
  123. /**
  124. * Verb flag indicating payload is compressed with LZ4
  125. */
  126. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_FLAG_COMPRESSED 0x80
  127. /**
  128. * Rounds used for Salsa20 encryption in ZT
  129. *
  130. * Discussion:
  131. *
  132. * DJB (Salsa20's designer) designed Salsa20 with a significant margin of 20
  133. * rounds, but has said repeatedly that 12 is likely sufficient. So far (as of
  134. * July 2015) there are no published attacks against 12 rounds, let alone 20.
  135. *
  136. * In cryptography, a "break" means something different from what it means in
  137. * common discussion. If a cipher is 256 bits strong and someone finds a way
  138. * to reduce key search to 254 bits, this constitues a "break" in the academic
  139. * literature. 254 bits is still far beyond what can be leveraged to accomplish
  140. * a "break" as most people would understand it -- the actual decryption and
  141. * reading of traffic.
  142. *
  143. * Nevertheless, "attacks only get better" as cryptographers like to say. As
  144. * a result, they recommend not using anything that's shown any weakness even
  145. * if that weakness is so far only meaningful to academics. It may be a sign
  146. * of a deeper problem.
  147. *
  148. * So why choose a lower round count?
  149. *
  150. * Turns out the speed difference is nontrivial. On a Macbook Pro (Core i3) 20
  151. * rounds of SSE-optimized Salsa20 achieves ~508mb/sec/core, while 12 rounds
  152. * hits ~832mb/sec/core. ZeroTier is designed for multiple objectives:
  153. * security, simplicity, and performance. In this case a deference was made
  154. * for performance.
  155. *
  156. * Meta discussion:
  157. *
  158. * The cipher is not the thing you should be paranoid about.
  159. *
  160. * I'll qualify that. If the cipher is known to be weak, like RC4, or has a
  161. * key size that is too small, like DES, then yes you should worry about
  162. * the cipher.
  163. *
  164. * But if the cipher is strong and your adversary is anyone other than the
  165. * intelligence apparatus of a major superpower, you are fine in that
  166. * department.
  167. *
  168. * Go ahead. Search for the last ten vulnerabilities discovered in SSL. Not
  169. * a single one involved the breaking of a cipher. Now broaden your search.
  170. * Look for issues with SSH, IPSec, etc. The only cipher-related issues you
  171. * will find might involve the use of RC4 or MD5, algorithms with known
  172. * issues or small key/digest sizes. But even weak ciphers are difficult to
  173. * exploit in the real world -- you usually need a lot of data and a lot of
  174. * compute time. No, virtually EVERY security vulnerability you will find
  175. * involves a problem with the IMPLEMENTATION not with the cipher.
  176. *
  177. * A flaw in ZeroTier's protocol or code is incredibly, unbelievably
  178. * more likely than a flaw in Salsa20 or any other cipher or cryptographic
  179. * primitive it uses. We're talking odds of dying in a car wreck vs. odds of
  180. * being personally impacted on the head by a meteorite. Nobody without a
  181. * billion dollar budget is going to break into your network by actually
  182. * cracking Salsa20/12 (or even /8) in the field.
  183. *
  184. * So stop worrying about the cipher unless you are, say, the Kremlin and your
  185. * adversary is the NSA and the GCHQ. In that case... well that's above my
  186. * pay grade. I'll just say defense in depth.
  187. */
  188. #define ZT_PROTO_SALSA20_ROUNDS 12
  189. /**
  190. * PUSH_DIRECT_PATHS flag: forget path
  191. */
  192. #define ZT_PUSH_DIRECT_PATHS_FLAG_FORGET_PATH 0x01
  193. /**
  194. * PUSH_DIRECT_PATHS flag: cluster redirect
  195. */
  196. #define ZT_PUSH_DIRECT_PATHS_FLAG_CLUSTER_REDIRECT 0x02
  197. // Field indexes in packet header
  198. #define ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV 0
  199. #define ZT_PACKET_IDX_DEST 8
  200. #define ZT_PACKET_IDX_SOURCE 13
  201. #define ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS 18
  202. #define ZT_PACKET_IDX_MAC 19
  203. #define ZT_PACKET_IDX_VERB 27
  204. #define ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD 28
  205. /**
  206. * Packet buffer size (can be changed)
  207. */
  208. #define ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH (ZT_MAX_PACKET_FRAGMENTS * ZT_DEFAULT_PHYSMTU)
  209. /**
  210. * Minimum viable packet length (a.k.a. header length)
  211. */
  212. #define ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD
  213. // Indexes of fields in fragment header
  214. #define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PACKET_ID 0
  215. #define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_DEST 8
  216. #define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_INDICATOR 13
  217. #define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_NO 14
  218. #define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_HOPS 15
  219. #define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD 16
  220. /**
  221. * Magic number found at ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_INDICATOR
  222. */
  223. #define ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_INDICATOR ZT_ADDRESS_RESERVED_PREFIX
  224. /**
  225. * Minimum viable fragment length
  226. */
  227. #define ZT_PROTO_MIN_FRAGMENT_LENGTH ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD
  228. // Field incides for parsing verbs -------------------------------------------
  229. // Some verbs have variable-length fields. Those aren't fully defined here
  230. // yet-- instead they are parsed using relative indexes in IncomingPacket.
  231. // See their respective handler functions.
  232. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_PROTOCOL_VERSION (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
  233. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_MAJOR_VERSION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_PROTOCOL_VERSION + 1)
  234. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_MINOR_VERSION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_MAJOR_VERSION + 1)
  235. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_REVISION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_MINOR_VERSION + 1)
  236. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_TIMESTAMP (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_REVISION + 2)
  237. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_IDENTITY (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO_IDX_TIMESTAMP + 8)
  238. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_IN_RE_VERB (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
  239. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_IN_RE_PACKET_ID (ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_IN_RE_VERB + 1)
  240. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_ERROR_CODE (ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_IN_RE_PACKET_ID + 8)
  241. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_PAYLOAD (ZT_PROTO_VERB_ERROR_IDX_ERROR_CODE + 1)
  242. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_IN_RE_VERB (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
  243. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_IN_RE_PACKET_ID (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_IN_RE_VERB + 1)
  244. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_PAYLOAD (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_IN_RE_PACKET_ID + 8)
  245. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_WHOIS_IDX_ZTADDRESS (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
  246. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_FLAGS (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
  247. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_ZTADDRESS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_FLAGS + 1)
  248. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_PORT (ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_ZTADDRESS + 5)
  249. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_ADDRLEN (ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_PORT + 2)
  250. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_ADDRESS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_RENDEZVOUS_IDX_ADDRLEN + 1)
  251. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_FRAME_IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
  252. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_FRAME_IDX_ETHERTYPE (ZT_PROTO_VERB_FRAME_IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8)
  253. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_FRAME_IDX_PAYLOAD (ZT_PROTO_VERB_FRAME_IDX_ETHERTYPE + 2)
  254. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
  255. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_NETWORK_ID 8
  256. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_NETWORK_ID + ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_NETWORK_ID)
  257. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_FLAGS 1
  258. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_COM (ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS + ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_FLAGS)
  259. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_TO (ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS + ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_FLAGS)
  260. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_TO 6
  261. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_FROM (ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_TO + ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_TO)
  262. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_FROM 6
  263. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_ETHERTYPE (ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_FROM + ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_FROM)
  264. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_ETHERTYPE 2
  265. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_PAYLOAD (ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_IDX_ETHERTYPE + ZT_PROTO_VERB_EXT_FRAME_LEN_ETHERTYPE)
  266. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST_IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
  267. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST_IDX_DICT_LEN (ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST_IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8)
  268. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST_IDX_DICT (ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST_IDX_DICT_LEN + 2)
  269. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
  270. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_FLAGS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8)
  271. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_MAC (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_FLAGS + 1)
  272. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_ADI (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_MAC + 6)
  273. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_GATHER_LIMIT (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_ADI + 4)
  274. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_COM (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER_IDX_GATHER_LIMIT + 4)
  275. // Note: COM, GATHER_LIMIT, and SOURCE_MAC are optional, and so are specified without size
  276. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD)
  277. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8)
  278. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_COM (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS + 1)
  279. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_GATHER_LIMIT (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS + 1)
  280. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_SOURCE_MAC (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS + 1)
  281. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_DEST_MAC (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_FLAGS + 1)
  282. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_DEST_ADI (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_DEST_MAC + 6)
  283. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_ETHERTYPE (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_DEST_ADI + 4)
  284. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_FRAME (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME_IDX_ETHERTYPE + 2)
  285. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_TIMESTAMP (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_PAYLOAD)
  286. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_PROTOCOL_VERSION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_TIMESTAMP + 8)
  287. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_MAJOR_VERSION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_PROTOCOL_VERSION + 1)
  288. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_MINOR_VERSION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_MAJOR_VERSION + 1)
  289. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_REVISION (ZT_PROTO_VERB_HELLO__OK__IDX_MINOR_VERSION + 1)
  290. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_WHOIS__OK__IDX_IDENTITY (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_PAYLOAD)
  291. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST__OK__IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_PAYLOAD)
  292. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST__OK__IDX_DICT_LEN (ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST__OK__IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8)
  293. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST__OK__IDX_DICT (ZT_PROTO_VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST__OK__IDX_DICT_LEN + 2)
  294. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_PAYLOAD)
  295. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_MAC (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8)
  296. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_ADI (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_MAC + 6)
  297. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_GATHER_RESULTS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER__OK__IDX_ADI + 4)
  298. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_NETWORK_ID (ZT_PROTO_VERB_OK_IDX_PAYLOAD)
  299. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_MAC (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_NETWORK_ID + 8)
  300. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_ADI (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_MAC + 6)
  301. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_FLAGS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_ADI + 4)
  302. #define ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_COM_AND_GATHER_RESULTS (ZT_PROTO_VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME__OK__IDX_FLAGS + 1)
  303. // ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  304. namespace ZeroTier {
  305. /**
  306. * ZeroTier packet
  307. *
  308. * Packet format:
  309. * <[8] 64-bit packet ID / crypto IV / packet counter>
  310. * <[5] destination ZT address>
  311. * <[5] source ZT address>
  312. * <[1] flags/cipher/hops>
  313. * <[8] 64-bit MAC (or trusted path ID in trusted path mode)>
  314. * [... -- begin encryption envelope -- ...]
  315. * <[1] encrypted flags (MS 3 bits) and verb (LS 5 bits)>
  316. * [... verb-specific payload ...]
  317. *
  318. * Packets smaller than 28 bytes are invalid and silently discarded.
  319. *
  320. * The 64-bit packet ID is a strongly random value used as a crypto IV.
  321. * Its least significant 3 bits are also used as a monotonically increasing
  322. * (and looping) counter for sending packets to a particular recipient. This
  323. * can be used for link quality monitoring and reporting and has no crypto
  324. * impact as it does not increase the likelihood of an IV collision. (The
  325. * crypto we use is not sensitive to the nature of the IV, only that it does
  326. * not repeat.)
  327. *
  328. * The flags/cipher/hops bit field is: FFCCCHHH where C is a 3-bit cipher
  329. * selection allowing up to 7 cipher suites, F is outside-envelope flags,
  330. * and H is hop count.
  331. *
  332. * The three-bit hop count is the only part of a packet that is mutable in
  333. * transit without invalidating the MAC. All other bits in the packet are
  334. * immutable. This is because intermediate nodes can increment the hop
  335. * count up to 7 (protocol max).
  336. *
  337. * For unencrypted packets, MAC is computed on plaintext. Only HELLO is ever
  338. * sent in the clear, as it's the "here is my public key" message.
  339. */
  340. class Packet : public Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>
  341. {
  342. public:
  343. /**
  344. * A packet fragment
  345. *
  346. * Fragments are sent if a packet is larger than UDP MTU. The first fragment
  347. * is sent with its normal header with the fragmented flag set. Remaining
  348. * fragments are sent this way.
  349. *
  350. * The fragmented bit indicates that there is at least one fragment. Fragments
  351. * themselves contain the total, so the receiver must "learn" this from the
  352. * first fragment it receives.
  353. *
  354. * Fragments are sent with the following format:
  355. * <[8] packet ID of packet whose fragment this belongs to>
  356. * <[5] destination ZT address>
  357. * <[1] 0xff, a reserved address, signals that this isn't a normal packet>
  358. * <[1] total fragments (most significant 4 bits), fragment no (LS 4 bits)>
  359. * <[1] ZT hop count (top 5 bits unused and must be zero)>
  360. * <[...] fragment data>
  361. *
  362. * The protocol supports a maximum of 16 fragments. If a fragment is received
  363. * before its main packet header, it should be cached for a brief period of
  364. * time to see if its parent arrives. Loss of any fragment constitutes packet
  365. * loss; there is no retransmission mechanism. The receiver must wait for full
  366. * receipt to authenticate and decrypt; there is no per-fragment MAC. (But if
  367. * fragments are corrupt, the MAC will fail for the whole assembled packet.)
  368. */
  369. class Fragment : public Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>
  370. {
  371. public:
  372. Fragment() :
  373. Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>()
  374. {
  375. }
  376. template<unsigned int C2>
  377. Fragment(const Buffer<C2> &b) :
  378. Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(b)
  379. {
  380. }
  381. Fragment(const void *data,unsigned int len) :
  382. Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(data,len)
  383. {
  384. }
  385. /**
  386. * Initialize from a packet
  387. *
  388. * @param p Original assembled packet
  389. * @param fragStart Start of fragment (raw index in packet data)
  390. * @param fragLen Length of fragment in bytes
  391. * @param fragNo Which fragment (>= 1, since 0 is Packet with end chopped off)
  392. * @param fragTotal Total number of fragments (including 0)
  393. */
  394. Fragment(const Packet &p,unsigned int fragStart,unsigned int fragLen,unsigned int fragNo,unsigned int fragTotal)
  395. {
  396. init(p,fragStart,fragLen,fragNo,fragTotal);
  397. }
  398. /**
  399. * Initialize from a packet
  400. *
  401. * @param p Original assembled packet
  402. * @param fragStart Start of fragment (raw index in packet data)
  403. * @param fragLen Length of fragment in bytes
  404. * @param fragNo Which fragment (>= 1, since 0 is Packet with end chopped off)
  405. * @param fragTotal Total number of fragments (including 0)
  406. */
  407. inline void init(const Packet &p,unsigned int fragStart,unsigned int fragLen,unsigned int fragNo,unsigned int fragTotal)
  408. {
  409. if ((fragStart + fragLen) > p.size())
  410. throw ZT_EXCEPTION_OUT_OF_BOUNDS;
  411. setSize(fragLen + ZT_PROTO_MIN_FRAGMENT_LENGTH);
  412. // NOTE: this copies both the IV/packet ID and the destination address.
  413. memcpy(field(ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PACKET_ID,13),p.field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV,13),13);
  414. (*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_INDICATOR] = ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_INDICATOR;
  415. (*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_NO] = (char)(((fragTotal & 0xf) << 4) | (fragNo & 0xf));
  416. (*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_HOPS] = 0;
  417. memcpy(field(ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD,fragLen),p.field(fragStart,fragLen),fragLen);
  418. }
  419. /**
  420. * Get this fragment's destination
  421. *
  422. * @return Destination ZT address
  423. */
  424. inline Address destination() const { return Address(field(ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_DEST,ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH),ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH); }
  425. /**
  426. * @return True if fragment is of a valid length
  427. */
  428. inline bool lengthValid() const { return (size() >= ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD); }
  429. /**
  430. * @return ID of packet this is a fragment of
  431. */
  432. inline uint64_t packetId() const { return at<uint64_t>(ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PACKET_ID); }
  433. /**
  434. * @return Total number of fragments in packet
  435. */
  436. inline unsigned int totalFragments() const { return (((unsigned int)((*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_NO]) >> 4) & 0xf); }
  437. /**
  438. * @return Fragment number of this fragment
  439. */
  440. inline unsigned int fragmentNumber() const { return ((unsigned int)((*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_FRAGMENT_NO]) & 0xf); }
  441. /**
  442. * @return Fragment ZT hop count
  443. */
  444. inline unsigned int hops() const { return (unsigned int)((*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_HOPS]); }
  445. /**
  446. * Increment this packet's hop count
  447. */
  448. inline void incrementHops()
  449. {
  450. (*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_HOPS] = (((*this)[ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_HOPS]) + 1) & ZT_PROTO_MAX_HOPS;
  451. }
  452. /**
  453. * @return Length of payload in bytes
  454. */
  455. inline unsigned int payloadLength() const { return ((size() > ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD) ? (size() - ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD) : 0); }
  456. /**
  457. * @return Raw packet payload
  458. */
  459. inline const unsigned char *payload() const
  460. {
  461. return field(ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD,size() - ZT_PACKET_FRAGMENT_IDX_PAYLOAD);
  462. }
  463. };
  464. /**
  465. * ZeroTier protocol verbs
  466. */
  467. enum Verb /* Max value: 32 (5 bits) */
  468. {
  469. /**
  470. * No operation (ignored, no reply)
  471. */
  472. VERB_NOP = 0x00,
  473. /**
  474. * Announcement of a node's existence and vitals:
  475. * <[1] protocol version>
  476. * <[1] software major version>
  477. * <[1] software minor version>
  478. * <[2] software revision>
  479. * <[8] timestamp for determining latency>
  480. * <[...] binary serialized identity (see Identity)>
  481. * <[...] physical destination address of packet>
  482. * <[8] 64-bit world ID of current planet>
  483. * <[8] 64-bit timestamp of current planet>
  484. * [... remainder if packet is encrypted using cryptField() ...]
  485. * <[2] 16-bit number of moons>
  486. * [<[1] 8-bit type ID of moon>]
  487. * [<[8] 64-bit world ID of moon>]
  488. * [<[8] 64-bit timestamp of moon>]
  489. * [... additional moon type/ID/timestamp tuples ...]
  490. *
  491. * HELLO is sent in the clear as it is how peers share their identity
  492. * public keys. A few additional fields are sent in the clear too, but
  493. * these are things that are public info or are easy to determine. As
  494. * of 1.2.0 we have added a few more fields, but since these could have
  495. * the potential to be sensitive we introduced the encryption of the
  496. * remainder of the packet. See cryptField(). Packet MAC is still
  497. * performed of course, so authentication occurs as normal.
  498. *
  499. * Destination address is the actual wire address to which the packet
  500. * was sent. See InetAddress::serialize() for format.
  501. *
  502. * OK payload:
  503. * <[8] HELLO timestamp field echo>
  504. * <[1] protocol version>
  505. * <[1] software major version>
  506. * <[1] software minor version>
  507. * <[2] software revision>
  508. * <[...] physical destination address of packet>
  509. * <[2] 16-bit length of world update(s) or 0 if none>
  510. * [[...] updates to planets and/or moons]
  511. *
  512. * With the exception of the timestamp, the other fields pertain to the
  513. * respondent who is sending OK and are not echoes.
  514. *
  515. * Note that OK is fully encrypted so no selective cryptField() of
  516. * potentially sensitive fields is needed.
  517. *
  518. * ERROR has no payload.
  519. */
  520. VERB_HELLO = 0x01,
  521. /**
  522. * Error response:
  523. * <[1] in-re verb>
  524. * <[8] in-re packet ID>
  525. * <[1] error code>
  526. * <[...] error-dependent payload>
  527. */
  528. VERB_ERROR = 0x02,
  529. /**
  530. * Success response:
  531. * <[1] in-re verb>
  532. * <[8] in-re packet ID>
  533. * <[...] request-specific payload>
  534. */
  535. VERB_OK = 0x03,
  536. /**
  537. * Query an identity by address:
  538. * <[5] address to look up>
  539. * [<[...] additional addresses to look up>
  540. *
  541. * OK response payload:
  542. * <[...] binary serialized identity>
  543. * [<[...] additional binary serialized identities>]
  544. *
  545. * If querying a cluster, duplicate OK responses may occasionally occur.
  546. * These must be tolerated, which is easy since they'll have info you
  547. * already have.
  548. *
  549. * If the address is not found, no response is generated. The semantics
  550. * of WHOIS is similar to ARP and NDP in that persistent retrying can
  551. * be performed.
  552. */
  553. VERB_WHOIS = 0x04,
  554. /**
  555. * Relay-mediated NAT traversal or firewall punching initiation:
  556. * <[1] flags (unused, currently 0)>
  557. * <[5] ZeroTier address of peer that might be found at this address>
  558. * <[2] 16-bit protocol address port>
  559. * <[1] protocol address length (4 for IPv4, 16 for IPv6)>
  560. * <[...] protocol address (network byte order)>
  561. *
  562. * An upstream node can send this to inform both sides of a relay of
  563. * information they might use to establish a direct connection.
  564. *
  565. * Upon receipt a peer sends HELLO to establish a direct link.
  566. *
  567. * No OK or ERROR is generated.
  568. */
  569. VERB_RENDEZVOUS = 0x05,
  570. /**
  571. * ZT-to-ZT unicast ethernet frame (shortened EXT_FRAME):
  572. * <[8] 64-bit network ID>
  573. * <[2] 16-bit ethertype>
  574. * <[...] ethernet payload>
  575. *
  576. * MAC addresses are derived from the packet's source and destination
  577. * ZeroTier addresses. This is a shortened EXT_FRAME that elides full
  578. * Ethernet framing and other optional flags and features when they
  579. * are not necessary.
  580. *
  581. * ERROR may be generated if a membership certificate is needed for a
  582. * closed network. Payload will be network ID.
  583. */
  584. VERB_FRAME = 0x06,
  585. /**
  586. * Full Ethernet frame with MAC addressing and optional fields:
  587. * <[8] 64-bit network ID>
  588. * <[1] flags>
  589. * <[6] destination MAC or all zero for destination node>
  590. * <[6] source MAC or all zero for node of origin>
  591. * <[2] 16-bit ethertype>
  592. * <[...] ethernet payload>
  593. *
  594. * Flags:
  595. * 0x01 - Certificate of network membership attached (DEPRECATED)
  596. * 0x02 - Most significant bit of subtype (see below)
  597. * 0x04 - Middle bit of subtype (see below)
  598. * 0x08 - Least significant bit of subtype (see below)
  599. * 0x10 - ACK requested in the form of OK(EXT_FRAME)
  600. *
  601. * Subtypes (0..7):
  602. * 0x0 - Normal frame (bridging can be determined by checking MAC)
  603. * 0x1 - TEEd outbound frame
  604. * 0x2 - REDIRECTed outbound frame
  605. * 0x3 - WATCHed outbound frame (TEE with ACK, ACK bit also set)
  606. * 0x4 - TEEd inbound frame
  607. * 0x5 - REDIRECTed inbound frame
  608. * 0x6 - WATCHed inbound frame
  609. * 0x7 - (reserved for future use)
  610. *
  611. * An extended frame carries full MAC addressing, making it a
  612. * superset of VERB_FRAME. It is used for bridged traffic,
  613. * redirected or observed traffic via rules, and can in theory
  614. * be used for multicast though MULTICAST_FRAME exists for that
  615. * purpose and has additional options and capabilities.
  616. *
  617. * OK payload (if ACK flag is set):
  618. * <[8] 64-bit network ID>
  619. */
  620. VERB_EXT_FRAME = 0x07,
  621. /**
  622. * ECHO request (a.k.a. ping):
  623. * <[...] arbitrary payload>
  624. *
  625. * This generates OK with a copy of the transmitted payload. No ERROR
  626. * is generated. Response to ECHO requests is optional and ECHO may be
  627. * ignored if a node detects a possible flood.
  628. */
  629. VERB_ECHO = 0x08,
  630. /**
  631. * Announce interest in multicast group(s):
  632. * <[8] 64-bit network ID>
  633. * <[6] multicast Ethernet address>
  634. * <[4] multicast additional distinguishing information (ADI)>
  635. * [... additional tuples of network/address/adi ...]
  636. *
  637. * LIKEs may be sent to any peer, though a good implementation should
  638. * restrict them to peers on the same network they're for and to network
  639. * controllers and root servers. In the current network, root servers
  640. * will provide the service of final multicast cache.
  641. *
  642. * VERB_NETWORK_CREDENTIALS should be pushed along with this, especially
  643. * if using upstream (e.g. root) nodes as multicast databases. This allows
  644. * GATHERs to be authenticated.
  645. *
  646. * OK/ERROR are not generated.
  647. */
  648. VERB_MULTICAST_LIKE = 0x09,
  649. /**
  650. * Network credentials push:
  651. * [<[...] one or more certificates of membership>]
  652. * <[1] 0x00, null byte marking end of COM array>
  653. * <[2] 16-bit number of capabilities>
  654. * <[...] one or more serialized Capability>
  655. * <[2] 16-bit number of tags>
  656. * <[...] one or more serialized Tags>
  657. * <[2] 16-bit number of revocations>
  658. * <[...] one or more serialized Revocations>
  659. * <[2] 16-bit number of certificates of ownership>
  660. * <[...] one or more serialized CertificateOfOwnership>
  661. *
  662. * This can be sent by anyone at any time to push network credentials.
  663. * These will of course only be accepted if they are properly signed.
  664. * Credentials can be for any number of networks.
  665. *
  666. * The use of a zero byte to terminate the COM section is for legacy
  667. * backward compatiblity. Newer fields are prefixed with a length.
  668. *
  669. * OK/ERROR are not generated.
  670. */
  671. VERB_NETWORK_CREDENTIALS = 0x0a,
  672. /**
  673. * Network configuration request:
  674. * <[8] 64-bit network ID>
  675. * <[2] 16-bit length of request meta-data dictionary>
  676. * <[...] string-serialized request meta-data>
  677. * <[8] 64-bit revision of netconf we currently have>
  678. * <[8] 64-bit timestamp of netconf we currently have>
  679. *
  680. * This message requests network configuration from a node capable of
  681. * providing it.
  682. *
  683. * Respones to this are always whole configs intended for the recipient.
  684. * For patches and other updates a NETWORK_CONFIG is sent instead.
  685. *
  686. * It would be valid and correct as of 1.2.0 to use NETWORK_CONFIG always,
  687. * but OK(NTEWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST) should be sent for compatibility.
  688. *
  689. * OK response payload:
  690. * <[8] 64-bit network ID>
  691. * <[2] 16-bit length of network configuration dictionary chunk>
  692. * <[...] network configuration dictionary (may be incomplete)>
  693. * [ ... end of legacy single chunk response ... ]
  694. * <[1] 8-bit flags>
  695. * <[8] 64-bit config update ID (should never be 0)>
  696. * <[4] 32-bit total length of assembled dictionary>
  697. * <[4] 32-bit index of chunk>
  698. * [ ... end signed portion ... ]
  699. * <[1] 8-bit chunk signature type>
  700. * <[2] 16-bit length of chunk signature>
  701. * <[...] chunk signature>
  702. *
  703. * The chunk signature signs the entire payload of the OK response.
  704. * Currently only one signature type is supported: ed25519 (1).
  705. *
  706. * Each config chunk is signed to prevent memory exhaustion or
  707. * traffic crowding DOS attacks against config fragment assembly.
  708. *
  709. * If the packet is from the network controller it is permitted to end
  710. * before the config update ID or other chunking related or signature
  711. * fields. This is to support older controllers that don't include
  712. * these fields and may be removed in the future.
  713. *
  714. * ERROR response payload:
  715. * <[8] 64-bit network ID>
  716. */
  717. VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST = 0x0b,
  718. /**
  719. * Network configuration data push:
  720. * <[8] 64-bit network ID>
  721. * <[2] 16-bit length of network configuration dictionary chunk>
  722. * <[...] network configuration dictionary (may be incomplete)>
  723. * <[1] 8-bit flags>
  724. * <[8] 64-bit config update ID (should never be 0)>
  725. * <[4] 32-bit total length of assembled dictionary>
  726. * <[4] 32-bit index of chunk>
  727. * [ ... end signed portion ... ]
  728. * <[1] 8-bit chunk signature type>
  729. * <[2] 16-bit length of chunk signature>
  730. * <[...] chunk signature>
  731. *
  732. * This is a direct push variant for network config updates. It otherwise
  733. * carries the same payload as OK(NETWORK_CONFIG_REQUEST) and has the same
  734. * semantics.
  735. *
  736. * The legacy mode missing the additional chunking fields is not supported
  737. * here.
  738. *
  739. * Flags:
  740. * 0x01 - Use fast propagation
  741. *
  742. * An OK should be sent if the config is successfully received and
  743. * accepted.
  744. *
  745. * OK payload:
  746. * <[8] 64-bit network ID>
  747. * <[8] 64-bit config update ID>
  748. */
  749. VERB_NETWORK_CONFIG = 0x0c,
  750. /**
  751. * Request endpoints for multicast distribution:
  752. * <[8] 64-bit network ID>
  753. * <[1] flags>
  754. * <[6] MAC address of multicast group being queried>
  755. * <[4] 32-bit ADI for multicast group being queried>
  756. * <[4] 32-bit requested max number of multicast peers>
  757. * [<[...] network certificate of membership>]
  758. *
  759. * Flags:
  760. * 0x01 - COM is attached
  761. *
  762. * This message asks a peer for additional known endpoints that have
  763. * LIKEd a given multicast group. It's sent when the sender wishes
  764. * to send multicast but does not have the desired number of recipient
  765. * peers.
  766. *
  767. * More than one OK response can occur if the response is broken up across
  768. * multiple packets or if querying a clustered node.
  769. *
  770. * The COM should be included so that upstream nodes that are not
  771. * members of our network can validate our request.
  772. *
  773. * OK response payload:
  774. * <[8] 64-bit network ID>
  775. * <[6] MAC address of multicast group being queried>
  776. * <[4] 32-bit ADI for multicast group being queried>
  777. * [begin gather results -- these same fields can be in OK(MULTICAST_FRAME)]
  778. * <[4] 32-bit total number of known members in this multicast group>
  779. * <[2] 16-bit number of members enumerated in this packet>
  780. * <[...] series of 5-byte ZeroTier addresses of enumerated members>
  781. *
  782. * ERROR is not generated; queries that return no response are dropped.
  783. */
  784. VERB_MULTICAST_GATHER = 0x0d,
  785. /**
  786. * Multicast frame:
  787. * <[8] 64-bit network ID>
  788. * <[1] flags>
  789. * [<[4] 32-bit implicit gather limit>]
  790. * [<[6] source MAC>]
  791. * <[6] destination MAC (multicast address)>
  792. * <[4] 32-bit multicast ADI (multicast address extension)>
  793. * <[2] 16-bit ethertype>
  794. * <[...] ethernet payload>
  795. *
  796. * Flags:
  797. * 0x01 - Network certificate of membership attached (DEPRECATED)
  798. * 0x02 - Implicit gather limit field is present
  799. * 0x04 - Source MAC is specified -- otherwise it's computed from sender
  800. *
  801. * OK and ERROR responses are optional. OK may be generated if there are
  802. * implicit gather results or if the recipient wants to send its own
  803. * updated certificate of network membership to the sender. ERROR may be
  804. * generated if a certificate is needed or if multicasts to this group
  805. * are no longer wanted (multicast unsubscribe).
  806. *
  807. * OK response payload:
  808. * <[8] 64-bit network ID>
  809. * <[6] MAC address of multicast group>
  810. * <[4] 32-bit ADI for multicast group>
  811. * <[1] flags>
  812. * [<[...] network certficate of membership (DEPRECATED)>]
  813. * [<[...] implicit gather results if flag 0x01 is set>]
  814. *
  815. * OK flags (same bits as request flags):
  816. * 0x01 - OK includes certificate of network membership (DEPRECATED)
  817. * 0x02 - OK includes implicit gather results
  818. *
  819. * ERROR response payload:
  820. * <[8] 64-bit network ID>
  821. * <[6] multicast group MAC>
  822. * <[4] 32-bit multicast group ADI>
  823. */
  824. VERB_MULTICAST_FRAME = 0x0e,
  825. /**
  826. * Push of potential endpoints for direct communication:
  827. * <[2] 16-bit number of paths>
  828. * <[...] paths>
  829. *
  830. * Path record format:
  831. * <[1] 8-bit path flags>
  832. * <[2] length of extended path characteristics or 0 for none>
  833. * <[...] extended path characteristics>
  834. * <[1] address type>
  835. * <[1] address length in bytes>
  836. * <[...] address>
  837. *
  838. * Path record flags:
  839. * 0x01 - Forget this path if currently known (not implemented yet)
  840. * 0x02 - Cluster redirect -- use this in preference to others
  841. *
  842. * The receiver may, upon receiving a push, attempt to establish a
  843. * direct link to one or more of the indicated addresses. It is the
  844. * responsibility of the sender to limit which peers it pushes direct
  845. * paths to to those with whom it has a trust relationship. The receiver
  846. * must obey any restrictions provided such as exclusivity or blacklists.
  847. * OK responses to this message are optional.
  848. *
  849. * Note that a direct path push does not imply that learned paths can't
  850. * be used unless they are blacklisted explicitly or unless flag 0x01
  851. * is set.
  852. *
  853. * OK and ERROR are not generated.
  854. */
  855. VERB_PUSH_DIRECT_PATHS = 0x10,
  856. // 0x11, 0x12 -- deprecated
  857. /**
  858. * A message with arbitrary user-definable content:
  859. * <[8] 64-bit arbitrary message type ID>
  860. * [<[...] message payload>]
  861. *
  862. * This can be used to send arbitrary messages over VL1. It generates no
  863. * OK or ERROR and has no special semantics outside of whatever the user
  864. * (via the ZeroTier core API) chooses to give it.
  865. *
  866. * Message type IDs less than or equal to 65535 are reserved for use by
  867. * ZeroTier, Inc. itself. We recommend making up random ones for your own
  868. * implementations.
  869. */
  870. VERB_USER_MESSAGE = 0x14,
  871. /**
  872. * A trace for remote debugging or diagnostics:
  873. * <[...] null-terminated dictionary containing trace information>
  874. * [<[...] additional null-terminated dictionaries>]
  875. *
  876. * This message contains a remote trace event. Remote trace events can
  877. * be sent to observers configured at the network level for those that
  878. * pertain directly to actiity on a network, or to global observers if
  879. * locally configured.
  880. *
  881. * The instance ID is a random 64-bit value generated by each ZeroTier
  882. * node on startup. This is helpful in identifying traces from different
  883. * members of a cluster.
  884. */
  885. VERB_REMOTE_TRACE = 0x15
  886. };
  887. /**
  888. * Error codes for VERB_ERROR
  889. */
  890. enum ErrorCode
  891. {
  892. /* No error, not actually used in transit */
  893. ERROR_NONE = 0x00,
  894. /* Invalid request */
  895. ERROR_INVALID_REQUEST = 0x01,
  896. /* Bad/unsupported protocol version */
  897. ERROR_BAD_PROTOCOL_VERSION = 0x02,
  898. /* Unknown object queried */
  899. ERROR_OBJ_NOT_FOUND = 0x03,
  900. /* HELLO pushed an identity whose address is already claimed */
  901. ERROR_IDENTITY_COLLISION = 0x04,
  902. /* Verb or use case not supported/enabled by this node */
  903. ERROR_UNSUPPORTED_OPERATION = 0x05,
  904. /* Network membership certificate update needed */
  905. ERROR_NEED_MEMBERSHIP_CERTIFICATE = 0x06,
  906. /* Tried to join network, but you're not a member */
  907. ERROR_NETWORK_ACCESS_DENIED_ = 0x07, /* extra _ at end to avoid Windows name conflict */
  908. /* Multicasts to this group are not wanted */
  909. ERROR_UNWANTED_MULTICAST = 0x08
  910. };
  911. template<unsigned int C2>
  912. Packet(const Buffer<C2> &b) :
  913. Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(b)
  914. {
  915. }
  916. Packet(const void *data,unsigned int len) :
  917. Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(data,len)
  918. {
  919. }
  920. /**
  921. * Construct a new empty packet with a unique random packet ID
  922. *
  923. * Flags and hops will be zero. Other fields and data region are undefined.
  924. * Use the header access methods (setDestination() and friends) to fill out
  925. * the header. Payload should be appended; initial size is header size.
  926. */
  927. Packet() :
  928. Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH)
  929. {
  930. Utils::getSecureRandom(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV,8),8);
  931. (*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] = 0; // zero flags, cipher ID, and hops
  932. }
  933. /**
  934. * Make a copy of a packet with a new initialization vector and destination address
  935. *
  936. * This can be used to take one draft prototype packet and quickly make copies to
  937. * encrypt for different destinations.
  938. *
  939. * @param prototype Prototype packet
  940. * @param dest Destination ZeroTier address for new packet
  941. */
  942. Packet(const Packet &prototype,const Address &dest) :
  943. Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(prototype)
  944. {
  945. Utils::getSecureRandom(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV,8),8);
  946. setDestination(dest);
  947. }
  948. /**
  949. * Construct a new empty packet with a unique random packet ID
  950. *
  951. * @param dest Destination ZT address
  952. * @param source Source ZT address
  953. * @param v Verb
  954. */
  955. Packet(const Address &dest,const Address &source,const Verb v) :
  956. Buffer<ZT_PROTO_MAX_PACKET_LENGTH>(ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH)
  957. {
  958. Utils::getSecureRandom(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV,8),8);
  959. setDestination(dest);
  960. setSource(source);
  961. (*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] = 0; // zero flags and hops
  962. setVerb(v);
  963. }
  964. /**
  965. * Reset this packet structure for reuse in place
  966. *
  967. * @param dest Destination ZT address
  968. * @param source Source ZT address
  969. * @param v Verb
  970. */
  971. inline void reset(const Address &dest,const Address &source,const Verb v)
  972. {
  973. setSize(ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH);
  974. Utils::getSecureRandom(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV,8),8);
  975. setDestination(dest);
  976. setSource(source);
  977. (*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] = 0; // zero flags, cipher ID, and hops
  978. setVerb(v);
  979. }
  980. /**
  981. * Generate a new IV / packet ID in place
  982. *
  983. * This can be used to re-use a packet buffer multiple times to send
  984. * technically different but otherwise identical copies of the same
  985. * packet.
  986. */
  987. inline void newInitializationVector() { Utils::getSecureRandom(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV,8),8); }
  988. /**
  989. * Set this packet's destination
  990. *
  991. * @param dest ZeroTier address of destination
  992. */
  993. inline void setDestination(const Address &dest) { dest.copyTo(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_DEST,ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH),ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH); }
  994. /**
  995. * Set this packet's source
  996. *
  997. * @param source ZeroTier address of source
  998. */
  999. inline void setSource(const Address &source) { source.copyTo(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_SOURCE,ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH),ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH); }
  1000. /**
  1001. * Get this packet's destination
  1002. *
  1003. * @return Destination ZT address
  1004. */
  1005. inline Address destination() const { return Address(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_DEST,ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH),ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH); }
  1006. /**
  1007. * Get this packet's source
  1008. *
  1009. * @return Source ZT address
  1010. */
  1011. inline Address source() const { return Address(field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_SOURCE,ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH),ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH); }
  1012. /**
  1013. * @return True if packet is of valid length
  1014. */
  1015. inline bool lengthValid() const { return (size() >= ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH); }
  1016. /**
  1017. * @return True if packet is fragmented (expect fragments)
  1018. */
  1019. inline bool fragmented() const { return (((unsigned char)(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] & ZT_PROTO_FLAG_FRAGMENTED) != 0); }
  1020. /**
  1021. * Set this packet's fragmented flag
  1022. *
  1023. * @param f Fragmented flag value
  1024. */
  1025. inline void setFragmented(bool f)
  1026. {
  1027. if (f)
  1028. (*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] |= (char)ZT_PROTO_FLAG_FRAGMENTED;
  1029. else (*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] &= (char)(~ZT_PROTO_FLAG_FRAGMENTED);
  1030. }
  1031. /**
  1032. * @return True if compressed (result only valid if unencrypted)
  1033. */
  1034. inline bool compressed() const { return (((unsigned char)(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_VERB] & ZT_PROTO_VERB_FLAG_COMPRESSED) != 0); }
  1035. /**
  1036. * @return ZeroTier forwarding hops (0 to 7)
  1037. */
  1038. inline unsigned int hops() const { return ((unsigned int)(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] & 0x07); }
  1039. /**
  1040. * Increment this packet's hop count
  1041. */
  1042. inline void incrementHops()
  1043. {
  1044. unsigned char &b = (*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS];
  1045. b = (b & 0xf8) | ((b + 1) & 0x07);
  1046. }
  1047. /**
  1048. * @return Cipher suite selector: 0 - 7 (see #defines)
  1049. */
  1050. inline unsigned int cipher() const
  1051. {
  1052. return (((unsigned int)(*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] & 0x38) >> 3);
  1053. }
  1054. /**
  1055. * Set this packet's cipher suite
  1056. */
  1057. inline void setCipher(unsigned int c)
  1058. {
  1059. unsigned char &b = (*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS];
  1060. b = (b & 0xc7) | (unsigned char)((c << 3) & 0x38); // bits: FFCCCHHH
  1061. // Set DEPRECATED "encrypted" flag -- used by pre-1.0.3 peers
  1062. if (c == ZT_PROTO_CIPHER_SUITE__C25519_POLY1305_SALSA2012)
  1063. b |= ZT_PROTO_FLAG_ENCRYPTED;
  1064. else b &= (~ZT_PROTO_FLAG_ENCRYPTED);
  1065. }
  1066. /**
  1067. * Get the trusted path ID for this packet (only meaningful if cipher is trusted path)
  1068. *
  1069. * @return Trusted path ID (from MAC field)
  1070. */
  1071. inline uint64_t trustedPathId() const { return at<uint64_t>(ZT_PACKET_IDX_MAC); }
  1072. /**
  1073. * Set this packet's trusted path ID and set the cipher spec to trusted path
  1074. *
  1075. * @param tpid Trusted path ID
  1076. */
  1077. inline void setTrusted(const uint64_t tpid)
  1078. {
  1079. setCipher(ZT_PROTO_CIPHER_SUITE__NO_CRYPTO_TRUSTED_PATH);
  1080. setAt(ZT_PACKET_IDX_MAC,tpid);
  1081. }
  1082. /**
  1083. * Get this packet's unique ID (the IV field interpreted as uint64_t)
  1084. *
  1085. * Note that the least significant 3 bits of this ID will change when armor()
  1086. * is called to armor the packet for transport. This is because armor() will
  1087. * mask the last 3 bits against the send counter for QoS monitoring use prior
  1088. * to actually using the IV to encrypt and MAC the packet. Be aware of this
  1089. * when grabbing the packetId of a new packet prior to armor/send.
  1090. *
  1091. * @return Packet ID
  1092. */
  1093. inline uint64_t packetId() const { return at<uint64_t>(ZT_PACKET_IDX_IV); }
  1094. /**
  1095. * Set packet verb
  1096. *
  1097. * This also has the side-effect of clearing any verb flags, such as
  1098. * compressed, and so must only be done during packet composition.
  1099. *
  1100. * @param v New packet verb
  1101. */
  1102. inline void setVerb(Verb v) { (*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_VERB] = (char)v; }
  1103. /**
  1104. * @return Packet verb (not including flag bits)
  1105. */
  1106. inline Verb verb() const { return (Verb)((*this)[ZT_PACKET_IDX_VERB] & 0x1f); }
  1107. /**
  1108. * @return Length of packet payload
  1109. */
  1110. inline unsigned int payloadLength() const { return ((size() < ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH) ? 0 : (size() - ZT_PROTO_MIN_PACKET_LENGTH)); }
  1111. /**
  1112. * @return Raw packet payload
  1113. */
  1114. inline const unsigned char *payload() const { return field(ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD,size() - ZT_PACKET_IDX_PAYLOAD); }
  1115. /**
  1116. * Armor packet for transport
  1117. *
  1118. * @param key 32-byte key
  1119. * @param encryptPayload If true, encrypt packet payload, else just MAC
  1120. */
  1121. void armor(const void *key,bool encryptPayload);
  1122. /**
  1123. * Verify and (if encrypted) decrypt packet
  1124. *
  1125. * This does not handle trusted path mode packets and will return false
  1126. * for these. These are handled in IncomingPacket if the sending physical
  1127. * address and MAC field match a trusted path.
  1128. *
  1129. * @param key 32-byte key
  1130. * @return False if packet is invalid or failed MAC authenticity check
  1131. */
  1132. bool dearmor(const void *key);
  1133. /**
  1134. * Encrypt/decrypt a separately armored portion of a packet
  1135. *
  1136. * This is currently only used to mask portions of HELLO as an extra
  1137. * security precation since most of that message is sent in the clear.
  1138. *
  1139. * This must NEVER be used more than once in the same packet, as doing
  1140. * so will result in re-use of the same key stream.
  1141. *
  1142. * @param key 32-byte key
  1143. * @param start Start of encrypted portion
  1144. * @param len Length of encrypted portion
  1145. */
  1146. void cryptField(const void *key,unsigned int start,unsigned int len);
  1147. /**
  1148. * Attempt to compress payload if not already (must be unencrypted)
  1149. *
  1150. * This requires that the payload at least contain the verb byte already
  1151. * set. The compressed flag in the verb is set if compression successfully
  1152. * results in a size reduction. If no size reduction occurs, compression
  1153. * is not done and the flag is left cleared.
  1154. *
  1155. * @return True if compression occurred
  1156. */
  1157. bool compress();
  1158. /**
  1159. * Attempt to decompress payload if it is compressed (must be unencrypted)
  1160. *
  1161. * If payload is compressed, it is decompressed and the compressed verb
  1162. * flag is cleared. Otherwise nothing is done and true is returned.
  1163. *
  1164. * @return True if data is now decompressed and valid, false on error
  1165. */
  1166. bool uncompress();
  1167. private:
  1168. static const unsigned char ZERO_KEY[32];
  1169. /**
  1170. * Deterministically mangle a 256-bit crypto key based on packet
  1171. *
  1172. * This uses extra data from the packet to mangle the secret, giving us an
  1173. * effective IV that is somewhat more than 64 bits. This is "free" for
  1174. * Salsa20 since it has negligible key setup time so using a different
  1175. * key each time is fine.
  1176. *
  1177. * @param in Input key (32 bytes)
  1178. * @param out Output buffer (32 bytes)
  1179. */
  1180. inline void _salsa20MangleKey(const unsigned char *in,unsigned char *out) const
  1181. {
  1182. const unsigned char *d = (const unsigned char *)data();
  1183. // IV and source/destination addresses. Using the addresses divides the
  1184. // key space into two halves-- A->B and B->A (since order will change).
  1185. for(unsigned int i=0;i<18;++i) // 8 + (ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH * 2) == 18
  1186. out[i] = in[i] ^ d[i];
  1187. // Flags, but with hop count masked off. Hop count is altered by forwarding
  1188. // nodes. It's one of the only parts of a packet modifiable by people
  1189. // without the key.
  1190. out[18] = in[18] ^ (d[ZT_PACKET_IDX_FLAGS] & 0xf8);
  1191. // Raw packet size in bytes -- thus each packet size defines a new
  1192. // key space.
  1193. out[19] = in[19] ^ (unsigned char)(size() & 0xff);
  1194. out[20] = in[20] ^ (unsigned char)((size() >> 8) & 0xff); // little endian
  1195. // Rest of raw key is used unchanged
  1196. for(unsigned int i=21;i<32;++i)
  1197. out[i] = in[i];
  1198. }
  1199. };
  1200. } // namespace ZeroTier
  1201. #endif