From 26a029d407be480d791972afb5975cf62c9360a6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Fri, 19 Apr 2024 02:47:55 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 124.0.1. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- netwerk/docs/dns/dns-over-https-trr.md | 156 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 156 insertions(+) create mode 100644 netwerk/docs/dns/dns-over-https-trr.md (limited to 'netwerk/docs/dns/dns-over-https-trr.md') diff --git a/netwerk/docs/dns/dns-over-https-trr.md b/netwerk/docs/dns/dns-over-https-trr.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..cf025a1e60 --- /dev/null +++ b/netwerk/docs/dns/dns-over-https-trr.md @@ -0,0 +1,156 @@ +# DNS over HTTPS (Trusted Recursive Resolver) + +## Terminology + +**DNS-over-HTTPS (DoH)** allows DNS to be resolved with enhanced +privacy, secure transfers and comparable performance. The protocol is +described in [RFC 8484](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8484) . + +**Trusted Recursive Resolver (TRR)** is the name of Firefox\'s +implementation of the protocol and the +[policy](https://wiki.mozilla.org/Security/DOH-resolver-policy) that +ensures only privacy-respecting DoH providers are recommended by +Firefox. + +On this page we will use DoH when referring to the protocol, and TRR +when referring to the implementation. + +**Unencrypted DNS (Do53)** is the regular way most programs resolve DNS +names. This is usually done by the operating system by sending an +unencrypted packet to the DNS server that normally listens on port 53. + +## DoH Rollout + +**DoH Rollout** refers to the frontend code that decides whether TRR +will be enabled automatically for users in the [rollout +population](https://support.mozilla.org/kb/firefox-dns-over-https#w_about-the-us-rollout-of-dns-over-https). + +The functioning of this module is described +[here](https://wiki.mozilla.org/Security/DNS_Over_HTTPS). + +The code lives in +[browser/components/doh](https://searchfox.org/mozilla-central/source/browser/components/doh). + +## Implementation + +When enabled TRR may work in two modes, TRR-first (2) and TRR-only (3). +These are controlled by the **network.trr.mode** or **doh-rollout.mode** +prefs. The difference is that when a DoH request fails in TRR-first +mode, we then fallback to **Do53**. + +For TRR-first mode, we have a strict-fallback setting which can be +enabled by setting network.trr.strict\_native\_fallback to true. With +this, while we will still completely skip TRR for certain requests (like +captive portal detection, bootstrapping the TRR provider, etc.) we will +only fall back after a TRR failure to **Do53** for three possible +reasons: +1. We detected, via Confirmation, that TRR is currently out of +service on the network. This could mean the provider is down or blocked. +2. The address successfully resolved via TRR could not be connected to. +3. TRR result is NXDOMAIN. + +When a DNS resolution doesn't use TRR we will normally preserve that data in the form of a _TRRSkippedReason_. A detailed explanation of each one is available [here](trr-skip-reasons). + +In other cases, instead of falling back, we will trigger a fresh +Confirmation (which will start us on a fresh connection to the provider) +and retry the lookup with TRR again. We only retry once. + +DNS name resolutions are performed in _nsHostResolver::ResolveHost_. If a +cached response for the request could not be found, +_nsHostResolver::NameLookup_ will trigger either a DoH or a Do53 request. +First it checks the effective TRR mode of the request is as requests +could have a different mode from the global one. If the request may use +TRR, then we dispatch a request in _nsHostResolver::TrrLookup_. Since we +usually reolve both IPv4 and IPv6 names, a **TRRQuery** object is +created to perform and combine both responses. + +Once done, _nsHostResolver::CompleteLookup_ is called. If the DoH server +returned a valid response we use it, otherwise we report a failure in +TRR-only mode, or try Do53 in TRR-first mode. + +**TRRService** controls the global state and settings of the feature. +Each individual request is performed by the **TRR** class. + +Since HTTP channels in Firefox normally work on the main thread, TRR +uses a special implementation called **TRRServiceChannel** to avoid +congestion on the main thread. + +## Dynamic Blocklist + +In order to improve performance TRR service manages a dynamic blocklist +for host names that can\'t be resolved with DoH but work with the native +resolver. Blocklisted entries will not be retried over DoH for one +minute (See _network.trr.temp\_blocklist\_duration\_sec_ +pref). When a domain is added to the blocklist, we also check if there +is an NS record for its parent domain, in which case we add that to the +blocklist. This feature is controlled by the +_network.trr.temp\_blocklist_ pref. + +## TRR Confirmation + +TRR requests normally have a 1.5 second timeout. If for some reason we +do not get a response in that time we fall back to Do53. To avoid this +delay for all requests when the DoH server is not accessible, we perform +a confirmation check. If the check fails, we conclude that the server is +not usable and will use Do53 directly. The confirmation check is retried +periodically to check if the TRR connection is functional again. + +The confirmation state has one of the following values: + +- CONFIRM\_OFF: TRR is turned off, so the service is not active. +- CONFIRM\_TRING\_OK: TRR in on, but we are not sure yet if the + DoH server is accessible. We optimistically try to resolve via + DoH and fall back to Do53 after 1.5 seconds. While in this state + the TRRService will be performing NS record requests to the DoH + server as a connectivity check. Depending on a successful + response it will either transition to the CONFIRM\_OK or + CONFIRM\_FAILED state. +- CONFIRM\_OK: TRR is on and we have confirmed that the DoH server + is behaving adequately. Will use TRR for all requests (and fall + back to Do53 in case of timeout, NXDOMAIN, etc). +- CONFIRM\_FAILED: TRR is on, but the DoH server is not + accessible. Either we have no network connectivity, or the + server is down. We don\'t perform DoH requests in this state + because they are sure to fail. +- CONFIRM\_TRYING\_FAILED: This is equivalent to CONFIRM\_FAILED, + but we periodically enter this state when rechecking if the DoH + server is accessible. +- CONFIRM\_DISABLED: We are in this state if the browser is in + TRR-only mode, or if the confirmation was explicitly disabled + via pref. + +The state machine for the confirmation is defined in the +_HandleConfirmationEvent_ method in _TRRService.cpp_ + +If strict fallback mode is enabled, Confirmation will set a flag to +refresh our connection to the provider. + +## Excluded Domains + +Some domains will never be resolved via TRR. This includes: + +- domains listed in the **network.trr.builtin-excluded-domains** pref +(normally domains that are equal or end in *localhost* or *local*) +- domains listed in the **network.trr.excluded-domains** pref (chosen by the user) +- domains that are subdomains of the network\'s DNS suffix +(for example if the network has the **lan** suffix, domains such as **computer.lan** will not use TRR) +- requests made by Firefox to check for the existence of a captive-portal +- requests made by Firefox to check the network\'s IPv6 capabilities +- domains listed in _/etc/hosts_ + +## Steering + + +A small set of TRR providers are only available on certain networks. +Detection is performed in DoHHeuristics.jsm followed by a call to +_TRRService::SetDetectedURI_. This causes Firefox to use the +network specific TRR provider until a network change occurs. + +## User Choice + +The TRR feature is designed to prioritize user choice before user agent +decisions. That means the user may explicitly disable TRR by setting +**network.trr.mode** to **5** (TRR-disabled), and that +_doh-rollout_ will not overwrite user settings. Changes to +the TRR URL or TRR mode by the user will disable heuristics use the user +configured settings. -- cgit v1.2.3