1
0
mirror of https://github.com/systemd/systemd.git synced 2025-03-21 02:50:18 +03:00
Matthias-Christian Ott dbc4661a2c resolve: do not derive query timeout from RTT
DNS queries need timeout values to detect whether a DNS server is
unresponsive or, if the query is sent over UDP, whether a DNS message
was lost and has to be resent. The total time that it takes to answer a
query to arrive is t + RTT, where t is the maximum time that the DNS
server that is being queried needs to answer the query.

An authoritative server stores a copy of the zone that it serves in main
memory or secondary storage, so t is very small and therefore the time
that it takes to answer a query is almost entirely determined by the
RTT. Modern authoritative server software keeps its zones in main memory
and, for example, Knot DNS and NSD are able to answer in less than
100 µs [1]. So iterative resolvers continuously measure the RTT to
optimize their query timeouts and to resend queries more quickly if they
are lost.

systemd-resolved is a stub resolver: it forwards DNS queries to an
upstream resolver and waits for an answer. So the time that it takes for
systemd-resolved to answer a query is determined by the RTT and the time
that it takes the upstream resolver to answer the query.

It seems common for iterative resolver software to set a total timeout
for the query. Such total timeout subsumes the timeout of all queries
that the iterative has to make to answer a query. For example, BIND
seems to use a default timeout of 10 s.

At the moment systemd-resolved derives its query timeout entirely from
the RTT and does not consider the query timeout of the upstream
resolver. Therefore it often mistakenly degrades the feature set of its
upstream resolvers if it takes them longer than usual to answer a query.
It has been reported to be a considerable problem in practice, in
particular if DNSSEC=yes. So the query timeout systemd-resolved should
be derived from the timeout of the upstream resolved and the RTT to the
upstream resolver.

At the moment systemd-resolved measures the RTT as the time that it
takes the upstream resolver to answer a query. This clearly leads to
incorrect measurements. In order to correctly measure the RTT
systemd-resolved would have to measure RTT separately and continuously,
for example with a query with an empty question section or a query for
the SOA RR of the root zone so that the upstream resolver would be able
to answer to query without querying another server. However, this
requires significant changes to systemd-resolved. So it seems best to
postpone them until other issues have been addressed and to set the
resend timeout to a fixed value for now.

As mentioned, BIND seems to use a timeout of 10 s, so perhaps 12 s is a
reasonable value that also accounts for common RTT values. If we assume
that the we are going to retry, it could be less. So it should be enough
to set the resend timeout to DNS_TIMEOUT_MAX_USEC as
DNS_SERVER_FEATURE_RETRY_ATTEMPTS * DNS_TIMEOUT_MAX_USEC = 15 s.
However, this will not solve the incorrect feature set degradation and
should be seen as a temporary change until systemd-resolved does
probe the feature set of an upstream resolver independently from the
actual queries.

[1] https://www.knot-dns.cz/benchmark/
2018-06-12 23:21:18 +02:00
2018-05-30 08:21:40 +02:00
2018-05-24 17:01:57 +02:00
2018-01-12 18:02:57 +01:00
2017-11-29 14:33:56 +01:00
2018-03-05 17:21:09 +01:00
2018-06-11 21:35:58 +02:00
2016-10-06 11:53:58 -04:00
2018-06-12 15:41:38 +02:00
2018-06-07 17:53:43 +00:00
2018-06-07 18:20:42 +02:00

systemd - System and Service Manager

Count of open issues over time Count of open pull requests over time Build Status
Coverity Scan Status
CII Best Practices
Build Status

Details

General information about systemd can be found in the systemd Wiki.

Information about build requirements are provided in the README file.

Consult our NEWS file for information about what's new in the most recent systemd versions.

Please see the HACKING file for information how to hack on systemd and test your modifications.

Please see our Contribution Guidelines for more information about filing GitHub Issues and posting GitHub Pull Requests.

When preparing patches for systemd, please follow our Coding Style Guidelines.

If you are looking for support, please contact our mailing list or join our IRC channel.

Stable branches with backported patches are available in the stable repo.

Description
The systemd System and Service Manager
Readme 568 MiB
Languages
C 89.2%
Python 5.3%
Shell 4.1%
Meson 1.2%