Constants.hpp 9.0 KB

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  1. /*
  2. * ZeroTier One - Global Peer to Peer Ethernet
  3. * Copyright (C) 2012-2013 ZeroTier Networks LLC
  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. * ZeroTier may be used and distributed under the terms of the GPLv3, which
  21. * are available at: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.html
  22. *
  23. * If you would like to embed ZeroTier into a commercial application or
  24. * redistribute it in a modified binary form, please contact ZeroTier Networks
  25. * LLC. Start here: http://www.zerotier.com/
  26. */
  27. #ifndef ZT_CONSTANTS_HPP
  28. #define ZT_CONSTANTS_HPP
  29. //
  30. // This include file also auto-detects and canonicalizes some environment
  31. // information defines:
  32. //
  33. // __LINUX__
  34. // __APPLE__
  35. // __UNIX_LIKE__ - any "unix like" OS (BSD, posix, etc.)
  36. // __WINDOWS__
  37. //
  38. // Also makes sure __BYTE_ORDER is defined reasonably.
  39. //
  40. // Canonicalize Linux... is this necessary? Do it anyway to be defensive.
  41. #if defined(__linux__) || defined(linux) || defined(__LINUX__) || defined(__linux)
  42. #ifndef __LINUX__
  43. #define __LINUX__
  44. #ifndef __UNIX_LIKE__
  45. #define __UNIX_LIKE__
  46. #endif
  47. #endif
  48. #endif
  49. // TODO: Android is what? Linux technically, but does it define it?
  50. // OSX and iOS are unix-like OSes far as we're concerned
  51. #ifdef __APPLE__
  52. #include <TargetConditionals.h>
  53. #ifndef __UNIX_LIKE__
  54. #define __UNIX_LIKE__
  55. #endif
  56. #endif
  57. // Linux has endian.h
  58. #ifdef __LINUX__
  59. #include <endian.h>
  60. #endif
  61. #if defined(_WIN32) || defined(_WIN64)
  62. #ifndef __WINDOWS__
  63. #define __WINDOWS__
  64. #endif
  65. #define NOMINMAX
  66. #pragma warning(disable : 4290)
  67. #pragma warning(disable : 4996)
  68. #pragma warning(disable : 4101)
  69. #undef __UNIX_LIKE__
  70. #define ZT_PATH_SEPARATOR '\\'
  71. #define ZT_PATH_SEPARATOR_S "\\"
  72. #define ZT_EOL_S "\r\n"
  73. #endif
  74. // Assume these are little-endian. PPC is not supported for OSX, and ARM
  75. // runs in little-endian mode for these OS families.
  76. #if defined(__APPLE__) || defined(__WINDOWS__)
  77. #undef __BYTE_ORDER
  78. #undef __LITTLE_ENDIAN
  79. #undef __BIG_ENDIAN
  80. #define __BIG_ENDIAN 4321
  81. #define __LITTLE_ENDIAN 1234
  82. #define __BYTE_ORDER 1234
  83. #endif
  84. #ifdef __UNIX_LIKE__
  85. #define ZT_PATH_SEPARATOR '/'
  86. #define ZT_PATH_SEPARATOR_S "/"
  87. #define ZT_EOL_S "\n"
  88. #endif
  89. // Error out if required symbols are missing
  90. #ifndef __BYTE_ORDER
  91. error_no_byte_order_defined;
  92. #endif
  93. /**
  94. * Length of a ZeroTier address in bytes
  95. */
  96. #define ZT_ADDRESS_LENGTH 5
  97. /**
  98. * Addresses beginning with this byte are reserved for the joy of in-band signaling
  99. */
  100. #define ZT_ADDRESS_RESERVED_PREFIX 0xff
  101. /**
  102. * Default local UDP port
  103. */
  104. #define ZT_DEFAULT_UDP_PORT 9993
  105. /**
  106. * Local control port, also used for multiple invocation check
  107. */
  108. #define ZT_DEFAULT_CONTROL_UDP_PORT 39393
  109. /**
  110. * Default payload MTU for UDP packets
  111. *
  112. * In the future we might support UDP path MTU discovery, but for now we
  113. * set a maximum that is equal to 1500 minus 8 (for PPPoE overhead, common
  114. * in some markets) minus 48 (IPv6 UDP overhead).
  115. */
  116. #define ZT_UDP_DEFAULT_PAYLOAD_MTU 1444
  117. /**
  118. * MTU used for Ethernet tap device
  119. *
  120. * This is pretty much an unchangeable global constant. To make it change
  121. * across nodes would require logic to send ICMP packet too big messages,
  122. * which would complicate things. 1500 has been good enough on most LANs
  123. * for ages, so a larger MTU should be fine for the forseeable future. This
  124. * typically results in two UDP packets per single large frame. Experimental
  125. * results seem to show that this is good. Larger MTUs resulting in more
  126. * fragments seemed too brittle on slow/crummy links for no benefit.
  127. *
  128. * If this does change, also change it in tap.h in the tuntaposx code under
  129. * mac-tap.
  130. *
  131. * Overhead for a normal frame split into two packets:
  132. *
  133. * 1414 = 1444 (typical UDP MTU) - 28 (packet header) - 2 (ethertype)
  134. * 1428 = 1444 (typical UDP MTU) - 16 (fragment header)
  135. * SUM: 2842
  136. *
  137. * We use 2800, which leaves some room for other payload in other types of
  138. * messages such as multicast propagation or future support for bridging.
  139. */
  140. #define ZT_IF_MTU 2800
  141. /**
  142. * Maximum number of packet fragments we'll support
  143. *
  144. * The actual spec allows 16, but this is the most we'll support right
  145. * now. Packets with more than this many fragments are dropped.
  146. */
  147. #define ZT_MAX_PACKET_FRAGMENTS 3
  148. /**
  149. * Timeout for receipt of fragmented packets in ms
  150. *
  151. * Since there's no retransmits, this is just a really bad case scenario for
  152. * transit time. It's short enough that a DOS attack from exhausing buffers is
  153. * very unlikely, as the transfer rate would have to be fast enough to fill
  154. * system memory in this time.
  155. */
  156. #define ZT_FRAGMENTED_PACKET_RECEIVE_TIMEOUT 1000
  157. /**
  158. * First byte of MAC addresses derived from ZeroTier addresses
  159. *
  160. * This has the 0x02 bit set, which indicates a locally administrered
  161. * MAC address rather than one with a known HW ID.
  162. */
  163. #define ZT_MAC_FIRST_OCTET 0x32
  164. /**
  165. * Length of secret key in bytes
  166. */
  167. #define ZT_PEER_SECRET_KEY_LENGTH 32
  168. /**
  169. * How often Topology::clean() and Network::clean() are called in ms
  170. */
  171. #define ZT_DB_CLEAN_PERIOD 300000
  172. /**
  173. * How long to remember peers in RAM if they haven't been used
  174. */
  175. #define ZT_PEER_IN_MEMORY_EXPIRATION 600000
  176. /**
  177. * Delay between WHOIS retries in ms
  178. */
  179. #define ZT_WHOIS_RETRY_DELAY 350
  180. /**
  181. * Maximum identity WHOIS retries
  182. */
  183. #define ZT_MAX_WHOIS_RETRIES 3
  184. /**
  185. * Transmit queue entry timeout
  186. */
  187. #define ZT_TRANSMIT_QUEUE_TIMEOUT (ZT_WHOIS_RETRY_DELAY * (ZT_MAX_WHOIS_RETRIES + 1))
  188. /**
  189. * Receive queue entry timeout
  190. */
  191. #define ZT_RECEIVE_QUEUE_TIMEOUT (ZT_WHOIS_RETRY_DELAY * (ZT_MAX_WHOIS_RETRIES + 1))
  192. /**
  193. * Maximum number of ZT hops allowed
  194. *
  195. * The protocol allows up to 7, but we limit it to something smaller.
  196. */
  197. #define ZT_RELAY_MAX_HOPS 3
  198. /**
  199. * Size of multicast deduplication ring buffer in 64-bit ints
  200. */
  201. #define ZT_MULTICAST_DEDUP_HISTORY_LENGTH 512
  202. /**
  203. * Default number of bits in multicast propagation prefix
  204. */
  205. #define ZT_DEFAULT_MULTICAST_PREFIX_BITS 1
  206. /**
  207. * Default max depth (TTL) for multicast propagation
  208. */
  209. #define ZT_DEFAULT_MULTICAST_DEPTH 32
  210. /**
  211. * Global maximum for multicast propagation depth
  212. *
  213. * This is kind of an insane value, meant as a sanity check.
  214. */
  215. #define ZT_MULTICAST_GLOBAL_MAX_DEPTH 500
  216. /**
  217. * Expire time for multicast 'likes' in ms
  218. */
  219. #define ZT_MULTICAST_LIKE_EXPIRE 120000
  220. /**
  221. * Time between polls of local taps for multicast membership changes
  222. */
  223. #define ZT_MULTICAST_LOCAL_POLL_PERIOD 10000
  224. /**
  225. * Delay between scans of the topology active peer DB for peers that need ping
  226. */
  227. #define ZT_PING_CHECK_DELAY 7000
  228. /**
  229. * Delay between checks of network configuration fingerprint
  230. */
  231. #define ZT_NETWORK_FINGERPRINT_CHECK_DELAY 5000
  232. /**
  233. * Delay between pings (actually HELLOs) to direct links
  234. */
  235. #define ZT_PEER_DIRECT_PING_DELAY 120000
  236. /**
  237. * Delay in ms between firewall opener packets to direct links
  238. *
  239. * This should be lower than the UDP conversation entry timeout in most
  240. * stateful firewalls.
  241. */
  242. #define ZT_FIREWALL_OPENER_DELAY 50000
  243. /**
  244. * Delay between requests for updated network autoconf information
  245. */
  246. #define ZT_NETWORK_AUTOCONF_DELAY 60000
  247. /**
  248. * Delay in core loop between checks of network autoconf newness
  249. */
  250. #define ZT_NETWORK_AUTOCONF_CHECK_DELAY 7000
  251. /**
  252. * Minimum delay in Node service loop
  253. *
  254. * This is the shortest of the check delays/periods.
  255. */
  256. #define ZT_MIN_SERVICE_LOOP_INTERVAL ZT_NETWORK_FINGERPRINT_CHECK_DELAY
  257. /**
  258. * Activity timeout for links
  259. *
  260. * A link that hasn't spoken in this long is simply considered inactive.
  261. */
  262. #define ZT_PEER_LINK_ACTIVITY_TIMEOUT ((ZT_PEER_DIRECT_PING_DELAY * 2) + 1000)
  263. /**
  264. * Number of outgoing verb/packetId pairs to keep for sends expecting responses
  265. */
  266. #define ZT_PEER_REQUEST_HISTORY_LENGTH 8
  267. /**
  268. * IP hops (a.k.a. TTL) to set for firewall opener packets
  269. *
  270. * 2 should permit traversal of double-NAT configurations, such as from inside
  271. * a VM running behind local NAT on a host that is itself behind NAT.
  272. */
  273. #define ZT_FIREWALL_OPENER_HOPS 2
  274. /**
  275. * Delay sleep overshoot for detection of a probable sleep/wake event
  276. */
  277. #define ZT_SLEEP_WAKE_DETECTION_THRESHOLD 2000
  278. /**
  279. * Time to pause main service loop after sleep/wake detect
  280. */
  281. #define ZT_SLEEP_WAKE_SETTLE_TIME 5000
  282. /**
  283. * Minimum interval between attempts by relays to unite peers
  284. */
  285. #define ZT_MIN_UNITE_INTERVAL 30000
  286. /**
  287. * Delay in milliseconds between firewall opener and real packet for NAT-t
  288. */
  289. #define ZT_RENDEZVOUS_NAT_T_DELAY 500
  290. /**
  291. * Minimum interval between attempts to do a software update
  292. */
  293. #define ZT_UPDATE_MIN_INTERVAL 120000
  294. /**
  295. * Maximum interval between attempts to do a software update
  296. */
  297. #define ZT_UPDATE_MAX_INTERVAL 28800000
  298. /**
  299. * Update HTTP timeout in seconds
  300. */
  301. #define ZT_UPDATE_HTTP_TIMEOUT 30
  302. #endif