| // Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. | 
 | // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style | 
 | // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. | 
 |  | 
 | // +build darwin dragonfly freebsd linux nacl netbsd openbsd solaris windows | 
 |  | 
 | package net | 
 |  | 
 | import ( | 
 | 	"runtime" | 
 | 	"syscall" | 
 | 	"time" | 
 | ) | 
 |  | 
 | // BUG(rsc,mikio): On DragonFly BSD and OpenBSD, listening on the | 
 | // "tcp" and "udp" networks does not listen for both IPv4 and IPv6 | 
 | // connections. This is due to the fact that IPv4 traffic will not be | 
 | // routed to an IPv6 socket - two separate sockets are required if | 
 | // both address families are to be supported. | 
 | // See inet6(4) for details. | 
 |  | 
 | func probeIPv4Stack() bool { | 
 | 	s, err := socketFunc(syscall.AF_INET, syscall.SOCK_STREAM, syscall.IPPROTO_TCP) | 
 | 	switch err { | 
 | 	case syscall.EAFNOSUPPORT, syscall.EPROTONOSUPPORT: | 
 | 		return false | 
 | 	case nil: | 
 | 		closeFunc(s) | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return true | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // Should we try to use the IPv4 socket interface if we're | 
 | // only dealing with IPv4 sockets?  As long as the host system | 
 | // understands IPv6, it's okay to pass IPv4 addresses to the IPv6 | 
 | // interface. That simplifies our code and is most general. | 
 | // Unfortunately, we need to run on kernels built without IPv6 | 
 | // support too. So probe the kernel to figure it out. | 
 | // | 
 | // probeIPv6Stack probes both basic IPv6 capability and IPv6 IPv4- | 
 | // mapping capability which is controlled by IPV6_V6ONLY socket | 
 | // option and/or kernel state "net.inet6.ip6.v6only". | 
 | // It returns two boolean values. If the first boolean value is | 
 | // true, kernel supports basic IPv6 functionality. If the second | 
 | // boolean value is true, kernel supports IPv6 IPv4-mapping. | 
 | func probeIPv6Stack() (supportsIPv6, supportsIPv4map bool) { | 
 | 	var probes = []struct { | 
 | 		laddr TCPAddr | 
 | 		value int | 
 | 	}{ | 
 | 		// IPv6 communication capability | 
 | 		{laddr: TCPAddr{IP: ParseIP("::1")}, value: 1}, | 
 | 		// IPv4-mapped IPv6 address communication capability | 
 | 		{laddr: TCPAddr{IP: IPv4(127, 0, 0, 1)}, value: 0}, | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	var supps [2]bool | 
 | 	switch runtime.GOOS { | 
 | 	case "dragonfly", "openbsd": | 
 | 		// Some released versions of DragonFly BSD pretend to | 
 | 		// accept IPV6_V6ONLY=0 successfully, but the state | 
 | 		// still stays IPV6_V6ONLY=1. Eventually DragonFly BSD | 
 | 		// stops pretending, but the transition period would | 
 | 		// cause unpredictable behavior and we need to avoid | 
 | 		// it. | 
 | 		// | 
 | 		// OpenBSD also doesn't support IPV6_V6ONLY=0 but it | 
 | 		// never pretends to accept IPV6_V6OLY=0. It always | 
 | 		// returns an error and we don't need to probe the | 
 | 		// capability. | 
 | 		probes = probes[:1] | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	for i := range probes { | 
 | 		s, err := socketFunc(syscall.AF_INET6, syscall.SOCK_STREAM, syscall.IPPROTO_TCP) | 
 | 		if err != nil { | 
 | 			continue | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		defer closeFunc(s) | 
 | 		syscall.SetsockoptInt(s, syscall.IPPROTO_IPV6, syscall.IPV6_V6ONLY, probes[i].value) | 
 | 		sa, err := probes[i].laddr.sockaddr(syscall.AF_INET6) | 
 | 		if err != nil { | 
 | 			continue | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		if err := syscall.Bind(s, sa); err != nil { | 
 | 			continue | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		supps[i] = true | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	return supps[0], supps[1] | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | // favoriteAddrFamily returns the appropriate address family to | 
 | // the given net, laddr, raddr and mode. At first it figures | 
 | // address family out from the net. If mode indicates "listen" | 
 | // and laddr is a wildcard, it assumes that the user wants to | 
 | // make a passive connection with a wildcard address family, both | 
 | // AF_INET and AF_INET6, and a wildcard address like following: | 
 | // | 
 | //	1. A wild-wild listen, "tcp" + "" | 
 | //	If the platform supports both IPv6 and IPv6 IPv4-mapping | 
 | //	capabilities, or does not support IPv4, we assume that | 
 | //	the user wants to listen on both IPv4 and IPv6 wildcard | 
 | //	addresses over an AF_INET6 socket with IPV6_V6ONLY=0. | 
 | //	Otherwise we prefer an IPv4 wildcard address listen over | 
 | //	an AF_INET socket. | 
 | // | 
 | //	2. A wild-ipv4wild listen, "tcp" + "0.0.0.0" | 
 | //	Same as 1. | 
 | // | 
 | //	3. A wild-ipv6wild listen, "tcp" + "[::]" | 
 | //	Almost same as 1 but we prefer an IPv6 wildcard address | 
 | //	listen over an AF_INET6 socket with IPV6_V6ONLY=0 when | 
 | //	the platform supports IPv6 capability but not IPv6 IPv4- | 
 | //	mapping capability. | 
 | // | 
 | //	4. A ipv4-ipv4wild listen, "tcp4" + "" or "0.0.0.0" | 
 | //	We use an IPv4 (AF_INET) wildcard address listen. | 
 | // | 
 | //	5. A ipv6-ipv6wild listen, "tcp6" + "" or "[::]" | 
 | //	We use an IPv6 (AF_INET6, IPV6_V6ONLY=1) wildcard address | 
 | //	listen. | 
 | // | 
 | // Otherwise guess: if the addresses are IPv4 then returns AF_INET, | 
 | // or else returns AF_INET6.  It also returns a boolean value what | 
 | // designates IPV6_V6ONLY option. | 
 | // | 
 | // Note that OpenBSD allows neither "net.inet6.ip6.v6only=1" change | 
 | // nor IPPROTO_IPV6 level IPV6_V6ONLY socket option setting. | 
 | func favoriteAddrFamily(net string, laddr, raddr sockaddr, mode string) (family int, ipv6only bool) { | 
 | 	switch net[len(net)-1] { | 
 | 	case '4': | 
 | 		return syscall.AF_INET, false | 
 | 	case '6': | 
 | 		return syscall.AF_INET6, true | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	if mode == "listen" && (laddr == nil || laddr.isWildcard()) { | 
 | 		if supportsIPv4map || !supportsIPv4 { | 
 | 			return syscall.AF_INET6, false | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		if laddr == nil { | 
 | 			return syscall.AF_INET, false | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		return laddr.family(), false | 
 | 	} | 
 |  | 
 | 	if (laddr == nil || laddr.family() == syscall.AF_INET) && | 
 | 		(raddr == nil || raddr.family() == syscall.AF_INET) { | 
 | 		return syscall.AF_INET, false | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return syscall.AF_INET6, false | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | func internetSocket(net string, laddr, raddr sockaddr, deadline time.Time, sotype, proto int, mode string, cancel <-chan struct{}) (fd *netFD, err error) { | 
 | 	family, ipv6only := favoriteAddrFamily(net, laddr, raddr, mode) | 
 | 	return socket(net, family, sotype, proto, ipv6only, laddr, raddr, deadline, cancel) | 
 | } | 
 |  | 
 | func ipToSockaddr(family int, ip IP, port int, zone string) (syscall.Sockaddr, error) { | 
 | 	switch family { | 
 | 	case syscall.AF_INET: | 
 | 		if len(ip) == 0 { | 
 | 			ip = IPv4zero | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		ip4 := ip.To4() | 
 | 		if ip4 == nil { | 
 | 			return nil, &AddrError{Err: "non-IPv4 address", Addr: ip.String()} | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		sa := &syscall.SockaddrInet4{Port: port} | 
 | 		copy(sa.Addr[:], ip4) | 
 | 		return sa, nil | 
 | 	case syscall.AF_INET6: | 
 | 		// In general, an IP wildcard address, which is either | 
 | 		// "0.0.0.0" or "::", means the entire IP addressing | 
 | 		// space. For some historical reason, it is used to | 
 | 		// specify "any available address" on some operations | 
 | 		// of IP node. | 
 | 		// | 
 | 		// When the IP node supports IPv4-mapped IPv6 address, | 
 | 		// we allow an listener to listen to the wildcard | 
 | 		// address of both IP addressing spaces by specifying | 
 | 		// IPv6 wildcard address. | 
 | 		if len(ip) == 0 || ip.Equal(IPv4zero) { | 
 | 			ip = IPv6zero | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		// We accept any IPv6 address including IPv4-mapped | 
 | 		// IPv6 address. | 
 | 		ip6 := ip.To16() | 
 | 		if ip6 == nil { | 
 | 			return nil, &AddrError{Err: "non-IPv6 address", Addr: ip.String()} | 
 | 		} | 
 | 		sa := &syscall.SockaddrInet6{Port: port, ZoneId: uint32(zoneToInt(zone))} | 
 | 		copy(sa.Addr[:], ip6) | 
 | 		return sa, nil | 
 | 	} | 
 | 	return nil, &AddrError{Err: "invalid address family", Addr: ip.String()} | 
 | } |