chapter02

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Published: Dec 13, 2023 License: GPL-3.0 Imports: 7 Imported by: 0

README

Chapter II: establishing TCP connections

In this chapter we explain how to measure establishing TCP connections.

We will first write a simple main.go file that shows how to use this functionality. Then, we will show some runs of this file, and we will comment the output that we see.

(This file is auto-generated. Do not edit it directly! To apply changes you need to modify ./internal/tutorial/measurex/chapter02/main.go.)

main.go

We declare the package and import useful packages. The most important package we're importing here is, of course, internal/measurex.

package main

import (
	"context"
	"encoding/json"
	"flag"
	"fmt"
	"time"

	"github.com/ooni/probe-cli/v3/internal/legacy/measurex"
	"github.com/ooni/probe-cli/v3/internal/runtimex"
)

func main() {
Setup

This first part of main.go is really similar to the previous chapter, so there is not much new to say here.

	address := flag.String("address", "8.8.4.4:443", "remote endpoint address")
	timeout := flag.Duration("timeout", 60*time.Second, "timeout to use")
	flag.Parse()
	ctx, cancel := context.WithTimeout(context.Background(), *timeout)
	defer cancel()
Creating a Measurer

We create a Measurer like we did in the previous chapter.

	mx := measurex.NewMeasurerWithDefaultSettings()
Establishing a TCP connection

We then call TCPConnect, which establishes a connection and returns the corresponding measurement.

The arguments are the context (for timeouts), and the address of the endpoint to which we want to connect. (Here and in most of this tutorial with "endpoint" we mean an IP address and a port, serialized as "ADDRESS:PORT", where the address is quoted with "[" and "]" if IPv6, e.g., [::1]:53.)

	m := mx.TCPConnect(ctx, *address)
Printing the measurement

The rest of the main function is just like in the previous chapter. Like we did before, we convert the obtained measurement to the "archival" data format before printing.

	data, err := json.Marshal(measurex.NewArchivalEndpointMeasurement(m))
	runtimex.PanicOnError(err, "json.Marshal failed")
	fmt.Printf("%s\n", string(data))
}

Running the example program

Let us run the program with default arguments first. You can do this operation by running:

go run -race ./internal/tutorial/measurex/chapter02 | jq

Here is the JSON we obtain in output:

{
  // These two fields identify the endpoint
  "network": "tcp",
  "address": "8.8.4.4:443",

  // This block contains the results of the connect syscall
  // using the df-008-netevents data format.
  "tcp_connect": [{
    "ip": "8.8.4.4",
    "port": 443,
    "t": 0.020303,
    "status": {
      "blocked": false,
      "failure": null,
      "success": true
    },
    "started": 0.000109292,
    "oddity": ""
  }]
}

This JSON implements the df-005-tcpconnect OONI data format.

This is what it says:

  • we are connecting a "tcp" socket;

  • the destination endpoint address is "8.8.4.4:443";

  • connect terminated ~0.020 seconds into the program's life (see t);

  • the operation succeeded (failure is nil).

Let us now see if we can provoke some errors and timeouts.

Measurement with connection refused

Let us start with an IP address where there's no listening socket:

go run -race ./internal/tutorial/measurex/chapter02 -address 127.0.0.1:1 | jq

We get this JSON:

{
  "network": "tcp",
  "address": "127.0.0.1:1",
  "tcp_connect": [
    {
      "ip": "127.0.0.1",
      "port": 1,
      "t": 0.000457584,
      "status": {
        "blocked": true,
        "failure": "connection_refused",
        "success": false
      },
      "started": 0.000104792,
      "oddity": "tcp.connect.refused"
    }
  ]
}

And here's an error telling us the connection was refused and the oddity that classifies the error.

Measurement with timeouts

Let us now try to obtain a timeout:

go run -race ./internal/tutorial/measurex/chapter02 -address 8.8.4.4:1 | jq

We get this JSON:

{
  "network": "tcp",
  "address": "8.8.4.4:1",
  "tcp_connect": [
    {
      "ip": "8.8.4.4",
      "port": 1,
      "t": 10.006558625,
      "status": {
        "blocked": true,
        "failure": "generic_timeout_error",
        "success": false
      },
      "started": 9.55e-05,
      "oddity": "tcp.connect.timeout"
    }
  ]
}

So, we clearly see from the value of t that our 60 seconds default timeout did not hit, because there is a lower watchdog timeout (10 s). We also see again how the oddity is more precise than just the error alone.

Let us now use a very small timeout:

go run -race ./internal/tutorial/measurex/chapter02 -address 8.8.4.4:1 -timeout 100ms | jq

To get this JSON:

{
  "network": "tcp",
  "address": "8.8.4.4:1",
  "tcp_connect": [
    {
      "ip": "8.8.4.4",
      "port": 1,
      "t": 0.105445125,
      "status": {
        "blocked": true,
        "failure": "generic_timeout_error",
        "success": false
      },
      "started": 9.4083e-05,
      "oddity": "tcp.connect.timeout"
    }
  ]
}

We see a timeout after ~0.1s.

We enforce a reasonably small timeout for connecting, equal to 10 s, because we want to guarantee that measurements eventually terminate. Also, since often censorship is implemented by timing out, we don't want to spend to much time waiting for a timeout to expire.

Conclusions

We have seen how to measure the operation of connecting to a specific TCP endpoint.

Documentation

Overview

-=-=- StartHere -=-=-

Chapter II: establishing TCP connections

In this chapter we explain how to measure establishing TCP connections.

We will first write a simple `main.go` file that shows how to use this functionality. Then, we will show some runs of this file, and we will comment the output that we see.

(This file is auto-generated. Do not edit it directly! To apply changes you need to modify `./internal/tutorial/measurex/chapter02/main.go`.)

## main.go

We declare the package and import useful packages. The most important package we're importing here is, of course, `internal/measurex`.

```Go

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