From Fedora Project Wiki

Testing IPv6 support and dualstack networking can be very tricky. The purpose of this document is to provide a live resource on testing situations arising from existance and usage of two network layer protocols.

Base system components related to IPv6 and dual-stack operation:

  • kernel
  • glibc

Configuration

Name resolution

Name resolution features are provided by the GNU C Library (glibc) which is not yet ready for proper IPv6 and dual-stack operation as you can see when performing your tests. The C library comes with its own testing tool getent that has a special database called ahosts that runs getaddrinfo(), the library function that translates names to objects with addressing information. For your testing it is best used together with tools like strace, ltrace or even gdb so that you know exactly what is happening behind the scenes.

As the getent tool is very primitive, we created a tool called getaddrinfo just as the library function that handles a larger subset of the function's API.

Name resolution input

When application requests addressing information for a hostname with an optional service name, the library returns a list of addressing information objects. The order of objects in the list is significant and depends on operating system configuration and connectivity.

From the application

  • nodename
  • servname
  • protocol
  • socktype
  • flags
    • AI_CANONNAME
    • ...

From local configuration and connectivity checks

  • Files in /etc/ including nsswitch, hosts, services and more
  • To what extend is IPv4 and IPv6 available

From the outside world

  • DNS information
  • Multicast DNS information
  • LDAP information

Name resolution processing

What is requested

Not all information is requested at all times. Some information like canonical name must be explicitly requested by the application via AI_CANONNAME flag. It may be desirable to suppress other requests by local configuration or connectivity checks, a notable example being suppression of DNS AAAA queries on hosts without global connectivity.

What is passed to the application

Not all information that is learnt via requests is presented to the application. It is typically filtered according to input from the application. It is sometimes also filtered according to connectivity checks but that has caused more problems than improvements.

How it is sorted

There are rules for sorting addressing information returned by getaddrinfo(). One of the basic features is to return global IPv6 destinations before global IPv4 destinations. But when the library detects that IPv6 connectivity is not available, the reverse applies.

Example tests

Dual-stack host, destination with global IPv4 and IPv6

On a host with IPv4 and IPv6 connectivity we request addressing information of another host that is announced as dual-stack in DNS.

$ getent ahosts www.nix.cz
2a02:38::1001   STREAM info.nix.cz
2a02:38::1001   DGRAM  
2a02:38::1001   RAW    
195.47.235.3    STREAM 
195.47.235.3    DGRAM  
195.47.235.3    RAW

You can see that getaddrinfo() returned six items for two unique IP addresses with the IPv6 address sorted first. If you only expected only two items, one for each IP address, see upstream bug 14990.

IPv4-only host, destination with global IPv4 and IPv6

We do the same on a host without IPv6 connectivity.

$ getent ahosts www.nix.cz
195.47.235.3    STREAM info.nix.cz
195.47.235.3    DGRAM  
195.47.235.3    RAW    
2a02:38::1001   STREAM 
2a02:38::1001   DGRAM  
2a02:38::1001   RAW    

You can see that the result is the same as before except that IPv4 is sorted first.

Testing client applications

Testing server applications