think (foreshadowing)

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Daniel Barlow 2024-05-07 17:50:13 +01:00 committed by Raito Bezarius
parent 1e9204f2f0
commit c40f258323

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@ -4726,9 +4726,9 @@ outside of it
[X] 2) if so, convert it to lualinux [X] 2) if so, convert it to lualinux
[X] 3) add netlink socket to event loop [X] 3) add netlink socket to event loop
[X] 4) make it send messages to subscribers [X] 4) make it send messages to subscribers
5) package it [X] 5) package it
6) make uevent-watcher use it instead of netlink directly [X] 6) make uevent-watcher use it instead of netlink directly
7) write an inout test variant that has the stick inserted [X] 7) write an inout test variant that has the stick inserted
at boot time already at boot time already
I'm also thinking we could wrap the raw fds from lualinux into small I'm also thinking we could wrap the raw fds from lualinux into small
@ -4741,3 +4741,167 @@ state before subscribing them [ needs a test ]
figure out what event format the subscribers want? lua-ish or send the figure out what event format the subscribers want? lua-ish or send the
same messages as udev would? If we're going to send the originals, same messages as udev would? If we're going to send the originals,
should we store them alongside the parsed, or reconstruct from parsed? should we store them alongside the parsed, or reconstruct from parsed?
Sat Apr 27 21:52:11 BST 2024
We have a passing inout test. Next thing to do is try it on
the actual arhcive hardware
Next big thing is some kind of failovery service. Almost-obvious
candidate is LTE failover with aaisp l2tp tunnel
Tue Apr 30 23:27:30 BST 2024
I want to connect my new ip camera to arthur without letting it reach the
internet, or the internet reach it.
we could plug it into a gl.inet box running dhcp server on lan
and client on wan, then use NAT to expose the camera's http and rtsp
ports on whatever address it has on the wan interface
Tue May 7 22:23:49 BST 2024
If we want to build a config with an l2tp upstream, it needs an
underlying dhcp interface not pppoe as we can't use the bordervm l2tp
account simultaneously. Having bordervm do dhcp might be quite useful
anyway for other applications, although it will have to double-nat to
the internet. We could give it an aaisp /64 and have routable ipv6 but
maybe that's a level of faff too high.
Given that we can build xl2tpd and a service for it.
're using the same l2tp account for thingy that we use to simulate ppp,
we need an upstream which is not ppp
We need a less shit coldplug that copes with filenames containing spaces (!)
Fri May 10 00:33:14 BST 2024
Getting xl2tp hackily running turned out to be not a lot of work. However,
we need to figure out routing
- we need a route on lan device to the dns to lookup l2tp.aaisp.net.uk
- we need a route on lan device to l2tp.aaisp.net.uk
also it doesn't die when the tunnel closes, which is a bit shit
maybe this is where we lean into health check services
a health check service is just a service that watches another service
and kills it if it's not healthy.
for xl2tpd, "not healthy" is "there is no ppp process" or "there is no
tunnel" or "the tunnel has no sessions". I don't know how we
(robustly) test for no ppp process associated with the l2tp peer
when ppp quits, does the tunnel come down?
in xl2tld.c child_handler we respond to sigchld by closing c->fd
and setting it to -1
Sat May 11 17:55:04 BST 2024
A better way to monitor the connection health would be to ping a
computer on the internet (preferably one that doesn't mind being
pinged). If we combine autodial with "is $isp still there" then we
should have something fairly robust.
xl2tpd spawns pppd, we should equip it with config that writes the
ppp outputs (ip address etc) to the xl2tp service directory so
that it can be used like a regular ppp. This will also make
it possible to have the health check work by pinging the peer address
Sun May 12 22:33:09 BST 2024
sleep until the interface is probably up
failure counter = 0
loop indefinitely
get outputs/peer-address of watched ppp service
ping it
if ok
reset failure counter
else
increment failure counter
fi
if failure counter > threshold
bounce the ppp service
exit, if previous action didn't do that already
end
sleep(check interval)
end loop
# ps ax | grep l2tp
72 root 1316 S s6-supervise l2tp.aaisp.net.uk.l2tp
73 root 1316 S s6-supervise l2tp.aaisp.net.uk.l2tp-log
122 root 1428 S {run.user} /bin/sh ./run.user l2tp.aaisp.net.uk.l2tp
1099 root 1428 S {run.user} /bin/sh ./run.user l2tp.aaisp.net.uk.l2tp
1102 root 1104 S {xl2tpd} /nix/store/i1bbqh7vybam03l6jzf4sm4np3k4ack5
1115 root 1420 S grep l2tp
# s6-rc -d change l2tp.aaisp.net.uk.l2tp
# ps ax | grep l2tp
72 root 1316 S s6-supervise l2tp.aaisp.net.uk.l2tp
73 root 1316 S s6-supervise l2tp.aaisp.net.uk.l2tp-log
122 root 1428 S {run.user} /bin/sh ./run.user l2tp.aaisp.net.uk.l2tp
1102 root 1104 S {xl2tpd} /nix/store/i1bbqh7vybam03l6jzf4sm4np3k4ack5
1122 root 1420 S grep l2tp
Mon May 13 19:45:59 BST 2024
We need to do the usb id swithcing dance thing for the lte modem.
At startup it's 12d1:14fe, which is "mass storage mode", although the
disks seem to disappear as soon as they appear which is weird
probably the mode switch should be triggered by device insertion
usb_modeswitch -v 12d1 -p 14fe --huawei-new-mode
https://github.com/pixelspark/tymodem?tab=readme-ov-file
Tue May 14 21:58:25 BST 2024
[ we didn't need this. the first form is the default, the second
is what something on the internet said we should change it to, the
third is setting it back to default ]
^SETPORT:A1,A2;12,1,16,A1,A2
AT^SETPORT="FF;12,16"
AT^SETPORT="A1,A2;12,1,16,A1,A2"
Wed May 15 21:55:11 BST 2024
we can use uevent-watch to look for devtype=usb_device product=12d1/14fe/102
and trigger a oneshot that runs usb-modeswitch
we can use uevent-watch to look for devtype=usb_device product=12d1/1506/102
and trigger a oneshot that runs the AT commands
if wwan0 is a triggered service how can dhcp depend on it? arse
- we can get reverse dependencies from s6-rc-db, so the sematics of
starting a triggered service could include starting everything it
enables
- we don't want to inadvertently start it on boot by putting it in the
global config.services
Thu May 16 09:09:44 BST 2024
we could do something cleverish with the config.services at build time
by stripping from it everything depending on a trigger. but then how
_do_ they get started? the intent of putting it in config.services
is that it will be started when conditions are suitable.
can we: go through each service in config.services, detect the trigger
that started it, and add it to a bundle named for that trigger?
we need something in the triggering service to mark the triggered
service as not-for-boot, and then to apply that transitively to
everyting depending on it
I don't think we have common code for triggers, so either we need to
add some or put this marking in all of the current examples