[Tails-dev] Some research about mirror infrastructure

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Author: foob
Date:  
To: tails-dev
Subject: [Tails-dev] Some research about mirror infrastructure
Hi folks,

Following https://labs.riseup.net/code/issues/7161, I did some research
about how to change the round robin mechanism.

The idea I had was to let the server(s) send a reduced list of hosts. Not
only it would allow to work-around Tor DNS limitations, but also to have
some weighted round robin, in order to prioritize some high bandwidth
mirrors, if we choose to.

If I had to mention the ideal design goals for such changes, I would say
that the more straightforward would be the better for implementation and
also for maintainability.

I think it can be done:
* Using DNS.
* Using HTTP(s).

== Using DNS ==

Using DNS seems to be an easy way to do some round robin in low level. It
allows some kind of transparency to the upper layers protocols and
distribute the load and to avoid having a single server that can became a
SPOF.

The following ways are available to implement it:
* CNAME Hacks
* NS Hacks
* Modified DNS servers

=== CNAME Hacks ===

As mention by ToBeFree something that can be done is to have different
pools of servers like:

a.dl.amnesia.boum.org A $MIRROR1
a.dl.amnesia.boum.org A $MIRROR2
a.dl.amnesia.boum.org A $MIRROR3
a.dl.amnesia.boum.org A $MIRROR4
a.dl.amnesia.boum.org A $MIRROR5

b.dl.amnesia.boum.org A $MIRROR6
b.dl.amnesia.boum.org A $MIRROR7

dl.amnedia.boum.org CNAME a.dl.amnesia.boum.org
dl.amnedia.boum.org CNAME b.dl.amnesia.boum.org

Interestingly the requests would be equally distributed betwen a.dl and
b.dl, thus if their is more mirrors in one name than one other some
servers would be somehow prioritized. For example: here "a" mirrors will
share 50% of requests, giving 10% for every host where "b" mirrors will
share the other 50% of requests betwen two host giving them 25% of
requests each.

However this kind of CNAME hack is not supported by current DNS Servers.
Bind 8 used to support it with a configuration option [1] that has not
been ported to bind 9. Neither NSD nor PowerDNS seem to support it, and
their is no actual data about how resolvers would handle this case, so I
don't think it is the best option.

[1] http://docstore.mik.ua/orelly/networking_2ndEd/dns/ch10_07.htm

=== HS Hacks ===

Following the same idea the dl amnesia.boum.org could be delegated to a
few different DNS servers, and those servers may have different versions
of the zone. For example:

dl.amnesia.boum.org NS $DNS1
dl.amnesia.boum.org NS $DNS2

DNS1 would have a zone similar to a.dl.amnesia.boum.org:
dl.amnesia.boum.org A $MIRROR1
dl.amnesia.boum.org A $MIRROR2
dl.amnesia.boum.org A $MIRROR3
dl.amnesia.boum.org A $MIRROR4
dl.amnesia.boum.org A $MIRROR5

And DNS2 would have a zone similar to b.dl.amnesia.boum.org:
dl.amnesia.boum.org A $MIRROR6
dl.amnesia.boum.org A $MIRROR7

In theory it should work (and give almost the same load distribution as
CNAME hacks, almost as the NS servers will not receive 50% of requests
because of [2]). However, I am not sure that playing with DNS
inconsistency will be a so good idea, for example for maintainability :)

[2] http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5452

=== Using modified DNS servers ===

Interestingly Tails is not the first project to be looking how to use DNS
for load distribution. People already wrote some DNS software designed to
handle those usecases and return the visitor a reduced list of servers
according to some rules like weights or geolocalisation. They work by
delegating a subzone (like dl.amnesia.boum.org) to those servers and with
zone files containing additionals fields. There is two main softwares for
those usecases:

* http://gdnsd.org/ which is available on debian and used for example for
wikipedia.

* https://github.com/abh/geodns that requires manual installation and is
used for example by pool.ntp.org.

Deploying such software would solve the problem in a more elegant way than
CNAME or NS hacks. It would require a bit of system administration that
maybe can be done using some puppet templates in a few Virtal Machines.

== Using HTTP(s) ==

DNS is not the only way to do some load balancing. It is mostly used for
low level protocols that don't allow redirects (for example: ntp). As
content download is already done using HTTP(s). HTTP(s) can be leveraged
to do this kind of load balancing. It is what is done by sourceforge.net
as pointed by ToBeFree.

For example using a PHP script (or more complete options such as
mirrorbrain, thanks Sagi!) that would redirect requests to
dl.amnesia.boum.org/$file to $mirror.dl.amnesia.boum.org/$file randomly or
according to some additional rules (weights, geolocalisation, SSL
availability ...).

There is a few drawbacks on this approach:
* It would increase a bit the load on boum.org's server.
* It would increase the dependency on this server, meaning that it is
unavailable (down, blocked...), downloads will be blocked (but in this
case the site will be too).
* It would require to develop the script or to install one such as
mirrorbrain.

On the other side it has a few advantage:
* It will only require a few ~20 lines of PHP script when DNS based
solutions require to install and maintain additional software and servers.
* It can allow the script to be personnalised to add some additional rules
if necessary.
* As boum.org server will see every requests, it would allow to do some
stats.
* It can allow to use $mirror.dl.amnesia.boum.org URLs, allowing to deploy
SSL certificates easier that if all mirrors use dl.amnesia.boum.org.
* As ToBeFree mentionned (thanks!) it is also possible to use some client
side scripts to select the mirror. I would not recommend to rely only on
this option as it would not work for browsers without scripts, but it can
be done as a complementary approach, it order to reduce the load and
dependency to dl.amnesia.boum.org's server.

Thus, if I may, I would like to recommend considering the HTTP(s) option,
even if it means that I have to write the PHP script by myself :).

Best,

foob