Commit Graph

5 Commits (59d1077e2853e1964ae27a3158eaa80e01d690ee)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Adrian Dewhurst 1ef5bd5381 util/osdiag, util/winutil: expose Windows policy key
The Windows base registry key is already exported but the policy key was
not. util/osdiag currently replicates the string rather than the
preferred approach of reusing the constant.

Updates #cleanup

Change-Id: I6c1c45337896c744059b85643da2364fb3f232f2
Signed-off-by: Adrian Dewhurst <adrian@tailscale.com>
12 months ago
Aaron Klotz 6b6a8cf843 util/osdiag: add query for Windows page file configuration and status
It's very common for OOM crashes on Windows to be caused by lack of page
file space (the NT kernel does not overcommit). Since Windows automatically
manages page file space by default, unless the machine is out of disk space,
this is typically caused by manual page file configurations that are too
small.

This patch obtains the current page file size, the amount of free page file
space, and also determines whether the page file is automatically or manually
managed.

Fixes #9090

Signed-off-by: Aaron Klotz <aaron@tailscale.com>
1 year ago
Aaron Klotz 5fb1695bcb util/osdiag, util/osdiag/internal/wsc: add code to probe the Windows Security Center for installed software
The Windows Security Center is a component that manages the registration of
security products on a Windows system. Only products that have obtained a
special cert from Microsoft may register themselves using the WSC API.
Practically speaking, most vendors do in fact sign up for the program as it
enhances their legitimacy.

From our perspective, this is useful because it gives us a high-signal
source of information to query for the security products installed on the
system. I've tied this query into the osdiag package and is run during
bugreports.

It uses COM bindings that were automatically generated by my prototype
metadata processor, however that program still has a few bugs, so I had
to make a few manual tweaks. I dropped those binding into an internal
package because (for the moment, at least) they are effectively
purpose-built for the osdiag use case.

We also update the wingoes dependency to pick up BSTR.

Fixes #10646

Signed-off-by: Aaron Klotz <aaron@tailscale.com>
1 year ago
Aaron Klotz c17a817769 util/osdiag: add logging for winsock layered service providers to Windows bugreports
The Layered Service Provider (LSP) is a deprecated (but still supported)
mechanism for inserting user-mode DLLs into a filter chain between the
Winsock API surface (ie, ws2_32.dll) and the internal user-mode interface
to the networking stack.

While their use is becoming more rare due to the aforementioned deprecation,
it is still possible for third-party software to install their DLLs into
this filter chain and interfere with Winsock API calls. Knowing whether
this is happening is useful for troubleshooting.

Fixes https://github.com/tailscale/tailscale/issues/8142

Signed-off-by: Aaron Klotz <aaron@tailscale.com>
1 year ago
Aaron Klotz 37925b3e7a go.mod, cmd/tailscaled, ipn/localapi, util/osdiag, util/winutil, util/winutil/authenticode: add Windows module list to OS-specific logs that are written upon bugreport
* We update wingoes to pick up new version information functionality
  (See pe/version.go in the https://github.com/dblohm7/wingoes repo);
* We move the existing LogSupportInfo code (including necessary syscall
  stubs) out of util/winutil into a new package, util/osdiag, and implement
  the public LogSupportInfo function may be implemented for other platforms
  as needed;
* We add a new reason argument to LogSupportInfo and wire that into
  localapi's bugreport implementation;
* We add module information to the Windows implementation of LogSupportInfo
  when reason indicates a bugreport. We enumerate all loaded modules in our
  process, and for each one we gather debug, authenticode signature, and
  version information.

Fixes #7802

Signed-off-by: Aaron Klotz <aaron@tailscale.com>
1 year ago