Yeah, it does clearly show them enqueuing IPv4 and IPv6 requests
separately. So either they need to add logic similar to c-ares has
internally with https://github.com/c-ares/c-ares/pull/551 or just use
ares_getaddrinfo() instead of ares_gethostbyname() with address family
AF_UNSPEC and let c-ares do the right thing.
On 1/23/24 11:25 AM, Nicholas Chammas wrote:
Thank you for all the troubleshooting help, Brad.
I am using gRPC via Apache Spark Connect (a Python library), so I am
two levels removed from c-ares itself. Looking in the Python virtual
environment where gRPC is installed, I’m not sure what file to run
otool on. The only seemingly relevant file I could find is
called cygrpc.cpython-311-darwin.so, and otool didn’t turn up anything
interesting on it.
I will take this issue up with the gRPC folks.
I see in several places that the gRPC folks are using ares_gethostbyname:
*
https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/v1.60.0/src/core/lib/event_engine/ares_resolver.cc#L287-L293
*
https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/v1.60.0/src/core/ext/filters/client_channel/resolver/dns/c_ares/grpc_ares_wrapper.cc#L748-L758
*
https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/v1.60.0/src/core/ext/filters/client_channel/resolver/dns/c_ares/grpc_ares_wrapper.cc#L1075-L1086
On Jan 22, 2024, at 1:39 PM, Brad House <b...@brad-house.com> wrote:
Are you using gRPC installed via homebrew or is it bundled with
something else? Usually package maintainers like homebrew will
dynamically link to the system versions of dependencies so they can
be updated independently. You might be able to run otool -L on grpc
to see what c-ares library its picking up (and if none are listed, it
might be compiled in statically).
That said, according to your grpc logs, it appears that grpc may be
itself performing both A and AAAA queries and expect responses to
both of those. I see the "A" reply comes back but the "AAAA" reply
never comes and it bails at that point. Many years ago c-ares didn't
have a way to request both A and AAAA records with one query, but
does these days via ares_getaddrinfo(), and it was recently enhanced
with logic to assist in the exact scenario you are seeing, basically
it will stop retrying when at least one address family is returned.
You might need to escalate this to the gRPC folks.
On 1/22/24 12:10 PM, Nicholas Chammas wrote:
Here’s the output of adig and ahost
<https://gist.github.com/nchammas/a4c9873d8158c323796e9b47c064e63a#file-adig-ahost-txt>,
both with and without the DNS servers set directly on the network
interface (vs. just on the router).
I also learned that gRPC 1.60.0 may be using c-ares 1.19.1
<https://github.com/grpc/grpc/tree/v1.60.0/third_party/cares>,
though again that’s just via looking at the gRPC source and not via
some runtime query.
On Jan 21, 2024, at 7:34 AM, Brad House <b...@brad-house.com> wrote:
I think homebrew distributes the 'adig' and 'ahost' utilities from
c-ares. Can you try using those to do the same lookup so we can
see the results?
On 1/19/24 11:01 AM, Nicholas Chammas wrote:
On Jan 17, 2024, at 3:38 PM, Brad House <b...@brad-house.com> wrote:
What version of c-ares is installed?
Sorry about the delay in responding. Answering this question is
more difficult than I expected.
I know that Spark Connect is running gRPC 1.160.0. Looking through
the gRPC repo, I see mention of c-ares 1.13.0
<https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/v1.60.0/cmake/cares.cmake#L42>,
but I don’t know how that translates to my runtime. Homebrew tells
me I have c-ares 1.25.0 installed, but again, I’m not sure if
that’s what I’m actually running.
Is there a way I can directly query the version of c-ares being
run via Spark Connect / gRPC? I asked this question on the gRPC
forum <https://groups.google.com/g/grpc-io/c/3tZCa48Xvh8> but no
response yet.
For the record, I know that c-ares is involved because if I tell
gRPC to not use it (via GRPC_DNS_RESOLVER=native
<https://github.com/grpc/grpc/blob/b34d98fbd47834845e3f9cdaa4aa706f1aa4eddb/doc/environment_variables.md>)
then my problem disappears.
What DNS servers are configured on your MacOS system when its not
operating properly? The output of "scutil --dns" would be
helpful here.
Here’s that output.
<https://gist.github.com/nchammas/a4c9873d8158c323796e9b47c064e63a#file-scutil-dns-txt> I
believe 192.168.1.1 is just my local router, and on there is where
I have the default DNS servers set to 1.1.1.1 and 1.0.0.1.
--
c-ares mailing list
c-ares@lists.haxx.se
https://lists.haxx.se/mailman/listinfo/c-ares