Files
softlan-vpn/TESTING.md
T
ddidderr e619866112 feat(client): require explicit TAP selection when ambiguous
Add a Windows client --tap-instance-id option for selecting a specific
TAP-Windows6 adapter by NetCfgInstanceId / InterfaceGuid. The client still opens
the only installed TAP adapter automatically, but now refuses to choose an
arbitrary adapter when multiple TAP-Windows6 adapters are present.

This keeps the MVP test run from silently configuring and opening the wrong TAP
adapter on machines that already have VPN or test TAP devices installed. The
error lists available adapter instance ids so the operator can rerun with the
intended value.

Test Plan:
- cargo fmt --check
- cargo test -p lanparty-client-win
- cargo test --workspace
- cargo clippy --workspace --all-targets -- -D warnings
- git diff --check

Refs: PLAN.md Windows client TAP adapter responsibility
2026-05-21 23:11:01 +02:00

6.1 KiB

MVP Test Guide

This guide is for the manual end-to-end MVP proof:

Windows TAP client -> public QUIC relay -> Linux AF_PACKET gateway -> LAN

The MVP is intentionally manual. It does not include an installer, GUI, production certificates, auth, or end-to-end payload encryption.

Machines

  • Relay: public Linux host reachable over UDP.
  • Gateway: Linux machine plugged into the LAN party switch with wired Ethernet.
  • Client: Windows 11 machine with TAP-Windows6 installed.

Use the same room code everywhere, for example ROOM1.

Build

On the relay or Linux build host:

cargo build --release -p lanparty-relay -p lanparty-gateway

On Windows, in an Administrator terminal:

cargo build --release -p lanparty-client-win

The Windows client must run elevated because it opens TAP and edits routes. The gateway usually needs root because it opens an AF_PACKET raw socket.

Start The Relay

Use a high UDP port first unless you already want to deal with privileged 443/udp binding:

./target/release/lanparty-relay \
  --listen 0.0.0.0:8443 \
  --dev-cert-der-out relay-cert.der

Open inbound UDP for the selected port on the relay host firewall.

Expected relay output:

lanparty-relay configured for 0.0.0.0:8443/udp ...
lanparty-relay listening on 0.0.0.0:8443

Copy relay-cert.der to the gateway and Windows client. The development certificate is for lanparty-relay.local, so keep --server-name lanparty-relay.local even when --relay is an IP address or another DNS name.

Start The Gateway

On the LAN gateway machine:

sudo ./target/release/lanparty-gateway \
  --relay relay.example.net:8443 \
  --server-name lanparty-relay.local \
  --relay-ca-cert ./relay-cert.der \
  --room ROOM1 \
  --iface eth0

Use the real wired LAN interface name for --iface. Do not use Wi-Fi.

Expected gateway output:

lanparty-gateway connected as peer ...
lanparty-gateway opened AF_PACKET socket on eth0 ...
lanparty-gateway bridging frames; press Ctrl-C to stop

Expected relay output:

accepted Gateway peer ... in room ROOM1 ...

Start The Windows Client

In an Administrator terminal on Windows:

.\target\release\lanparty-client-win.exe `
  --relay relay.example.net:8443 `
  --server-name lanparty-relay.local `
  --relay-ca-cert .\relay-cert.der `
  --room ROOM1

If the Windows machine has multiple TAP-Windows6 adapters, select the intended one explicitly:

Get-NetAdapter | Where-Object InterfaceDescription -Like "*TAP*" |
  Select-Object Name, InterfaceGuid, InterfaceDescription

.\target\release\lanparty-client-win.exe `
  --relay relay.example.net:8443 `
  --server-name lanparty-relay.local `
  --relay-ca-cert .\relay-cert.der `
  --room ROOM1 `
  --tap-instance-id "{InterfaceGuid-from-the-command-above}"

Expected client output:

lanparty-client-win connected as peer ...
relay route pinned before TAP ...
relay route verified after TAP activation ...
TAP driver reports MAC ... and MTU ...
client diagnostics: relay reachable yes gateway connected yes route pinned yes ...

The first diagnostics line may show IP unknown. After DHCP succeeds, a later line should show:

DHCP received: 10.x.x.x

What To Verify

  1. Relay sees both peers:
accepted Gateway peer ...
accepted Client peer ...
  1. Client sees the gateway:
gateway connected yes
Connected to LAN gateway
  1. Windows TAP gets an address from the LAN:
Get-NetIPAddress | ? InterfaceAlias -like "*TAP*"
  1. ARP and ping work from the TAP-side address:
arp -d *
ping -S <tap-ip> <lan-host-ip>
arp -a
  1. The LAN switch learns the remote client MAC on the gateway port.

Use the switch UI or CLI and look for the client MAC printed by the Windows client. It should appear on the physical port connected to the Linux gateway.

  1. A real LAN game discovers or joins a LAN server.

This is the practical MVP acceptance test.

Useful Log Signals

Relay frame forwarding:

relay frame room=ROOM1 ... action=Forwarded drop_reason=- targets=1

Gateway LAN traffic:

gateway frame interface=eth0 direction=LanToRemote ... action=Forwarded
gateway frame interface=eth0 direction=RemoteToLan ... action=Forwarded

Client health:

Relay RTT: 23 ms
Broadcast traffic flowing

Drops that can be normal during testing:

drop_reason=UnknownDestination
drop_reason=DatagramBudget
drop_reason=RateLimit

Drops that should be investigated if they dominate:

drop_reason=Malformed
drop_reason=UnauthorizedSourceMac
drop_reason=ControlPlaneEtherType

Troubleshooting

If the client says Waiting for LAN gateway, check that the gateway uses the same room code and is connected to the same relay.

If the client says Waiting for TAP IP, DHCP is not making the full round trip. Check relay/gateway frame logs for broadcast traffic and check that the gateway is on wired Ethernet.

If startup fails with a TAP MAC mismatch, disable/enable the TAP adapter or reinstall TAP-Windows6 so Windows reloads the NetworkAddress value. Do not continue with a mismatched MAC.

If startup says the relay route changed, stop. The client is refusing to run because Windows would route the relay connection through the tunnel.

If ping fails but DHCP worked, check Windows firewall, the target LAN host firewall, and whether the LAN subnet conflicts with the client's home LAN. Uncommon LAN subnets such as 10.73.42.0/24 are safer than 192.168.0.0/24.

Cleanup

Stop client, gateway, and relay with Ctrl-C. The Windows client restores the TAP route policy when it exits normally.

Keep lanparty-client-identity.json if you want the same virtual MAC on the next run. Delete it only when you intentionally want a new client identity.

Report Back

For a useful test report, capture:

  • relay command and relay logs
  • gateway command and gateway logs
  • client command and client logs
  • Windows TAP MAC and IP
  • ping result from <tap-ip> to a LAN host
  • switch MAC-table entry for the Windows client MAC
  • LAN game discovery or join result