tor/doc/spec/proposals/141-jit-sd-downloads.txt

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Filename: 141-jit-sd-downloads.txt
Title: Download server descriptors on demand
Version: $Revision$
Last-Modified: $Date$
Author: Peter Palfrader
Created: 15-Jun-2008
Status: Draft
1. Overview
Downloading all server descriptors is the most expensive part
of bootstrapping a Tor client. These server descriptors currently
amount to about 1.5 Megabytes of data, and this size will grow
linearly with network size.
Fetching all these server descriptors takes a long while for people
behind slow network connections. It is also a considerable load on
our network of directory mirrors.
This document describes proposed changes to the Tor network and
directory protocol so that clients will no longer need to download
all server descriptors.
These changes consist of moving load balancing information into
network status documents, implementing a means to download server
descriptors on demand in an anonymity-preserving way, and dealing
with exit node selection.
2. What is in a server descriptor
When a Tor client starts the first thing it will try to get is a
current network status document: a consensus signed by a majority
of directory authorities. This document is currently about 100
Kilobytes in size, tho it will grow linearly with network size.
This document lists all servers currently running on the network.
The Tor client will then try to get a server descriptor for each
of the running servers. All server descriptors currently amount
to about 1.5 Megabytes of downloads.
A Tor client learns several things about a server from its descriptor.
Some of these it already learned from the network status document
published by the authorities, but the server descriptor contains it
again in a single statement signed by the server itself, not just by
the directory authorities.
Tor clients use the information from server descriptors for
different purposes, which are considered in the following sections.
#three ways: One, to determine if a server will be able to handle
#this client's request; two, to actually communicate or use the server;
#three, for load balancing decisions.
#
#These three points are considered in the following subsections.
2.1 Load balancing
The Tor load balancing mechanism is quite complex in its details, but
it has a simple goal: The more traffic a server can handle the more
traffic it should get. That means the more traffic a server can
handle the more likely a client will use it.
For this purpose each server descriptor has bandwidth information
which tries to convey a server's capacity to clients.
Currently we weigh servers differently for different purposes. There
is a weigh for when we use a server as a guard node (our entry to the
Tor network), there is one weigh we assign servers for exit duties,
and a third for when we need intermediate (middle) nodes.
2.2 Exit information
When a Tor wants to exit to some resource on the internet it will
build a circuit to an exit node that allows access to that resource's
IP address and TCP Port.
When building that circuit the client can make sure that the circuit
ends at a server that will be able to fulfill the request because the
client already learned of all the servers' exit policies from their
descriptors.
2.3 Capability information
Server descriptors contain information about the specific version or
the Tor protocol they understand [proposal 105].
Furthermore the server descriptor also contains the exact version of
the Tor software that the server is running and some decisions are
made based on the server version number (for instance a Tor client
will only make conditional consensus requests [proposal 139] when
talking to Tor servers version 0.2.1.1-alpha or later).
2.4 Contact/key information
A server descriptor lists a server's IP address and TCP ports on which
it accepts onion and directory connections. Furthermore it contains
the onion key (a short lived RSA key to which clients encrypt CREATE
cells).
2.5 Identity information
A Tor client learns the digest of a server's key from the network
status document. Once it has a server descriptor this descriptor
contains the full RSA identity key of the server. Clients verify
that 1) the digest of the identity key matches the expected digest
it got from the consensus, and 2) that the signature on the descriptor
from that key is valid.
3. No longer require clients to have copies of all SDs
3.1 Load balancing info in consensus documents
One of the reasons why clients download all server descriptors is for
doing load proper load balancing as described in 2.1. In order for
clients to not require all server descriptors this information will
have to move into the network status document.
Consensus documents will have a new line per router similar
to the "r", "s", and "v" lines that already exist. This line
will convey weight information to clients.
"w Bandwidth=193"
The bandwidth number is the lesser of observed bandwidth and bandwidth
rate limit from the server descriptor that the "r" line referenced by
digest (1st and 3rd field of the bandwidth line in the descriptor).
It is given in kilobytes per second so the byte value in the
descriptor has to be divided by 1024 (and is then truncated, i.e.
rounded down).
Authorities will cap the bandwidth number at some arbitrary value,
currently 10MB/sec. If a router claims a larger bandwidth an
authority's vote will still only show Bandwidth=10240.
The consensus value for bandwidth is the median of all bandwidth
numbers given in votes. In case of an even number of votes we use
the lower median. (Using this procedure allows us to change the
cap value more easily.)
Clients should believe the bandwidth as presented in the consensus,
not capping it again.
3.2 Fetching descriptors on demand
As described in 2.4 a descriptor lists IP address, OR- and Dir-Port,
and the onion key for a server.
A client already knows the IP address and the ports from the consensus
documents, but without the onion key it will not be able to send
CREATE/EXTEND cells for that server. Since the client needs the onion
key it needs the descriptor.
If a client only downloaded a few descriptors in an observable manner
then that would leak which nodes it was going to use.
This proposal suggests the following:
1) when connecting to a guard node for which the client does not
yet have a cached descriptor it requests the descriptor it
expects by hash. (The consensus document that the client holds
has a hash for the descriptor of this server. We want exactly
that descriptor, not a different one.)
It does that by sending a RELAY_REQUEST_SD cell.
A client MAY cache the descriptor of the guard node so that it does
not need to request it every single time it contacts the guard.
2) when a client wants to extend a circuit that currently ends in
server B to a new next server C, the client will send a
RELAY_REQUEST_SD cell to server B. This cell contains in its
payload the hash of a server descriptor the client would like
to obtain (C's server descriptor). The server sends back the
descriptor and the client can now form a valid EXTEND/CREATE cell
encrypted to C's onion key.
Clients MUST NOT cache such descriptors. If they did they might
leak that they already extended to that server at least once
before.
Replies to RELAY_REQUEST_SD requests need to be padded to some
constant upper limit in order to conceal a client's destination
from anybody who might be counting cells/bytes.
RELAY_REQUEST_SD cells contain the following information:
- hash of the server descriptor requested
- hash of the identity digest of the server for which we want the SD
- IP address and OR-port or the server for which we want the SD
- padding factor - the number of cells we want the answer
padded to.
[XXX this just occured to me and it might be smart. or it might
be stupid. clients would learn the padding factor they want
to use from the consensus document. This allows us to grow
the replies later on should SDs become larger.]
[XXX: figure out a decent padding size]
3.3 Protocol versions
Server descriptors contain optional information of supported
link-level and circuit-level protocols in the form of
"opt protocols Link 1 2 Circuit 1". These are not currently needed
and will probably eventually move into the "v" (version) line in
the consensus. This proposal does not deal with them.
Similarly a server descriptor contains the version number of
a Tor node. This information is already present in the consensus
and is thus available to all clients immediately.
3.4 Exit selection
Currently finding an appropriate exit node for a user's request is
easy for a client because it has complete knowledge of all the exit
policies of all servers on the network.
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The consensus document will once again be extended to contain the
information required by clients. This information will be a summary
of each node's exit policy. The exit policy summary will only contain
the list of ports to which a node exits to most destination IP
addresses.
A summary should claim a router exits to a specific TCP port if,
ignoring private IP addresses, the exit policy indicates that the
router would exit to this port to most IP address. either two /8
netblocks, or one /8 and a couple of /12s or any other combination).
The exact algorith used is this: Going through all exit policy items
- ignore any accept that is not for all IP addresses ("*"),
- ignore rejects for these netblocks (exactly, no subnetting):
0.0.0.0/8, 169.254.0.0/16, 127.0.0.0/8, 192.168.0.0/16, 10.0.0.0/8,
and 172.16.0.0/12m
- for each reject count the number of IP addresses rejected against
the affected ports,
- once we hit an accept for all IP addresses ("*") add the ports in
that policy item to the list of accepted ports, if they don't have
more than 2^25 IP addresses (that's two /8 networks) counted
against them (i.e. if the router exits to a port to everywhere but
at most two /8 networks).
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An exit policy summary will be included in votes and consensus as a
new line attached to each exit node. The line will have the format
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"p" <space> "accept"|"reject" <portlist>
where portlist is a comma seperated list of single port numbers or
portranges (e.g. "22,80-88,1024-6000,6667").
Whether the summary shows the list of accepted ports or the list of
rejected ports depends on which list is shorter (has a shorter string
representation). In case of ties we choose the list of accepted
ports. As an exception to this rule an allow-all policy is
represented as "accept 1-65535" instead of "reject " and a reject-all
policy is similarly given as "reject 1-65535".
Summary items are compressed, that is instead of "80-88,89-100" there
only is a single item of "80-100", similarly instead of "20,21" a
summary will say "20-21".
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Port lists are sorted in ascending order.
The maximum allowed length of a policy summary (including the "accept "
or "reject ") is 1000 characters. If a summary exceeds that length we
use an accept-style summary and list as much of the port list as is
possible within these 1000 bytes.
3.4.1 Consensus selection
When building a consensus, authorities have to agree on a digest of
the server descriptor to list in the router line for each router.
This is documented in dir-spec section 3.4.
All authorities that listed that agreed upon descriptor digest in
their vote should also list the same exit policy summary - or list
none at all if the authority has not been upgraded to list that
information in their vote.
If we have votes with matching server descriptor digest of which at
least one of them has an exit policy then we differ between two cases:
a) all authorities agree (or abstained) on the policy summary, and we
use the exit policy summary that they all listed in their vote,
b) something went wrong (or some authority is playing foul) and we
have different policy summaries. In that case we pick the one
that is most commonly listed in votes with the matching
descriptor. We break ties in favour of the lexigraphically larger
vote.
If none one of the votes with a matching server descriptor digest has
an exit policy summary we use the most commonly listed one in all
votes, breaking ties like in case b above.
3.4.2 Client behaviour
When choosing an exit node for a specific request a Tor client will
choose from the list of nodes that exit to the requested port as given
by the consensus document. If a client has additional knowledge (like
cached full descriptors) that indicates the so chosen exit node will
reject the request then it MAY use that knowledge (or not include such
nodes in the selection to begin with). However, clients MUST NOT use
nodes that do not list the port as accepted in the summary (but for
which they know that the node would exit to that address from other
sources, like a cached descriptor).
An exception to this is exit enclave behaviour: A client MAY use the
node at a specific IP address to exit to any port on the same address
even if that node is not listed as exiting to the port in the summary.
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4. Migration
4.1 Consensus document changes.
The consensus will need to include
- bandwidth information (see 3.1)
- exit policy summaries (3.4)
A new consensus method (number TBD) will be chosen for this.
5. Future possibilities
This proposal still requires that all servers have the descriptors of
every other node in the network in order to answer RELAY_REQUEST_SD
cells. These cells are sent when a circuit is extended from ending at
node B to a new node C. In that case B would have to answer a
RELAY_REQUEST_SD cell that asks for C's server descriptor (by SD digest).
In order to answer that request B obviously needs a copy of C's server
descriptor. The RELAY_REQUEST_SD cell already has all the info that
B needs to contact C so it can ask about the descriptor before passing it
back to the client.