2008-06-16 03:14:02 +02:00
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Filename: 140-consensus-diffs.txt
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Title: Provide diffs between consensuses
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Author: Peter Palfrader
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Created: 13-Jun-2008
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2008-07-11 19:08:11 +02:00
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Status: Accepted
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2009-02-15 13:06:54 +01:00
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Target: 0.2.2.x
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2008-06-16 03:14:02 +02:00
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1. Overview.
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Tor clients and servers need a list of which relays are on the
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network. This list, the consensus, is created by authorities
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hourly and clients fetch a copy of it, with some delay, hourly.
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This proposal suggests that clients download diffs of consensuses
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once they have a consensus instead of hourly downloading a full
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consensus.
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2. Numbers
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After implementing proposal 138 which removes nodes that are not
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running from the list a consensus document is about 92 kilobytes
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in size after compression.
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The diff between two consecutive consensus, in ed format, is on
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average 13 kilobytes compressed.
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3. Proposal
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3.1 Clients
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If a client has a consensus that is recent enough it SHOULD
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try to download a diff to get the latest consensus rather than
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fetching a full one.
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[XXX: what is recent enough?
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time delta in hours / size of compressed diff
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0 20
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1 9650
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2 17011
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3 23150
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4 29813
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5 36079
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6 39455
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7 43903
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8 48907
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9 54549
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10 60057
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11 67810
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12 71171
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13 73863
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14 76048
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15 80031
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16 84686
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17 89862
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18 94760
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19 94868
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20 94223
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21 93921
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22 92144
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23 90228
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[ size of gzip compressed "diff -e" between the consensus on
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2008-06-01-00:00:00 and the following consensuses that day.
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Consensuses have been modified to exclude down routers per
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proposal 138. ]
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Data suggests that for the first few hours diffs are very useful,
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saving about 60% for the first three hours, 30% for the first 10,
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and almost nothing once we are past 16 hours.
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]
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3.2 Servers
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Directory authorities and servers need to keep up to X [XXX: depends
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on how long clients try to download diffs per above] old consensus
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documents so they can build diffs. They should offer a diff to the
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most recent consensus at the URL
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http://tor.noreply.org/tor/status-vote/current/consensus/diff/<HASH>/<FPRLIST>
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where hash is the full digest of the consensus the client currently
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has, and FPRLIST is a list of (abbreviated) fingerprints of
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authorities the client trusts.
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Servers will only return a consensus if more than half of the requested
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authorities have signed the document, otherwise a 404 error will be sent
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back. The fingerprints can be shortened to a length of any multiple of
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two, using only the leftmost part of the encoded fingerprint. Tor uses
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3 bytes (6 hex characters) of the fingerprint. (This is just like the
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conditional consensus downloads that Tor supports starting with
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0.1.2.1-alpha.)
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If a server cannot offer a diff from the consensus identified by the
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hash but has a current consensus it MUST return the full consensus.
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[XXX: what should we do when the client already has the latest
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consensus? I can think of the following options:
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- send back 3xx not modified
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- send back 200 ok and an empty diff
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- send back 404 nothing newer here.
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I currently lean towards the empty diff.]
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4. Diff Format
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Diffs start with the token "network-status-diff-version" followed by a
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space and the version number, currently "1".
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If a document does not start with network-status-diff it is assumed
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to be a full consensus download and would therefore currently start
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with "network-status-version 3".
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Following the network-status-diff header line is a diff, or patch, in
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limited ed format. We choose this format because it is easy to create
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and process with standard tools (patch, diff -e, ed). This will help
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us in developing and testing this proposal and it should make future
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debugging easier.
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[ If at one point in the future we decide that the space benefits from
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a custom diff format outweighs these benefits we can always
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introduce a new diff format and offer it at for instance
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../diff2/... ]
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We support the following ed commands, each on a line by itself:
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- "<n1>d" Delete line n1
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- "<n1>,<n2>d" Delete lines n1 through n2, including
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- "<n1>c" Replace line n1 with the following block
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- "<n1>,<n2>c" Replace lines n1 through n2, including, with the
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following block.
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- "<n1>a" Append the following block after line n1.
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- "a" Append the following block after the current line.
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- "s/.//" Remove the first character in the current line.
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Note that line numbers always apply to the file after all previous
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commands have already been applied.
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The "current line" is either the first line of the file, if this is
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the first command, the last line of a block we added in an append or
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change command, or the line immediate following a set of lines we just
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deleted (or the last line of the file if there are no lines after
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that).
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The replace and append command take blocks. These blocks are simply
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appended to the diff after the line with the command. A line with
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just a period (".") ends the block (and is not part of the lines
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to add). Note that it is impossible to insert a line with just
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a single dot. Recommended procedure is to insert a line with
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two dots, then remove the first character of that line using s/.//.
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