Merge branch 'ticket32211'

This commit is contained in:
Nick Mathewson 2019-11-15 09:10:11 -05:00
commit 97b5ff2b1d
4 changed files with 140 additions and 4 deletions

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@ -258,6 +258,8 @@ ALIASES =
ALIASES += refdir{1}="\ref src/\1 \"\1\""
ALIASES += ticket{1}="[ticket \1](https://bugs.torproject.org/\1)"
# This tag can be used to specify a number of word-keyword mappings (TCL only).
# A mapping has the form "name=value". For example adding "class=itcl::class"
# will allow you to use the command class in the itcl::class meaning.

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@ -0,0 +1,77 @@
/**
@page initialization Initialization and shutdown
@tableofcontents
@section overview Overview
Tor has a single entry point: tor_run_main() in main.c. All the ways of
starting a Tor process (ntmain.c, tor_main.c, and tor_api.c) work by invoking tor_run_main().
The tor_run_main() function normally exits (@ref init_exceptwhen "1") by
returning: not by calling abort() or exit(). Before it returns, it calls
tor_cleanup() in shutdown.c.
Conceptually, there are several stages in running Tor.
1. First, we initialize those modules that do not depend on the
configuration. This happens in the first half of tor_run_main(), and the
first half of tor_init(). (@ref init_pending_refactor "2")
2. Second, we parse the command line and our configuration, and configure
systems that depend on our configuration or state. This configuration
happens midway through tor_init(), which invokes
options_init_from_torrc(). We then initialize more systems from the
second half of tor_init().
3. At this point we may exit early if we have been asked to do something
requiring no further initialization, like printing our version number or
creating a new signing key. Otherwise, we proceed to run_tor_main_loop(),
which initializes some network-specific parts of Tor, grabs some
daemon-only resources (like the data directory lock) and starts Tor itself
running.
> @anchor init_exceptwhen 1. tor_run_main() _can_ terminate with a call to
> abort() or exit(), but only when crashing due to a bug, or when forking to
> run as a daemon.
> @anchor init_pending_refactor 2. The pieces of code that I'm describing as
> "the first part of tor_init()" and so on deserve to be functions with their
> own name. I'd like to refactor them, but before I do so, there is some
> slight reorganization that needs to happen. Notably, the
> nt_service_parse_options() call ought logically to be later in our
> initialization sequence. See @ticket{32447} for our refactoring progress.
@section subsys Subsystems and initialization
Our current convention is to use the subsystem mechanism to initialize and
clean up pieces of Tor. The more recently updated pieces of Tor will use
this mechanism. For examples, see e.g. time_sys.c or log_sys.c.
In simplest terms, a **subsytem** is a logically separate part of Tor that
can be initialized, shut down, managed, and configured somewhat independently
of the rest of the program.
The subsys_fns_t type describes a subsystem and a set of functions that
initialize it, desconstruct it, and so on. To define a subsystem, we declare
a `const` instance of subsys_fns_t. See the documentation for subsys_fns_t
for a full list of these functions.
After defining a subsytem, it must be inserted in subsystem_list.c. At that
point, table-driven mechanisms in subsysmgr.c will invoke its functions when
appropriate.
@subsection vsconfig Initialization versus configuration
We note that the initialization phase of Tor occurs before any configuration
is read from disk -- and therefore before any other files are read from
disk. Therefore, any behavior that depends on Tor's configuration or state
must occur _after_ the initialization process, during configuration.
**/

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@ -23,8 +23,16 @@ struct config_format_t;
* All callbacks are optional -- if a callback is set to NULL, the subsystem
* manager will treat it as a no-op.
*
* You should use c99 named-field initializers with this structure: we
* will be adding more fields, often in the middle of the structure.
* You should use c99 named-field initializers with this structure, for
* readability and safety. (There are a lot of functions here, all of them
* optional, and many of them with similar signatures.)
*
* See @ref initialization for more information about initialization and
* shutdown in Tor.
*
* To make a new subsystem, you declare a const instance of this type, and
* include it on the list in subsystem_list.c. The code that manages these
* subsystems is in subsysmgr.c.
**/
typedef struct subsys_fns_t {
/**
@ -55,7 +63,7 @@ typedef struct subsys_fns_t {
* it is only for global state or pre-configuration state.
*
* (If you need to do any setup that depends on configuration, you'll need
* to declare a configuration callback. (Not yet designed))
* to declare a configuration callback instead. (Not yet designed))
*
* This function MUST NOT have any parts that can fail.
**/
@ -63,22 +71,49 @@ typedef struct subsys_fns_t {
/**
* Connect a subsystem to the message dispatch system.
*
* This function should use the macros in @refdir{lib/pubsub} to register a
* set of messages that this subsystem may publish, and may subscribe to.
*
* See pubsub_macros.h for more information, and for examples.
**/
int (*add_pubsub)(struct pubsub_connector_t *);
/**
* Perform any necessary pre-fork cleanup. This function may not fail.
*
* On Windows (and any other platforms without fork()), this function will
* never be invoked. Otherwise it is used when we are about to start
* running as a background daemon, or when we are about to run a unit test
* in a subprocess. Unlike the subsys_fns_t.postfork callback, it is run
* from the parent process.
*
* Note that we do not invoke this function when the child process's only
* purpose is to call exec() and run another program.
*/
void (*prefork)(void);
/**
* Perform any necessary post-fork setup. This function may not fail.
*
* On Windows (and any other platforms without fork()), this function will
* never be invoked. Otherwise it is used when we are about to start
* running as a background daemon, or when we are about to run a unit test
* in a subprocess. Unlike the subsys_fns_t.prefork callback, it is run
* from the child process.
*
* Note that we do not invoke this function when the child process's only
* purpose is to call exec() and run another program.
*/
void (*postfork)(void);
/**
* Free any thread-local resources held by this subsystem. Called before
* the thread exits.
*
* This function is not allowed to fail.
*
* \bug Note that this callback is currently buggy: See \ticket{32103}.
*/
void (*thread_cleanup)(void);
@ -86,18 +121,28 @@ typedef struct subsys_fns_t {
* Free all resources held by this subsystem.
*
* This function is not allowed to fail.
*
* Subsystems are shut down when Tor is about to exit or return control to
* an embedding program. This callback must return the process to a state
* such that subsys_fns_t.init will succeed if invoked again.
**/
void (*shutdown)(void);
/**
* A config_format_t describing all of the torrc fields owned by this
* subsystem.
*
* This object, if present, is registered in a confmgr_t for Tor's options,
* and used to parse option fields from the command line and torrc file.
**/
const struct config_format_t *options_format;
/**
* A config_format_t describing all of the DataDir/state fields owned by
* this subsystem.
*
* This object, if present, is registered in a confmgr_t for Tor's state,
* and used to parse state fields from the DataDir/state file.
**/
const struct config_format_t *state_format;
@ -106,7 +151,11 @@ typedef struct subsys_fns_t {
* on success, -1 on failure.
*
* It is safe to store the pointer to the object until set_options()
* is called again. */
* is called again.
*
* This function is only called after all the validation code defined
* by subsys_fns_t.options_format has passed.
**/
int (*set_options)(void *);
/* XXXX Add an implementation for options_act_reversible() later in this
@ -118,6 +167,12 @@ typedef struct subsys_fns_t {
*
* It is safe to store the pointer to the object; set_state() is only
* called on startup.
*
* This function is only called after all the validation code defined
* by subsys_fns_t.state_format has passed.
*
* This function will only be called once per invocation of Tor, since
* Tor does not reload its state while it is running.
**/
int (*set_state)(void *);

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@ -30,6 +30,8 @@ Tor repository.
@subpage intro
@subpage initialization
@subpage dataflow
@subpage certificates