mirror of
https://gitlab.torproject.org/tpo/core/tor.git
synced 2024-11-24 04:13:28 +01:00
More module-level documentation.
This commit is contained in:
parent
04b8af9dc0
commit
a5f07a6c2a
@ -40,9 +40,38 @@
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* \file directory.c
|
||||
* \brief Code to send and fetch directories and router
|
||||
* descriptors via HTTP. Directories use dirserv.c to generate the
|
||||
* results; clients use routers.c to parse them.
|
||||
* \brief Code to send and fetch information from directory authorities and
|
||||
* caches via HTTP.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* Directory caches and authorities use dirserv.c to generate the results of a
|
||||
* query and stream them to the connection; clients use routerparse.c to parse
|
||||
* them.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* Every directory request has a dir_connection_t on the client side and on
|
||||
* the server side. In most cases, the dir_connection_t object is a linked
|
||||
* connection, tunneled through an edge_connection_t so that it can be a
|
||||
* stream on the Tor network. The only non-tunneled connections are those
|
||||
* that are used to upload material (descriptors and votes) to authorities.
|
||||
* Among tunneled connections, some use one-hop circuits, and others use
|
||||
* multi-hop circuits for anonymity.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* Directory requests are launched by calling
|
||||
* directory_initiate_command_rend() or one of its numerous variants. This
|
||||
* launch the connection, will construct an HTTP request with
|
||||
* directory_send_command(), send the and wait for a response. The client
|
||||
* later handles the response with connection_dir_client_reached_eof(),
|
||||
* which passes the information received to another part of Tor.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* On the server side, requests are read in directory_handle_command(),
|
||||
* which dispatches first on the request type (GET or POST), and then on
|
||||
* the URL requested. GET requests are processed with a table-based
|
||||
* dispatcher in url_table[]. The process of handling larger GET requests
|
||||
* is complicated because we need to avoid allocating a copy of all the
|
||||
* data to be sent to the client in one huge buffer. Instead, we spool the
|
||||
* data into the buffer using logic in connection_dirserv_flushed_some() in
|
||||
* dirserv.c. (TODO: If we extended buf.c to have a zero-copy
|
||||
* reference-based buffer type, we could remove most of that code, at the
|
||||
* cost of a bit more reference counting.)
|
||||
**/
|
||||
|
||||
/* In-points to directory.c:
|
||||
|
@ -6,8 +6,34 @@
|
||||
|
||||
/**
|
||||
* \file networkstatus.c
|
||||
* \brief Functions and structures for handling network status documents as a
|
||||
* client or cache.
|
||||
* \brief Functions and structures for handling networkstatus documents as a
|
||||
* client or as a directory cache.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* A consensus networkstatus object is created by the directory
|
||||
* authorities. It authenticates a set of network parameters--most
|
||||
* importantly, the list of all the relays in the network. This list
|
||||
* of relays is represented as an array of routerstatus_t objects.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* There are currently two flavors of consensus. With the older "NS"
|
||||
* flavor, each relay is associated with a digest of its router
|
||||
* descriptor. Tor instances that use this consensus keep the list of
|
||||
* router descriptors as routerinfo_t objects stored and managed in
|
||||
* routerlist.c. With the newer "microdesc" flavor, each relay is
|
||||
* associated with a digest of the microdescriptor that the authorities
|
||||
* made for it. These are stored and managed in microdesc.c. Information
|
||||
* about the router is divided between the the networkstatus and the
|
||||
* microdescriptor according to the general rule that microdescriptors
|
||||
* should hold information that changes much less frequently than the
|
||||
* information in the networkstatus.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* Modern clients use microdescriptor networkstatuses. Directory caches
|
||||
* need to keep both kinds of networkstatus document, so they can serve them.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* This module manages fetching, holding, storing, updating, and
|
||||
* validating networkstatus objects. The download-and-validate process
|
||||
* is slightly complicated by the fact that the keys you need to
|
||||
* validate a consensus are stored in the authority certificates, which
|
||||
* you might not have yet when you download the consensus.
|
||||
*/
|
||||
|
||||
#define NETWORKSTATUS_PRIVATE
|
||||
|
@ -10,6 +10,32 @@
|
||||
* \brief Structures and functions for tracking what we know about the routers
|
||||
* on the Tor network, and correlating information from networkstatus,
|
||||
* routerinfo, and microdescs.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* The key structure here is node_t: that's the canonical way to refer
|
||||
* to a Tor relay that we might want to build a circuit through. Every
|
||||
* node_t has either a routerinfo_t, or a routerstatus_t from the current
|
||||
* networkstatus consensus. If it has a routerstatus_t, it will also
|
||||
* need to have a microdesc_t before you can use it for circuits.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* The nodelist_t is a global singleton that maps identities to node_t
|
||||
* objects. Access them with the node_get_*() functions. The nodelist_t
|
||||
* is maintained by calls throughout the codebase
|
||||
*
|
||||
* Generally, other code should not have to reach inside a node_t to
|
||||
* see what information it has. Instead, you should call one of the
|
||||
* many accessor functions that works on a generic node_t. If there
|
||||
* isn't one that does what you need, it's better to make such a function,
|
||||
* and then use it.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* For historical reasons, some of the functions that select a node_t
|
||||
* from the list of all usable node_t objects are in the routerlist.c
|
||||
* module, since they originally selected a routerinfo_t. (TODO: They
|
||||
* should move!)
|
||||
*
|
||||
* (TODO: Perhaps someday we should abstract the remaining ways of
|
||||
* talking about a relay to also be node_t instances. Those would be
|
||||
* routerstatus_t as used for directory requests, and dir_server_t as
|
||||
* used for authorities and fallback directories.)
|
||||
*/
|
||||
|
||||
#include "or.h"
|
||||
|
@ -8,6 +8,41 @@
|
||||
* \file relay.c
|
||||
* \brief Handle relay cell encryption/decryption, plus packaging and
|
||||
* receiving from circuits, plus queuing on circuits.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* This is a core modules that makes Tor work. It's responsible for
|
||||
* dealing with RELAY cells (the ones that travel more than one hop along a
|
||||
* circuit), by:
|
||||
* <ul>
|
||||
* <li>constructing relays cells,
|
||||
* <li>encrypting relay cells,
|
||||
* <li>decrypting relay cells,
|
||||
* <li>demultiplexing relay cells as they arrive on a connection,
|
||||
* <li>queueing relay cells for retransmission,
|
||||
* <li>or handling relay cells that are for us to receive (as an exit or a
|
||||
* client).
|
||||
* </ul>
|
||||
*
|
||||
* RELAY cells are generated throughout the code at the client or relay side,
|
||||
* using relay_send_command_from_edge() or one of the functions like
|
||||
* connection_edge_send_command() that calls it. Of particular interest is
|
||||
* connection_edge_package_raw_inbuf(), which takes information that has
|
||||
* arrived on an edge connection socket, and packages it as a RELAY_DATA cell
|
||||
* -- this is how information is actually sent across the Tor network. The
|
||||
* cryptography for these functions is handled deep in
|
||||
* circuit_package_relay_cell(), which either adds a single layer of
|
||||
* encryption (if we're an exit), or multiple layers (if we're the origin of
|
||||
* the circuit). After construction and encryption, the RELAY cells are
|
||||
* passed to append_cell_to_circuit_queue(), which queues them for
|
||||
* transmission and tells the circuitmux (see circuitmux.c) that the circuit
|
||||
* is waiting to send something.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* Incoming RELAY cells arrive at circuit_receive_relay_cell(), called from
|
||||
* command.c. There they are decrypted and, if they are for us, are passed to
|
||||
* connection_edge_process_relay_cell(). If they're not for us, they're
|
||||
* re-queued for retransmission again with append_cell_to_circuit_queue().
|
||||
*
|
||||
* The connection_edge_process_relay_cell() function handles all the different
|
||||
* types of relay cells, launching requests or transmitting data as needed.
|
||||
**/
|
||||
|
||||
#define RELAY_PRIVATE
|
||||
|
@ -6,6 +6,23 @@
|
||||
*
|
||||
* \brief Implementation for ed25519-signed certificates as used in the Tor
|
||||
* protocol.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* This certificate format is designed to be simple and compact; it's
|
||||
* documented in tor-spec.txt in the torspec.git repository. All of the
|
||||
* certificates in this format are signed with an Ed25519 key; the
|
||||
* contents themselves may be another Ed25519 key, a digest of a
|
||||
* RSA key, or some other material.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* In this module there is also support for a crooss-certification of
|
||||
* Ed25519 identities using (older) RSA1024 identities.
|
||||
*
|
||||
* Tor uses other types of certificate too, beyond those described in this
|
||||
* module. Notably, our use of TLS requires us to touch X.509 certificates,
|
||||
* even though sensible people would stay away from those. Our X.509
|
||||
* certificates are represented with tor_x509_cert_t, and implemented in
|
||||
* tortls.c. We also have a separate certificate type that authorities
|
||||
* use to authenticate their RSA signing keys with their RSA identity keys:
|
||||
* that one is authority_cert_t, and it's mostly handled in routerlist.c.
|
||||
*/
|
||||
|
||||
#include "crypto.h"
|
||||
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user