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remove some of the done items, in preparation for overhaul
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\begin{document}
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\title{Tor Development Roadmap: Wishlist for Nov 2006--Dec 2007}
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\author{Roger Dingledine \and Nick Mathewson \and Shava Nerad}
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\title{Tor Development Roadmap: Wishlist for 2008 and beyond}
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\author{Roger Dingledine \and Nick Mathewson}
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\maketitle
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\pagestyle{plain}
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@ -26,23 +26,13 @@
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\section{Introduction}
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%Hi, Roger! Hi, Shava. This paragraph should get deleted soon. Right now,
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%this document goes into about as much detail as I'd like to go into for a
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%technical audience, since that's the audience I know best. It doesn't have
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%time estimates everywhere. It isn't well prioritized, and it doesn't
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%distinguish well between things that need lots of research and things that
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%don't. The breakdowns don't all make sense. There are lots of things where
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%I don't make it clear how they fit into larger goals, and lots of larger
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%goals that don't break down into little things. It isn't all stuff we can do
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%for sure, and it isn't even all stuff we can do for sure in 2007. The
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%tmp\{\} macro indicates stuff I haven't said enough about. That said, here
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%plangoes...
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Tor (the software) and Tor (the overall software/network/support/document
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suite) are now experiencing all the crises of success. Over the next year,
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we're probably going to grow more in terms of users, developers, and funding
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than before. This gives us the opportunity to perform long-neglected
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maintenance tasks.
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suite) are now experiencing all the crises of success. Over the next
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years, we're probably going to grow more in terms of users, developers,
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and funding than before. This document attempts to lay out all the
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well-understood next steps that Tor needs to take. We should periodically
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reorganize it to reflect current and intended priorities.
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\section{Code and design infrastructure}
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@ -96,22 +86,6 @@ significantly. Sadly, many of these are patented and unavailable for us.
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\subsection{Scalability}
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\subsubsection{Improved directory efficiency}
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Right now, clients download a statement of the {\bf network status} made by
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each directory authority. We could reduce network bandwidth significantly by
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having the authorities jointly sign a statement reflecting their vote on the
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current network status. This would save clients up to 160K per hour, and
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make their view of the network more uniform. Of course, we'd need to make
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sure the voting process was secure and resilient to failures in the
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network.\plan{Must do; specify in 2006. 2 weeks to specify, 3-4 weeks to
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implement.}
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We should {\bf shorten router descriptors}, since the current format includes
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a great deal of information that's only of interest to the directory
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authorities, and not of interest to clients. We can do this by having each
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router upload a short-form and a long-form signed descriptor, and having
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clients download only the short form. Even a naive version of this would
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save about 40\% of the bandwidth currently spent by clients downloading
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descriptors.\plan{Must do; specify in 2006. 3-4 weeks.}
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We should {\bf have routers upload their descriptors even less often}, so
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that clients do not need to download replacements every 18 hours whether any
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@ -154,11 +128,12 @@ have some preliminary designs~\cite{incentives-txt,tor-challenges},
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but need to perform
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some more research to make sure they would be safe and effective.\plan{Write
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a draft paper; 2 person-months.}
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(XXX we did that)
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\subsection{Portability}
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Our {\bf Windows implementation}, though much improved, continues to lag
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behind Unix and Mac OS X, especially when running as a server. We hope to
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merge promising patches from Mike Chiussi to address this point, and bring
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merge promising patches from Christian King to address this point, and bring
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Windows performance on par with other platforms.\plan{Do in 2007; 1.5 months
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to integrate not counting Mike's work.}
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@ -166,10 +141,6 @@ We should have {\bf better support for portable devices}, including modes of
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operation that require less RAM, and that write to disk less frequently (to
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avoid wearing out flash RAM).\plan{Optional; 2 weeks.}
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We should {\bf stop using socketpair on Windows}; instead, we can use
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in-memory structures to communicate between cpuworkers and the main thread,
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and between connections.\plan{Optional; 1 week.}
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\subsection{Performance: resource usage}
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We've been working on {\bf using less RAM}, especially on servers. This has
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paid off a lot for directory caches in the 0.1.2, which in some cases are
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@ -181,20 +152,8 @@ chunks produced with a specialized allocator.) This could potentially save
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around 25 to 50\% of the memory currently allocated for network buffers, and
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make Tor a more attractive proposition for restricted-memory environments
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like old computers, mobile devices, and the like.\plan{Do in 2007; 2-3 weeks
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plus one week measurement.}
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We should improve our {\bf bandwidth limiting}. The current system has been
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crucial in making users willing to run servers: nobody is willing to run a
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server if it might use an unbounded amount of bandwidth, especially if they
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are charged for their usage. We can make our system better by letting users
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configure bandwidth limits independently for their own traffic and traffic
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relayed for others; and by adding write limits for users running directory
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servers.\plan{Do in 2006; 2-3 weeks.}
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On many hosts, sockets are still in short supply, and will be until we can
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migrate our protocol to UDP. We can {\bf use fewer sockets} by making our
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self-to-self connections happen internally to the code rather than involving
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the operating system's socket implementation.\plan{Optional; 1 week.}
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plus one week measurement.} (XXX We did this, but we need to do something
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more/else.)
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\subsection{Performance: network usage}
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We know too little about how well our current path
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@ -272,39 +231,25 @@ tool.
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\subsection{Implementation: client-side and bridges-side}
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Our anticensorship design calls for some nodes to act as ``bridges''
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that are outside a national firewall, and others inside the firewall to
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act as pure clients. This part of the design is quite clear-cut; we're
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probably ready to begin implementing it. To {\bf implement bridges}, we
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need to have servers publish themselves as limited-availability relays
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to a special bridge authority if they judge they'd make good servers.
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We will also need to help provide documentation for port forwarding,
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and an easy configuration tool for running as a bridge.
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To {\bf implement clients}, we need to provide a flexible interface to
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learn about bridges and to act on knowledge of bridges. We also need
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to teach them how to know to use bridges as their first hop, and how to
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fetch directory information from both classes of directory authority.
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Clients also need to {\bf use the encrypted directory variant} added in Tor
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0.1.2.3-alpha. This will let them retrieve directory information over Tor
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once they've got their initial bridges. We may want to get the rest of the
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Tor user base to begin using this encrypted directory variant too, to
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provide cover.
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Bridges will want to be able to {\bf listen on multiple addresses and ports}
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if they can, to give the adversary more ports to block.
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\subsection{Research: anonymity implications from becoming a bridge}
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see arma's bridge proposal; e.g. should bridge users use a second layer of
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entry guards?
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\subsection{Implementation: bridge authority}
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The design here is also reasonably clear-cut: we need to run some
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we run some
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directory authorities with a slightly modified protocol that doesn't leak
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the entire list of bridges. Thus users can learn up-to-date information
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for bridges they already know about, but they can't learn about arbitrary
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new bridges.
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we need a design for distributing the bridge authority over more than one
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server
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\subsection{Normalizing the Tor protocol on the wire}
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Additionally, we should {\bf resist content-based filters}. Though an
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adversary can't see what users are saying, some aspects of our protocol are
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@ -313,10 +258,6 @@ easy to fingerprint {\em as} Tor. We should correct this where possible.
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Look like Firefox; or look like nothing?
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Future research: investigate timing similarities with other protocols.
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\subsection{Access control for bridges}
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Design/impl: password-protecting bridges, in light of above.
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And/or more general access control.
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\subsection{Research: scanning-resistance}
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\subsection{Research/Design/Impl: how users discover bridges}
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@ -398,14 +339,6 @@ resist these attacks, or can improve our design to resist them, we should.
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unless a graduate student is interested.}
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\subsection{Implementation security}
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Right now, each Tor node stores its keys unencrypted. We should {\bf encrypt
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more Tor keys} so that Tor authorities can require a startup password. We
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should look into adding intermediary medium-term ``signing keys'' between
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identity keys and onion keys, so that a password could be required to replace
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a signing key, but not to start Tor. This would improve Tor's long-term
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security, especially in its directory authority infrastructure.\plan{Design this
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as a part of the revised ``v2.1'' directory protocol; implement it in
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2007. 3-4 weeks.}
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We should also {\bf mark RAM that holds key material as non-swappable} so
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that there is no risk of recovering key material from a hard disk
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@ -458,11 +391,11 @@ them as belonging to the same family.\plan{Do during v2.1 directory protocol
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To avoid attacks where an adversary claims good performance in order to
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attract traffic, we should {\bf have authorities measure node performance}
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(including stability and bandwidth) themselves, and not simply believe what
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they're told. Measuring stability can be done by tracking MTBF. Measuring
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bandwidth can be tricky, since it's hard to distinguish between a server with
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they're told. We also measure stability by tracking MTBF. Measuring
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bandwidth will be tricky, since it's hard to distinguish between a server with
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low capacity, and a high-capacity server with most of its capacity in
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use.\plan{Do ``Stable'' in 2007; 2-3 weeks. ``Fast'' will be harder; do it
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if we can interest a grad student.}
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use. See also Nikita's NDSS 2008 paper.\plan{Do it if we can interest
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a grad student.}
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{\bf Operating a directory authority should be easier.} We rely on authority
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operators to keep the network running well, but right now their job involves
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