Because it invokes the Tor mainloop, it does unpredictable things to
test coverage of a lot of code that it doesn't actually test at
all. (It is more an integration test than anything else.)
The ordinary definitions of timeradd() and timersub() contain a
branch. However, in coverage builds, this means that we get spurious
complaints about partially covered basic blocks, in a way that makes
our coverage determinism harder to check.
Ordinarily we skip calling log_fn(LOG_DEBUG,...) if debug logging is
completely disabled. However, in coverage builds, this means that
we get spurious complaints about partially covered basic blocks, in
a way that makes our coverage determinism harder to check.
Two non fatal asserts are added in this commit. First one is to see if the
SENDME digest list kept on the circuit for validation ever grows bigger than
the maximum number of expected SENDME on a circuit (currently 10).
The second one is to know if we ever send more than one SENDME at a time on a
circuit. In theory, we shouldn't but if we ever do, the v1 implementation
wouldn't work because we only keep one single cell digest (the previous cell
to the SENDME) on the circuit/cpath. Thus, sending two SENDME consecutively
will lead to a mismatch on the other side because the same cell digest would
be use and thus the circuit would collapse.
Finally, add an extra debug log in case we emit a v0 which also includes the
consensus emit version in that case.
Part of #30428
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
We must not accumulate digests on the circuit if the other end point is using
another SENDME version that is not using those digests like v0.
This commit makes it that we always pop the digest regardless of the version.
Part of #30428
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Commit 4ef8470fa5480d3b was actually reverted before because in the end we
needed to do this minus 1 check on the window.
This commit clarifies that in the code, takes the useful comment changes from
4ef8470fa5480d3b and makes sendme_circuit_cell_is_next() private since it
behaves in a very specific way that one external caller might expect.
Part of #30428.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Turns out that we were only recording the "b_digest" but to have
bidirectionnal authenticated SENDMEs, we need to use the "f_digest" in the
forward cell situation.
Because of the cpath refactoring, this commit plays with the crypt_path_ and
relay_crypto_t API a little bit in order to respect the abstractions.
Previously, we would record the cell digest as the SENDME digest in the
decrypt cell function but to avoid code duplication (both directions needs to
record), we now do that right after iff the cell is recognized (at the edge).
It is now done in circuit_receive_relay_cell() instead.
We now also record the cell digest as the SENDME digest in both relay cell
encryption functions since they are split depending on the direction.
relay_encrypt_cell_outbound() and relay_encrypt_cell_inbound() need to
consider recording the cell digest depending on their direction (f vs b
digest).
Fixes#30428
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
There was a missing cell version check against our max supported version. In
other words, we do not fallback to v0 anymore in case we do know the SENDME
version.
We can either handle it or not, never fallback to the unauthenticated version
in order to avoid gaming the authenticated logic.
Add a unit tests making sure we properly test that and also test that we can
always handle the default emit and accepted versions.
Fixes#30428
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
The validation of the SENDME cell is now done as the very first thing when
receiving it for both client and exit. On failure to validate, the circuit is
closed as detailed in the specification.
Part of #30428
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
It turns out that only the exit side is validating the authenticated SENDME v1
logic and never the client side. Which means that if a client ever uploaded
data towards an exit, the authenticated SENDME logic wouldn't apply.
For this to work, we have to record the cell digest client side as well which
introduced a new function that supports both type of edges.
This also removes a test that is not valid anymore which was that we didn't
allow cell recording on an origin circuit (client).
Part of #30428
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
We want to support parsing a cell with unknown status code so we are forward
compatible.
Part of #30454
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Like the previous commit about the INTRODUCE_ACK status code, change all auth
key type to use the one defined in the trunnel file.
Standardize the use of these auth type to a common ABI.
Part of #30454
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This enum was the exact same as hs_intro_ack_status_t that was removed at the
previous commit. It was used client side when parsing the INTRODUCE_ACK cell.
Now, the entire code dealing with the INTRODUCE_ACK cell (both sending and
receiving) have been modified to all use the same ABI defined in the trunnel
introduce1 file.
Finally, the client will default to the normal behavior when receiving an
unknown NACK status code which is to note down that we've failed and re-extend
to the next intro point. This way, unknown status code won't trigger a
different behavior client side.
Part of #30454.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Remove the hs_intro_ack_status_t enum and move the value into trunnel. Only
use these values from now on in the intro point code.
Interestingly enough, the client side also re-define these values in hs_cell.h
with the hs_cell_introd_ack_status_t enum. Next commit will fix that and force
to use the trunnel ABI.
Part of #30454
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Previously we purged it in 1-hour increments -- but one-hour is the
maximum TTL for the cache! Now we do it in 25%-TTL increments.
Fixes bug 29617; bugfix on 0.3.5.1-alpha.
The client side had garbage histograms and deadcode here, too. That code has
been removed.
The tests have also been updated to properly test the intro circ by sending
padding from the relay side to the client, and verifying that both shut down
when padding was up. (The tests previously erroneously tested only the client
side of intro circs, which actually were supposed to be doing nothing).
This just moves the state transition directives into the proper client/relay
side functions. It also allows us to remove some dead-code from the client
side (since the client doesn't send padding).
- Add some more useful logs for future debugging.
- Stop usage of circpad_state_to_string(). It's innacurate.
- Reduce severity and fix up log domain of some logging messages.