exit-policy/reject-private lists the reject rules added by
ExitPolicyRejectPrivate. This makes it easier for stem to
display exit policies.
Add unit tests for getinfo exit-policy/*.
Completes ticket #17183. Patch by "teor".
Performing lookups in both the client and service side descriptor
caches from the same rend_cache_lookup_entry() function increases the
risk of accidental API misuse.
I'm separating the lookup functions to keep the caches distinct.
Including the replica number in the HS_DESC CREATED event provides
more context to a control port client. The replica allows clients
to more easily identify each replicated descriptor from the
independantly output control events.
Adds an Enum which represents the different types of rendezvous
descriptor caches. This argument is passed in each call to
rend_cache_lookup_entry() to specify lookup in the client-side or
service-side descriptor caches.
Adds a control command to fetch a local service descriptor from the
service descriptor cache. The local service descriptor cache is
referenced by the onion address of the service.
This control command is documented in the control spec.
The HS_DESC CREATED event should be emmited when a new service descriptor
is generated for a local rendevous service. This event is documented
in the control spec.
This commit resolves ticket #16291.
Adds a service descriptor cache which is indexed by service ID. This
descriptor cache is used to store service descriptors generated by a
local rendevous service.
The service-side cach can be queried by calling rend_cache_lookup_entry()
with the 'service' argument set to 1.
We used to use this when we had some controllers that would accept
long names and some that wouldn't. But it's been obsolete for a
while, and it's time to strip it out of the code.
Previously we'd put these strings right on the controllers'
outbufs. But this could cause some trouble, for these reasons:
1) Calling the network stack directly here would make a huge portion
of our networking code (from which so much of the rest of Tor is
reachable) reachable from everything that potentially generated
controller events.
2) Since _some_ events (EVENT_ERR for instance) would cause us to
call connection_flush(), every control_event_* function would
appear to be able to reach even _more_ of the network stack in
our cllgraph.
3) Every time we generated an event, we'd have to walk the whole
connection list, which isn't exactly fast.
This is an attempt to break down the "blob" described in
http://archives.seul.org/tor/dev/Mar-2015/msg00197.html -- the set of
functions from which nearly all the other functions in Tor are
reachable.
Closes ticket 16695.
The control port was using set_max_file_descriptors() with a limit set to 0
to query the number of maximum socket Tor can use. With the recent changes
to that function, a check was introduced to make sure a user can not set a
value below the amount we reserved for non socket.
This commit adds get_max_sockets() that returns the value of max_sockets so
we can stop using that "setter" function to get the current value.
Finally, the dead code is removed that is the code that checked for limit
equal to 0. From now on, set_max_file_descriptors() should never be used
with a limit set to 0 for a valid use case.
Fixes#16697
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
For FAILED and RECEIVED action of the HS_DESC event, we now sends back the
descriptor ID at the end like specified in the control-spec section 4.1.25.
Fixes#15881
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
"+HSPOST" and the related event changes allow the uploading of HS
descriptors via the control port, and more comprehensive event
monitoring of HS descriptor upload status.
Every callsite that use to allocate a rend_data_t object now use the
rend_data_client/service_create() function.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
These commands allow for the creation and management of ephemeral
Onion ("Hidden") services that are either bound to the lifetime of
the originating control connection, or optionally the lifetime of
the tor instance.
Implements #6411.
The HS_DESC_CONTENT event results in multiple line thus must be prefixed
with a "650+" and ending with "650 OK".
Reported-by: Damian Johnson <atagar@torproject.org>
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
The HS_DESC event was using rend_data_t from the dir connection to reply the
onion address and authentication type. With the new HSFETCH command, it's
now possible to fetch a descriptor only using the descriptor id thus
resulting in not having an onion address in any HS_DESC event.
This patch removes rend_query from the hs desc control functions and replace
it by an onion address string and an auth type.
On a successful fetch, the service id is taken from the fetched descriptor.
For that, an extra parameter is added to "store as a client" function that
contains the cache entry stored.
This will make the control event functions scale more easily over time if
other values not present in rend_data_t are needed since the rend_data from
the dir connection might not contained everything we need.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
Big refactor of the HS client descriptor fetch functionnality. This allows
to fetch an HS descriptor using only a descriptor ID. Furthermore, it's also
possible to provide a list of HSDir(s) now that are used instead of the
automatically choosen one.
The approach taken was to add a descriptor_id field to the rend_data_t
structure so it can be used, if available, by the HS client. The onion
address field however has priority over it that is if both are set, the
onion address is used to fetch the descriptor.
A new public function is introduced called rend_client_fetch_v2_desc(...)
that does NOT lookup the client cache before fetching and can take a list of
HSDirs as a parameter.
The HSFETCH control command now uses this new function thus making it work
and final.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
As defined in section 4.1.26 in the control-spec.txt, this new event replies
the content of a successfully fetched HS descriptor. This also adds a unit
test for the controller event.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
This adds the command on the controller side that parses and validate
arguments but does nothing for now. The HS desriptor fetch must be
modularized a bit more before we can use the command.
See control-spec.txt section 3.26 for more information on this command.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
This adds the key "hs/client/desc/id/<ADDR>" to the GETINFO command used to
lookup the given onion address in the client hs descriptor cache.
If found, prints it formatted as specified in section 1.3 of rend-spec.txt.
Fixes#14845
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
The idea here is that a controller should be able to make Tor produce a
new relay descriptor on demand, without that descriptor actually being
uploaded to the dirauths (they would likely reject it anyway due to
freshness concerns).
Implements #14784.
Introduces two new circuit status name-value parameters: SOCKS_USERNAME
and SOCKS_PASSWORD. Values are enclosing in quotes and unusual characters
are escaped.
Example:
650 CIRC 5 EXTENDED [...] SOCKS_USERNAME="my_username" SOCKS_PASSWORD="my_password"
If the consensus does not contain Exits, Tor will only build internal
circuits. In this case, relevant statuses will contain the word "internal"
as indicated in the Tor control-spec.txt. When bootstrap completes,
Tor will be ready to handle an application requesting an internal
circuit to hidden services at ".onion" addresses.
If a future consensus contains Exits, exit circuits may become available.
Tor already notifies the user at "notice" level if they have no exits in
the consensus, and can therefor only build internal paths.
Consequential change from #13718.
Bugfix on ed8f020e205267e6270494634346ab68d830e1d8; bug not in any
released version of Tor. Found by Coverity; this is CID 1239290.
[Yes, I used this commit message before, in 58e813d0fc.
Turns out, that fix wasn't right, since I didn't look up a
screen. :P ]
Uses libscrypt when found; otherwise, we don't have scrypt and we
only support openpgp rfc2440 s2k hashing, or pbkdf2.
Includes documentation and unit tests; coverage around 95%. Remaining
uncovered code is sanity-checks that shouldn't be reachable fwict.
Return an error when the second or later arguments of the
"setevents" controller command are invalid events. Previously we
would return success while silently skipping invalid events.
Fixes bug 13205; bugfix on 0.2.3.2-alpha. Reported by "fpxnns".
Back in 078d6bcd, we added an event number 0x20, but we didn't make
the event_mask field big enough to compensate.
Patch by "teor". Fixes 13085; bugfix on 0.2.5.1-alpha.
Most of these are in somewhat non-obvious code where it is probably
a good idea to initialize variables and add extra assertions anyway.
Closes 13036. Patches from "teor".
Coverity doesn't like doing NULL checks on things that can't be
NULL; I like checking things where the logic for their not being
NULL is nontrivial. Let's compromise, and make it obvious that this
field can't be NULL.
[Coverity CID 202004]
When we merged the cookieauthfile creation logic in 33c3e60a37, we
accidentally took out this feature. Fixes bug 12864, bugfix on
0.2.5.1-alpha.
Also adds an ExtORPortCookieAuthFileGroupReadable, since there's no
reason not to.
When running with User set, we frequently try to look up our
information in the user database (e.g., /etc/passwd). The seccomp2
sandbox setup doesn't let us open /etc/passwd, and probably
shouldn't.
To fix this, we have a pair of wrappers for getpwnam and getpwuid.
When a real call to getpwnam or getpwuid fails, they fall back to a
cached value, if the uid/gid matches.
(Granting access to /etc/passwd isn't possible with the way we
handle opening files through the sandbox. It's not desirable either.)
This is a fix for 9963. I say this is a feature, but if it's a
bugfix, it's a bugfix on 0.2.4.18-rc.
Old behavior:
Mar 27 11:02:19.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 50%: Loading relay descriptors.
Mar 27 11:02:20.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 51%: Loading relay descriptors.
Mar 27 11:02:20.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 52%: Loading relay descriptors.
... [Many lines omitted] ...
Mar 27 11:02:29.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 78%: Loading relay descriptors.
Mar 27 11:02:33.000 [notice] We now have enough directory information to build circuits.
New behavior:
Mar 27 11:16:17.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 50%: Loading relay descriptors
Mar 27 11:16:19.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 55%: Loading relay descriptors
Mar 27 11:16:21.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 60%: Loading relay descriptors
Mar 27 11:16:21.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 65%: Loading relay descriptors
Mar 27 11:16:21.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 70%: Loading relay descriptors
Mar 27 11:16:21.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 75%: Loading relay descriptors
Mar 27 11:16:21.000 [notice] We now have enough directory information to build circuits.
This should fixes some "hey, that function could have
__attribute__((noreturn))" warnings introduced by f96400d9.
Bug not in any released version of Tor.
According to control spec, longname should not contain any spaces and is
consists only of identy_digest + nickname
added two functions:
* node_get_verbose_nickname_by_id()
* node_describe_longname_by_id()
If you want a slow shutdown, send SIGNAL SHUTDOWN.
(Why not just have the default be SIGNAL QUIT? Because this case
should only happen when an owning controller has crashed, and a
crashed controller won't be able to give the user any "tor is
shutting down" feedback, and so the user gets confused for a while.
See bug 10449 for more info)
The remaining vestige is that we continue to publish the V2dir flag,
and that, for the controller, we continue to emit v2 directory
formats when requested.
Don't cast uint64_t * to const uint64_t * explicitly. The cast is always
safe, so C does it for us. Doing the cast explitictly can hide bugs if
the input is secretly the wrong type.
Suggested by Nick.
There were only two functions outside of circuitstats that actually
wanted to know what was inside this. Making the structure itself
hidden should help isolation and prevent us from spaghettifying the
thing more.
Use the generic function for both the ControlPort cookie and the
ExtORPort cookie.
Also, place the global cookie variables in the heap so that we can
pass them around more easily as pointers.
Also also, fix the unit tests that broke by this change.
Conflicts:
src/or/config.h
src/or/ext_orport.c
We previously used FILENAME_PRIVATE identifiers mostly for
identifiers exposed only to the unit tests... but also for
identifiers exposed to the benchmarker, and sometimes for
identifiers exposed to a similar module, and occasionally for no
really good reason at all.
Now, we use FILENAME_PRIVATE identifiers for identifiers shared by
Tor and the unit tests. They should be defined static when we
aren't building the unit test, and globally visible otherwise. (The
STATIC macro will keep us honest here.)
For identifiers used only by the unit tests and never by Tor at all,
on the other hand, we wrap them in #ifdef TOR_UNIT_TESTS.
This is not the motivating use case for the split test/non-test
build system; it's just a test example to see how it works, and to
take a chance to clean up the code a little.