These functions were there so that we could abstract the differences
between evbuffer and buf_t. But with the bufferevent removal, this
no longer serves a purpose.
The test was checking for EISDIR which is a Linux-ism making other OSes
unhappy. Instead of checking for a negative specific errno value, just make
sure it's negative indicating an error. We don't need more for this test.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Keep the base16 representation of the RSA identity digest in the commit object
so we can use it without using hex_str() or dynamically encoding it everytime
we need it. It's used extensively in the logs for instance.
Fixes#19561
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Encoded commit has an extra byte at the end for the NUL terminated byte and
the test was overrunning the payload buffer by one byte.
Found by Coverity issue 1362984.
Fixes#19567
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Only some very ancient distributions don't ship with Libevent 2 anymore,
even the oldest supported Ubuntu LTS version has it. This allows us to
get rid of a lot of compat code.
The test_state_update() test would fail if you run it between 23:30 and
00:00UTC in the following line because n_protocol_runs was 2:
tt_u64_op(state->n_protocol_runs, ==, 1);
The problem is that when you launch the test at 23:30UTC (reveal phase),
sr_state_update() gets called from sr_state_init() and it will prepare
the state for the voting round at 00:00UTC (commit phase). Since we
transition from reveal to commit phase, this would trigger a phase
transition and increment the n_protocol_runs counter.
The solution is to initialize the n_protocol_runs to 0 explicitly in the
beginning of the test, as we do for n_reveal_rounds, n_commit_rounds etc.
The *get* state query functions for the SRVs now only return const pointers
and the DEL action needs to be used to delete the SRVs from the state.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This patch makes us retain the intermediate list of K=V entries for
the duration of computing our vote, and lets us use that list with
a new function in order to look up parameters before the consensus
is published.
We can't actually use this function yet because of #19011: our
existing code to do this doesn't actually work, and we'll need a new
consensus method to start using it.
Closes ticket #19012.
Code has been changed so every RSA fingerprint for a commit in our state is
validated before being used. This fixes the unit tests by mocking one of the
key function and updating the hardcoded state string.
Also, fix a time parsing overflow on platforms with 32bit time_t
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Signed-off-by: George Kadianakis <desnacked@riseup.net>
The prop250 code used the RSA identity key fingerprint to index commit in a
digestmap instead of using the digest.
To behavior change except the fact that we are actually using digestmap
correctly.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
From 0.2.7.2-alpha onwards, Exits would reject all the IP addresses
they knew about in their exit policy. But this may have disclosed
addresses that were otherwise unlisted.
Now, only advertised addresses are rejected by default by
ExitPolicyRejectPrivate. All known addresses are only rejected when
ExitPolicyRejectLocalInterfaces is explicitly set to 1.
This hack provides a way to make sure we can see coverage from
test-switch-id. If you set OVERRIDE_GCDA_PERMISSIONS_HACK, we
temporarily make the .gcda files mode 0666 before we run the
test scripts, and then we set them to 0644 again afterwards.
That's necessary because the test_switch_id.sh script does a
setuid() to 'nobody' part way through, and drops the ability to
change its mind back.
Slow system can sometime take more than 10 seconds to reach the test
callsite resulting in the unit test failing when using time in the future or
in the past.
Fixes#19465
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
base16_decodes() now returns the number of decoded bytes. It's interface
changes from returning a "int" to a "ssize_t". Every callsite now checks the
returned value.
Fixes#14013
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
zlib 1.2 came out in 2003; earlier versions should be dead by now.
Our workaround code was only preventing us from using the gzip
encoding (if we decide to do so), and having some dead code linger
around in torgzip.c
This is a big-ish patch, but it's very straightforward. Under this
clang warning, we're not actually allowed to have a global variable
without a previous extern declaration for it. The cases where we
violated this rule fall into three roughly equal groups:
* Stuff that should have been static.
* Stuff that was global but where the extern was local to some
other C file.
* Stuff that was only global when built for the unit tests, that
needed a conditional extern in the headers.
The first two were IMO genuine problems; the last is a wart of how
we build tests.
This warning triggers on silently promoting a float to a double. In
our code, it's just a sign that somebody used a float by mistake,
since we always prefer double.
This warning, IIUC, means that the compiler doesn't like it when it
sees a NULL check _after_ we've already dereferenced the
variable. In such cases, it considers itself free to eliminate the
NULL check.
There are a couple of tricky cases:
One was the case related to the fact that tor_addr_to_in6() can
return NULL if it gets a non-AF_INET6 address. The fix was to
create a variant which asserts on the address type, and never
returns NULL.
This is a fairly easy way for us to get our test coverage up on
compat_threads.c and workqueue.c -- I already implemented these
tests, so we might as well enable them.
So, back long ago, XXX012 meant, "before Tor 0.1.2 is released, we
had better revisit this comment and fix it!"
But we have a huge pile of such comments accumulated for a large
number of released versions! Not cool.
So, here's what I tried to do:
* 0.2.9 and 0.2.8 are retained, since those are not yet released.
* XXX+ or XXX++ or XXX++++ or whatever means, "This one looks
quite important!"
* The others, after one-by-one examination, are downgraded to
plain old XXX. Which doesn't mean they aren't a problem -- just
that they cannot possibly be a release-blocking problem.
Remove support for "GET /tor/bytes.txt" DirPort request, and
"GETINFO dir-usage" controller request, which were only available
via a compile-time option in Tor anyway.
Feature was added in 0.2.2.1-alpha. Resolves ticket 19035.
Previously, if the header was present, we'd proceed even if the
function wasn't there.
Easy fix for bug 19161. A better fix would involve trying harder to
find libscrypt_scrypt.
AddressSanitizer's (ASAN) SIGSEGV handler overrides the backtrace
handler and prevents it from printing its backtrace. The output of ASAN
is different from what 'bt_test.py' expects and causes backtrace test
failures.
The 'allow_user_segv_handler' option allows applications to set their
own SIGSEGV handler but is not supported by older GCC versions. These
older GCC versions do support the 'handle_segv' which prevents ASAN from
setting its SIGSEGV handler.
With the fix for #17150, I added a duplicate certificate here. Here
I remove the original location in 0.2.8. (I wouldn't want to do
that in 027, due to the amount of authority-voting-related code
drift.)
Closes 19073.
We know there are overflows in curve25519-donna-c32, so we'll have
to have that one be fwrapv.
Only apply the asan, ubsan, and trapv options to the code that does
not need to run in constant time. Those options introduce branches
to the code they instrument.
(These introduced branches should never actually be taken, so it
might _still_ be constant time after all, but branch predictors are
complicated enough that I'm not really confident here. Let's aim for
safety.)
Closes 17983.
The goal here is to provide a way to decouple pieces of the code
that want to learn "when something happens" from those that realize
that it has happened.
The implementation here consists of a generic backend, plus a set of
macros to define and implement a set of type-safe frontends.
Tor stores client authorization cookies in two slightly different forms.
The service's client_keys file has the standard base64-encoded cookie,
including two chars of padding. The hostname file and the client remove
the two padding chars, and store an auth type flag in the unused bits.
The distinction makes no sense. Refactor all decoding to use the same
function, which will accept either form, and use a helper function for
encoding the truncated format.
Decide to advertise begindir support in a similar way to how
we decide to advertise DirPort.
Fix up the associated descriptor-building unit tests.
Resolves#18616, bugfix on 0c8e042c30 in #12538 in 0.2.8.1-alpha.
Apparently somewhere along the line we decided that MIN might be
missing.
But we already defined it (if it was missing) in compat.h, which
everybody includes.
Closes ticket 18889.
Also, put libor-testing.a at a better position in the list of
libraries, to avoid linker errors.
This is a fix, or part of a fix, for 18490.
Conflicts:
src/test/include.am
This changes simply renames them by removing "Testing" in front of them and
they do not require TestingTorNetwork to be enabled anymore.
Fixes#18481
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
Yes, we could cast to unsigned char first, but it's probably safest
to just use our own (in test_util), or remove bad-idea features that
we don't use (in readpassphrase.c).
Fixes 18728.
When we made HidServDirectoryV2 always 1, we removed the situation
where a relay could choose not to be an HSDir. Now simplify the
rest of the code to reflect this decision.
(We have to remove two apparently unrelated free() calls in the unit
tests, since they used to free stuff that we created as a side effect
of calling router_get_my_routerinfo(), and now we no longer call that.)
This simplifies relay behavior, because the relay offers the hsdir
functionality independent of whether the directory authorities have
decided this relay is suitable for clients to use yet.
Implements ticket 18332.
The transproxy feature is only enabled when __FreeBSD__ is defined, and
only regular FreeBSD does that. Change this to __FreeBSD_kernel__ which
is defined on derivatives as well.
This enables the relevant options/validate__transproxy test on FreeBSD
derivatives.
This is in accordance with our usual policy against freelists,
now that working allocators are everywhere.
It should also make memarea.c's coverage higher.
I also doubt that this code ever helped performance.
They are no longer "all" digests, but only the "common" digests.
Part of 17795.
This is an automated patch I made with a couple of perl one-liners:
perl -i -pe 's/crypto_digest_all/crypto_common_digests/g;' src/*/*.[ch]
perl -i -pe 's/\bdigests_t\b/common_digests_t/g;' src/*/*.[ch]
1. We were sometimes using libevent uninitialized, which is Not Allowed.
2. The malformed-PTR dns test was supposed to get a -1 output... but
the test was wrong, since it forgot that in-addr.arpa addresses
are in reverse order.
Bugs not in any released tor.
When ClientPreferIPv6ORPort is auto, bridges prefer the configured
bridge ORPort address. Otherwise, they use the value of the option.
Other clients prefer IPv4 ORPorts if ClientPreferIPv6ORPort is auto.
When ClientPreferIPv6DirPort is auto, all clients prefer IPv4 DirPorts.
When ClientPreferIPv6ORPort is auto, bridges prefer the configured
bridge ORPort address. Otherwise, they use the value of the option.
Other clients prefer IPv4 ORPorts if ClientPreferIPv6ORPort is auto.
When ClientPreferIPv6DirPort is auto, all clients prefer IPv4 DirPorts.
We've never actually tested this support, and we should probably assume
it's broken.
To the best of my knowledge, only OpenVMS has this, and even on
OpenVMS it's a compile-time option to disable it. And I don't think
we build on openvms anyway. (Everybody else seems to be working
around the 2038 problem by using a 64-bit time_t, which won't expire
for roughly 292 billion years.)
Closes ticket 18184.
Bridge clients ignore ClientUseIPv6, acting as if it is always 1.
This preserves existing behaviour.
Make ClientPreferIPv6OR/DirPort auto by default:
* Bridge clients prefer IPv6 by default.
* Other clients prefer IPv4 by default.
This preserves existing behaviour.
ClientUseIPv4 0 tells tor to avoid IPv4 client connections.
ClientPreferIPv6DirPort 1 tells tor to prefer IPv6 directory connections.
Refactor policy for IPv4/IPv6 preferences.
Fix a bug where node->ipv6_preferred could become stale if
ClientPreferIPv6ORPort was changed after the consensus was loaded.
Update documentation, existing code, add unit tests.
Avoid using a pronoun where it makes comments unclear.
Avoid using gender for things that don't have it.
Avoid assigning gender to people unnecessarily.
Sometimes you can call time() and then touch a file, and have the
second come out a little before the first. See #18025 for way more
information than you necessarily wanted.
This creates a random 100 KiB buffer, and incrementally hashes
(SHA3-512) between 1 and 5 * Rate bytes in a loop, comparing the running
digest with the equivalent one shot call from the start of the buffer.
This is an eXtendable-Output Function with the following claimed
security strengths against *all* adversaries:
Collision: min(d/2, 256)
Preimage: >= min(d, 256)
2nd Preimage: min(d, 256)
where d is the amount of output used, in bits.
* DIGEST_SHA3_[256,512] added as supported algorithms, which do
exactly what is said on the tin.
* test/bench now benchmarks all of the supported digest algorithms,
so it's possible to see just how slow SHA-3 is, though the message
sizes could probably use tweaking since this is very dependent on
the message size vs the SHA-3 rate.
This will give relay operators the ability of disabling the caching of
directory data. In general, this should not be necessary, but on some
lower-resource systems it may beneficial.
According to the POSIX standard the option value is a pointer to void
and the option length a socklen_t. The Windows implementation makes the
option value be a pointer to character and the option length an int.
Casting the option value to a pointer to void conforms to the POSIX
standard while the implicit cast to a pointer to character conforms to
the Windows implementation.
The casts of the option length to the socklen_t data type conforms to
the POSIX standard. The socklen_t data type is actually an alias of an
int so it also conforms to the Windows implementation.
When a relay does not have an open directory port but it has an
orport configured and is accepting client connections then it can
now service tunnelled directory requests, too. This was already true
of relays with an dirport configured.
We also conditionally stop advertising this functionality if the
relay is nearing its bandwidth usage limit - same as how dirport
advertisement is determined.
Partial implementation of prop 237, ticket 12538
These IPv6 addresses must be quoted, because : is the port separator,
and "acce" is a valid hex block.
Add unit tests for assumed actions in IPv6 policies.
"Tor has included a feature to fetch the initial consensus from nodes
other than the authorities for a while now. We just haven't shipped a
list of alternate locations for clients to go to yet.
Reasons why we might want to ship tor with a list of additional places
where clients can find the consensus is that it makes authority
reachability and BW less important.
We want them to have been around and using their current key, address,
and port for a while now (120 days), and have been running, a guard,
and a v2 directory mirror for most of that time."
Features:
* whitelist and blacklist for an opt-in/opt-out trial.
* excludes BadExits, tor versions that aren't recommended, and low
consensus weight directory mirrors.
* reduces the weighting of Exits to avoid overloading them.
* places limits on the weight of any one fallback.
* includes an IPv6 address and orport for each FallbackDir, as
implemented in #17327. (Tor won't bootstrap using IPv6 fallbacks
until #17840 is merged.)
* generated output includes timestamps & Onionoo URL for traceability.
* unit test ensures that we successfully load all included default
fallback directories.
Closes ticket #15775. Patch by "teor".
OnionOO script by "weasel", "teor", "gsathya", and "karsten".
Once tor is downloading a usable consensus, any other connection
attempts are not needed.
Choose a connection to keep, favouring:
* fallback directories over authorities,
* connections initiated earlier over later connections
Close all other connections downloading a consensus.
Prop210: Add attempt-based connection schedules
Existing tor schedules increment the schedule position on failure,
then retry the connection after the scheduled time.
To make multiple simultaneous connections, we need to increment the
schedule position when making each attempt, then retry a (potentially
simultaneous) connection after the scheduled time.
(Also change find_dl_schedule_and_len to find_dl_schedule, as it no
longer takes or returns len.)
Prop210: Add multiple simultaneous consensus downloads for clients
Make connections on TestingClientBootstrapConsensus*DownloadSchedule,
incrementing the schedule each time the client attempts to connect.
Check if the number of downloads is less than
TestingClientBootstrapConsensusMaxInProgressTries before trying any
more connections.
UseDefaultFallbackDirs enables any hard-coded fallback
directory mirrors. Default is 1, set it to 0 to disable fallbacks.
Implements ticket 17576.
Patch by "teor".
Using variables removes the ambiguity about when to use variables and
when to use substitutions. Variables always work. Substitutions only
work when Autoconf knows about them which is not always the case.
The variables are also placed between quotes to ensures spaces in the
variables are handled properly.
Update the code for IPv6 authorities and fallbacks for function
argument changes.
Update unit tests affected by the function argument changes in
the patch.
Add unit tests for authority and fallback:
* adding via a function
* line parsing
* adding default authorities
(Adding default fallbacks is unit tested in #15775.)
The hidden service descriptor cache (rendcache) tests use digest maps
which expect keys to have a length of DIGEST_LEN.
Because the tests use key strings with a length lower than DIGEST_LEN,
the internal copy operation reads outside the key strings which leads to
buffer over-reads.
The issue is resolved by using character arrays with a size of
DIGEST_LEN.
Patch on ade5005853.
The tests pass empty digest strings to the dir_server_new function which
copies it into a directory server structure. The copy operation expects
the digest strings to be DIGEST_LEN characters long.
Because the length of the empty digest strings are lower than
DIGEST_LEN, the copy operation reads outside the digest strings which
leads to buffer over-reads.
The issue is resolved by using character arrays with a size of
DIGEST_LEN.
Patch on 4ff08bb581.
These functions must really never fail; so have crypto_rand() assert
that it's working okay, and have crypto_seed_rng() demand that
callers check its return value. Also have crypto_seed_rng() check
RAND_status() before returning.
Stop ignoring ExitPolicyRejectPrivate in getinfo
exit-policy/reject-private. Fix a memory leak.
Set ExitPolicyRejectPrivate in the unit tests, and make a mock
function declaration static.
Fix unit tests for get_interface_address6_list to assume less
about the interface addresses on the system.
Instead, mock get_interface_address6_list and use the mocked
function to provide a range of address combinations.
This migrates away from SHA1, and provides further hash flooding
protection on top of the randomised siphash implementation.
Add unit tests to make sure that different inputs don't have the
same hash.
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".
Modify policies_parse_exit_policy_reject_private so it also blocks
the addresses configured for OutboundBindAddressIPv4_ and
OutboundBindAddressIPv6_, and any publicly routable port addresses
on exit relays.
Add and update unit tests for these functions.
In my testing, an IPv6-only FreeBSD jail without ::1 returned EINVAL
from tor_ersatz_socketpair. Let's not fail the unit test because of
this - it would only ever use tor_socketpair() anyway.
(But it won't work on some systems without IPv4/IPv6 localhost
(some BSD jails) by design, to avoid creating sockets on routable
IP addresses. However, those systems likely have the AF_UNIX socketpair,
which tor prefers.)
Fixes bug #17638; bugfix on a very early tor version,
earlier than 22dba27d8d (23 Nov 2004) / svn:r2943.
Patch by "teor".
Make unit tests pass on IPv6-only systems, and systems without
localhost addresses (like some FreeBSD jails).
Fixes:
* get_if_addrs_ifaddrs: systems without localhost
* get_if_addrs_ioctl: only works on IPv4 systems
* socket: check IPv4 and IPv6, skip on EPROTONOSUPPORT
* socketpair_ersatz: uses IPv4, skip on EPROTONOSUPPORT
Fixes bug #17632; bugfix on unit tests in 0.2.7.3-rc.
c464a36772 was a partial fix for this issue in #17255;
it was released in unit tests in 0.2.7.4-rc.
Patch by "teor".
Make unit tests pass on IPv6-only systems, and systems without
localhost addresses (like some FreeBSD jails).
Fixes:
* get_if_addrs_ifaddrs: systems without localhost
* get_if_addrs_ioctl: only works on IPv4 systems
* socket: check IPv4 and IPv6, skip on EPROTONOSUPPORT
* socketpair_ersatz: uses IPv4, skip on EPROTONOSUPPORT
Fixes bug #17632; bugfix on unit tests in 0.2.7.3-rc.
c464a36772 was a partial fix for this issue in #17255;
it was released in unit tests in 0.2.7.4-rc.
Patch by "teor".
* Don't assume that every test box has an IPv4 address
* Don't assume that every test box has a non-local address
Resolves issue #17255 released in unit tests in 0.2.7.3-rc.
Ensure that either a valid address is returned in address pointers,
or that the address data is zeroed on error.
Ensure that free_interface_address6_list handles NULL lists.
Add unit tests for get_interface_address* failure cases.
Fixes bug #17173.
Patch by fk/teor, not in any released version of tor.
Use environment variables instead. This repairs 'make distcheck',
which was running into trouble when it tried to chmod the generated
scripts.
Fixes 17148.
When we find a conflict in the keypinning journal, treat the new
entry as superseding all old entries that overlap either of its
keys.
Also add a (not-yet-used) configuration option to disable keypinning
enforcement.
src/test/test_policy.c:
Merged calls to policies_parse_exit_policy by adding additional arguments.
fixup to remaining instance of ~EXIT_POLICY_IPV6_ENABLED.
Compacting logic test now produces previous list length of 4, corrected this.
src/config/torrc.sample.in:
src/config/torrc.minimal.in-staging:
Merged torrc modification dates in favour of latest.
ExitPolicyRejectPrivate now rejects more local addresses by default:
* the relay's published IPv6 address (if any), and
* any publicly routable IPv4 or IPv6 addresses on any local interfaces.
This resolves a security issue for IPv6 Exits and multihomed Exits that
trust connections originating from localhost.
Resolves ticket 17027. Patch by "teor".
Patch on 42b8fb5a15 (11 Nov 2007), released in 0.2.0.11-alpha.
The unit tests added in e033d5e90b got malformed_list added to
router_parse_addr_policy_item_from_string calls, but unit tests from
subsequent commits didn't get the extra argument until now.
In previous versions of Tor, ExitPolicy accept6/reject6 * produced
policy entries for IPv4 and IPv6 wildcard addresses.
To reduce operator confusion, change accept6/reject6 * to only produce
an IPv6 wildcard address.
Resolves bug #16069.
Patch on 2eb7eafc9d and a96c0affcb (25 Oct 2012),
released in 0.2.4.7-alpha.
When parsing torrc ExitPolicies, we now warn if:
* an IPv4 address is used on an accept6 or reject6 line. The line is
ignored, but the rest of the policy items in the list are used.
(accept/reject continue to allow both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses in torrcs.)
* a "private" address alias is used on an accept6 or reject6 line.
The line filters both IPv4 and IPv6 private addresses, disregarding
the 6 in accept6/reject6.
When parsing torrc ExitPolicies, we now issue an info-level message:
* when expanding an accept/reject * line to include both IPv4 and IPv6
wildcard addresses.
In each instance, usage advice is provided to avoid the message.
Partial fix for ticket 16069. Patch by "teor".
Patch on 2eb7eafc9d and a96c0affcb (25 Oct 2012),
released in 0.2.4.7-alpha.
Add get_interface_address[6]_list by refactoring
get_interface_address6. Add unit tests for new and existing functions.
Preparation for ticket 17027. Patch by "teor".
Patch on 42b8fb5a15 (11 Nov 2007), released in 0.2.0.11-alpha.
Increase default boostrap time in test-network.sh to 30 seconds,
for larger networks like bridges+ipv6+hs.
This avoids the failure-hiding issues inherent in the retry approach
in #16952.
make test-network-all is Makefile target which verifies a series
of test networks generated using test-network.sh and chutney.
It runs IPv6 and mixed version test networks if the prerequisites are
available.
Each test network reports PASS, FAIL, or SKIP.
Closes ticket 16953. Patch by "teor".
Also adds "--hs-multi-client 1" option to TEST_NETWORK_FLAGS.
This resolves#17012.
Larger networks, such as bridges+hs, may fail until #16952 is merged.
Make "bridges+hs" the default test network. This tests almost all
tor functionality during make test-network, while allowing tests
to succeed on non-IPv6 systems.
Requires chutney commit 396da92 in test-network-bridges-hs.
Closes tickets 16945 (tor), 16946 (chutney) . Patches by "teor".
Service descriptors are now generated regardless of the the
PublishHidServDescriptors option. The generated descriptors are stored
in the service descriptor cache.
The PublishHidServDescriptors = 1 option now prevents descriptor
publication to the HSDirs rather than descriptor generation.
We don't want to accept any work after one of our worker functions has
returned WQ_RPL_SHUTDOWN. This testcase currently fails, because we do
not actually stop any of the worker threads.
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.
Test that TestingDirAuthVote{Exit,Guard,HSDir}[Strict] work on
routersets matching all routers, one router, and no routers.
TestingDirAuthVote{Exit,Guard,HSDir} set the corresponding flag
on routerstatuses which match the routerset, but leave other flags
unmodified.
TestingDirAuthVote{Exit,Guard,HSDir}Strict clear the corresponding flag
on routerstatuses which don't match the routerset.
URI syntax (and DNS syntax) allows for a single trailing `.` to
explicitly distinguish between a relative and absolute
(fully-qualified) domain name. While this is redundant in that RFC 1928
DOMAINNAME addresses are *always* fully-qualified, certain clients
blindly pass the trailing `.` along in the request.
Fixes bug 16674; bugfix on 0.2.6.2-alpha.
The workqueue test help message has two issues. First, the message uses 4 space
indentation when 2 space indentation seems more common. Second, the help
message misses some options.
This commit fixes both issues.
Add a new and slow unit test that checks if libscrypt_scrypt() and
EBP_PBE_scrypt() yield the same keys from test vectors.
squash! Assert interoperability betweeen libscrypt and OpenSSL EBP_PBE_scrypt().
squash! Assert interoperability betweeen libscrypt and OpenSSL EBP_PBE_scrypt().
squash! Assert interoperability betweeen libscrypt and OpenSSL EBP_PBE_scrypt().
The runtime sanity checking is slightly different from the optimized
basepoint stuff in that it uses a given implementation's self tests if
available, and checks if signing/verification works with a test vector
from the IETF EdDSA draft.
The unit tests include a new testcase that will fuzz donna against ref0,
including the blinding and curve25519 key conversion routines. If this
is something that should be done at runtime (No?), the code can be
stolen from there.
Note: Integrating batch verification is not done yet.
Integration work scavanged from nickm's `ticket8897_9663_v2` branch,
with minor modifications. Tor will still sanity check the output but
now also attempts to catch extreme breakage by spot checking the
optimized implementation vs known values from the NaCl documentation.
Implements feature 9663.
The following arguments change how chutney verifies the network:
--bytes n sends n bytes per test connection (10 KBytes)
--connections n makes n test connections per client (1)
--hs-multi-client 1 makes each client connect to each HS (0)
Requires the corresponding chutney performance testing changes.
Note: using --connections 7 or greater on a HS will trigger #15937.
Patch by "teor".