New IP address from 194.109.206.212 to 45.66.33.45.
Signed request from Alex de Joode, operator of dizum:
https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/31406
Published descriptor by dizum on August 12th, 2019:
--
r dizum fqbq1v2DCDxTj0QDi7+gd1h911U GZmZtCLaPDQNxkhIFj8UcgTRAuA 2019-08-12 15:28:40 45.66.33.45 443 80
s Authority Fast Running Stable V2Dir Valid
v Tor 0.4.0.5
pr Cons=1-2 Desc=1-2 DirCache=1-2 HSDir=1-2 HSIntro=3-4 HSRend=1-2 Link=1-5 LinkAuth=1,3 Microdesc=1-2 Relay=1-2 Padding=1
w Bandwidth=20 Unmeasured=1
p reject 1-65535
--
Finally, confirmed by DNS:
$ dig +short tor.dizum.com
45.66.33.45
Closes#31406
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
By binding the protover numbering to specific padding machines, we can make
our padding negotiation simpler. We probably should have done this in the
first place.
This has the side effect that earlier 0.4.1.x-alpha clients won't negotiate
with 0.4.1.x-stable relays, and 0.4.1.x-stable clients won't negotiate with
earlier 0.4.1.x-alpha relays (or 0.4.0.x relays). Since we don't support
alphas after the stable is released, this is fine, so long as it gets in
before the first stable of 0.4.1.x.
Previously we tried multiplying by -1 before casting to int32_t,
which would cause us to cast the -1 to an unsigned before we
multiplied. This gave us compiler warnings on windows.
Fixes bug 31353; bug not in any released Tor.
On some windows builds, time_t is 64 bits but long is not. This is
causing appveyor builds to fail.
Also, one of our uses of labs() on time_t was logically incorrect:
it was telling us to accept NETINFO cells up to three minutes
_before_ the message they were responding to, which doesn't make
sense.
This patch adds a time_abs() function that we should eventually move
to intmath.h or something. For now, though, it will make merges
easier to have it file-local in channeltls.c.
Fixes bug 31343; bugfix on 0.2.4.4-alpha.
In case the consensus parameters for the rate/burst changes, we need to update
all already established introduction circuits to the newest value.
This commit introduces a "get all intro circ" function from the HS circuitmap
(v2 and v3) so it can be used by the HS DoS module to go over all circuits and
adjust the INTRODUCE2 token bucket parameters.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Currently test the only available function which is hs_dos_can_send_intro2()
within the HS anti-DoS subsystem.
Closes#15516
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This commit add the hs_dos.{c|h} file that has the purpose of having the
anti-DoS code for onion services.
At this commit, it only has one which is a function that decides if an
INTRODUCE2 can be sent on the given introduction service circuit (S<->IP)
using a simple token bucket.
The rate per second is 25 and allowed burst to 200.
Basic defenses on #15516.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
A .may_includes file can be "advisory", which means that some
violations of the rules are expected. We will track these
violations with practracker, not as automatic errors.
Padding circuits were regular cells that got closed before their padding
machine could finish. This means that they can still receive regular cells from
their past life, but they have no way or reason to answer them anymore. Hence
let's ignore them before they even get to the proper subsystems.
Padding circuits were regular cells that got closed before their padding
machine could finish. This means that they can still receive regular cells from
their past life, but they have no way or reason to answer them anymore. Hence
let's ignore them before they even get to the proper subsystems.
This C file will eventually belong in lib/confmgt, so it needs to
have only low-level dependencies. Now that it no longers needs
routerset.c, we can adjust its includes accordingly.
I'm not moving the file yet, since it would make fixup commits on
earlier branches here really hard to do.
Now that we have a reasonable implementation for overriding the
default options for TestingTorNetwork, we don't need to modify
config_var_t structs any more. And therefore, we can have constant
format options, like reasonable people.
It's important to make sure that we don't change a config_mgr_t
after we start using it to make objects, or we could get into
inconsistent states. This feature is the start of a safety
mechanism to prevent this problem.
Previously, when TestingTorNetwork was set, we would manually adjust
the initvalue members of a bunch of other config_var_t, and then
re-run the early parts or parsing the options.
Now we treat the initvalue fields as immutable, but instead assign
to them in options_init(), as early as possible. Rather than
re-running the early parts of options, we just re-call the
options_init_from_string() function.
This patch de-kludges some of our code pretty handily. I think it
could later handle authorities and fallbacks, but for now I think we
should leave those alone.
Iterating over this array was once a good idea, but now that we are
going to have a separate structure for each submodule's
configuration variables, we should indirect through the config_mgr_t
object.
The eventual design here will be that multiple config_format_t
objects get registered with a single config_mgr_t. That
config_mgr_t manages a "top-level" object, which has a pointer to
the other objects.
I had earlier thought of a different design, where there would be no
top-level object, and config_mgr_t would deal with a container
instead. But this would require a bunch of invasive refactoring
that I don't think we should do just yet.
Remember that our goal in the present refactoring is to allow each
subsystem to declare its own configuration structure and
variables. To do this, each module will get its own
config_format_t, and so we'll want a different structure that wraps
several config_format_t objects. This is a "config_mgr_t".
This shouldn't be possible while Tor is running, but the tests can
hit this code. Rather than force the tests to add a dummy channel
object, let's just tolerate their incompletely built circuits.
Make origin-side messages about padding negotiation failure into
LOG_PROTOCOL_WARN.
I'm not sure I like this either.. But the negotiation refusal case might
happen naturally due to consensus drift, and is functionally no different than
a corrupted cell.
There is other code that uses this value, and some of it is
apparently reachable from inside router_dir_info_changed(), which
routerlist_free() apparently calls. (ouch!) This is a minimal fix
to try to resolve the issue without causing other problems.
Fixes bug 31003. I'm calling this a bugfix on 0.1.2.2-alpha, where
the call to router_dir_info_changed() was added to routerlist_free().
Overflowing a signed integer in C is an undefined behaviour.
It is possible to trigger this undefined behaviour in tor_asprintf on
Windows or systems lacking vasprintf.
On these systems, eiter _vscprintf or vsnprintf is called to retrieve
the required amount of bytes to hold the string. These functions can
return INT_MAX. The easiest way to recreate this is the use of a
specially crafted configuration file, e.g. containing the line:
FirewallPorts AAAAA<in total 2147483610 As>
This line triggers the needed tor_asprintf call which eventually
leads to an INT_MAX return value from _vscprintf or vsnprintf.
The needed byte for \0 is added to the result, triggering the
overflow and therefore the undefined behaviour.
Casting the value to size_t before addition fixes the behaviour.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Stoeckmann <tobias@stoeckmann.org>
When we added LD_MESG, we created a conflict with the LD_NO_MOCK
flag. We now need 64 bits for log domains in order to fix this
issue.
Fixes bug 31080; bugfix on 0.4.1.1-alpha.
The function make_intro_from_plaintext() in test_introduce.c would
leak memory if we ever hit a failure from our underlying crypto
functions. This kind of failure should be impossible, but it's best
to be safe here.
Bugfix on 0.2.4.1-alpha.
Coverity is worried that we check "service" at the end of these test
functions, since it doesn't see any way to reach the cleanup code
without having first dereferenced the variable.
Removing the check would be unwise in this case: instead we add a
tt_assert check before using "service" so that coverity thinks that
the check is doing something useful.
Bugfix on 0.3.2.1-alpha.
Coverity can't see that it is not in fact going to read
uninitialized memory here, so we initialize these values
unconditionally.
Bugfix on 0.4.0.1-alpha.
Coverity has had trouble figuring out our csiphash implementation,
and has given spurious warnings about its behavior.
This patch changes the csiphash implementation when coverity is in
use, so that coverity can figure out that we are not about to read
beyond the provided input.
Closes ticket 31025.
Coverity doesn't understand that if begin_cell_parse() returns 0 and
sets is_begindir to 0, its address field will always be set.
Fixes bug 30126; bugfix on 0.2.4.7-alpha; Fixes CID 1447296.
Update the fallback directory mirrors by merging the current list with:
fallback_dirs_2019-06-28-08-58-39_AU_f0437a39ddbc8459.inc
Part of 28795, see that ticket for logs.
Update the fallback directory mirrors by replacing the old list with:
fallback_dirs_2019-06-25-11-49-10_AU_a37adb956fbb5cd2.inc
Part of 28795, see that ticket for logs.
And that it does something sensible with host and host:port.
Also reorder the tests into valid, invalid, and ambiguous.
And add some missing cases.
Note: tor_addr_port_lookup() handles ip, ip:port, host, and host:port.
Tests for 30721.
When parsing addreses via Tor's internal address:port parsing and
DNS lookup APIs, require IPv6 addresses with ports to have square
brackets.
But allow IPv6 addresses without ports, whether or not they have
square brackets.
Fixes bug 30721; bugfix on 0.2.1.5-alpha.
When parsing addreses via Tor's internal DNS lookup API:
* reject IPv4 addresses in square brackets (with or without a port),
* accept IPv6 addresses in square brackets (with or without a port), and
* accept IPv6 addresses without square brackets, as long as they have no port.
This change completes the work started in 23082, making address parsing
consistent between tor's internal DNS lookup and address parsing APIs.
Fixes bug 30721; bugfix on 0.2.1.5-alpha.
"unsettable" is a property of types. LINELIST_V and OBSOLETE are
unsettable, meaning that they cannot be set by name.
"contained" is a property of types. I'm hoping to find a better
name here. LINELIST_S is "contained" because it always appears
within a LINELIST_V, and as such doesn't need to be dumped ore
copied independently.
"cumulative" is a property of types. Cumulative types can appear
more than once in a torrc without causing a warning, because they
add to each other rather than replacing each other.
"obsolete" is a property of variables.
"marking fragile" is now a command that struct members can accept.
With these changes, confparse and config no longer ever need to
mention CONFIG_TYPE_XYZ values by name.
Fix add_onion_helper_clientauth() and add_onion_helper_keyarg() to
explicitly call the appropriate control reply abstractions instead of
allocating a string to pass to their callers.
Part of ticket 30889.
Right now, this has been done at a high level by confparse.c, but it
makes more sense to lower it.
This API is radically un-typesafe as it stands; we'll be wrapping it
in a safer API as we do #30914 and lower the struct manipulation
code as well.
Closes ticket 30864.
If the signature data was removed, but the keyword was kept, this could
result in an unparseable extra info file.
Fixes bug 30958; bugfix on 0.2.7.2-alpha.
Always publish bridge pluggable transport information in the extra info
descriptor, even if ExtraInfoStatistics is 0. This information is
needed by BridgeDB.
Fixes bug 30956; bugfix on 0.4.1.1-alpha.
This will effectively also deny any bridge to be used as a single hop to the
introduction point since bridge do not authenticate like clients.
Fixes#24963
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
When we consider all circuits in "waiting for guard" state to be promoted to
an "open" state, we were considering all circuits, even the one marked for
close.
This ultiamtely triggers a "circuit_has_opened()" called on the circuit that
is marked for close which then leads to possible undesirable behaviors within
a subsystem.
For instance, the HS subsystem would be unable to find the authentication key
of the introduction point circuit leading to a BUG() warning and a duplicate
mark for close on the circuit.
This commit also adds a unit test to make sure we never select marked for
close circuits when upgrading its guard state from waiting for guard to open.
Fixes#30871
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
When we consider all circuits in "waiting for guard" state to be promoted to
an "open" state, we were considering all circuits, even the one marked for
close.
This ultiamtely triggers a "circuit_has_opened()" called on the circuit that
is marked for close which then leads to possible undesirable behaviors within
a subsystem.
For instance, the HS subsystem would be unable to find the authentication key
of the introduction point circuit leading to a BUG() warning and a duplicate
mark for close on the circuit.
This commit also adds a unit test to make sure we never select marked for
close circuits when upgrading its guard state from waiting for guard to open.
Fixes#30871
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
When we consider all circuits in "waiting for guard" state to be promoted to
an "open" state, we were considering all circuits, even the one marked for
close.
This ultiamtely triggers a "circuit_has_opened()" called on the circuit that
is marked for close which then leads to possible undesirable behaviors within
a subsystem.
For instance, the HS subsystem would be unable to find the authentication key
of the introduction point circuit leading to a BUG() warning and a duplicate
mark for close on the circuit.
This commit also adds a unit test to make sure we never select marked for
close circuits when upgrading its guard state from waiting for guard to open.
Fixes#30871
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Note that the event base object is _not_ created from the initialize
function, since it is configuration-dependent. This will wait until
configuration is integrated into subsystems.
Closes ticket 30806.
This is to avoid having two sendme.{c|h} in the repository since the subsystem
is implemented in src/core/or/sendme.{c|h}.
Fixes#30769
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Skip test_rebind when the TOR_SKIP_TEST_REBIND environmental variable
is set.
Skip test_rebind on macOS in Travis builds, because it is unreliable
on macOS on Travis.
Fixes bug 30713; bugfix on 0.3.5.1-alpha.
Adds ROUTER_AUTHDIR_BUG_ANNOTATIONS to was_router_added_t.
The out-of-order numbering is deliberate: it will be fixed by later commits
for 16564.
Fixes bug 30780; bugfix on 0.2.0.8-alpha.
Leave the other rend and hs_ident data around until circuit free, since code
may still try to inspect it after marking the circuit for close. The
circuitmap is the important thing to clean up, since repurposed
intropoints must be removed from this map to ensure validity.
Make origin-side messages about padding negotiation failure into
LOG_PROTOCOL_WARN.
I'm not sure I like this either.. But the negotiation refusal case might
happen naturally due to consensus drift, and is functionally no different than
a corrupted cell.
Leave the other rend and hs_ident data around until circuit free, since code
may still try to inspect it after marking the circuit for close. The
circuitmap is the important thing to clean up, since repurposed
intropoints must be removed from this map to ensure validity.
If "Log debug ..." is not set, the decrement never happens. This lead to the
package/deliver window to be out of sync at the stream level and thus breaking
the connection after 50+ cells.
Fixes#30628
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>