TROVE-2017-12. Severity: Medium
When choosing a random node for a circuit, directly use our router
descriptor to exclude ourself instead of the one in the global
descriptor list. That list could be empty because tor could be
downloading them which could lead to not excluding ourself.
Closes#21534
TROVE-2017-13. Severity: High.
In the unlikely case that a hidden service could be missing intro circuit(s),
that it didn't have enough directory information to open new circuits and that
an intro point was about to expire, a use-after-free is possible because of
the intro point object being both in the retry list and expiring list at the
same time.
The intro object would get freed after the circuit failed to open and then
access a second time when cleaned up from the expiring list.
Fixes#24313
Going from 4 hours to 24 hours in order to try reduce the efficiency of guard
discovery attacks.
Closes#23856
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
A circuit with purpose C_INTRODUCING means that its state is opened but the
INTRODUCE1 cell hasn't been sent yet. We shouldn't consider that circuit when
looking for timing out "building circuit". We have to wait on the rendezvous
circuit to be opened before sending that cell so the intro circuit needs to be
kept alive for at least that period of time.
This patch makes that the purpose C_INTRODUCING is ignored in the
circuit_expire_building() which means that we let the circuit idle timeout
take care of it if we end up never using it.
Fixes#23681
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
There are three changes here:
* We need to allow epoll_pwait.
* We need to allow PF_NETLINK sockets to be opened with SOCK_CLOEXEC.
* We need to use openat() instead of open().
Note that this fix is not complete, since the openat() change is
turned off. The next commit will make the openat() change happen
when we're running glibc 2.26 or later.
Fix for 24315.
We don't want to allow general signals to be sent, but there's no
problem sending a kill(0) to probe whether a process is there.
Fixes bug 24198; bugfix on 0.2.5.1-alpha when the seccomp2 sandbox
was introduced.
When we close a connection via connection_close_immediately, we kill
its events immediately. But if it had been blocked on bandwidth
read/write, we could try to re-add its (nonexistent) events later
from connection_bucket_refill -- if we got to that callback before
we swept the marked connections.
Fixes bug 24167. Fortunately, this hasn't been a crash bug since we
introduced connection_check_event in 0.2.9.10, and backported it.
This is a bugfix on commit 89d422914a, I believe, which
appeared in Tor 0.1.0.1-rc.
When we have fewer than 15 descriptors to fetch, we will delay the
fetch for a little while. That's fine, if we can go ahead and build
circuits... but if not, it's a poor choice indeed.
Fixes bug 23985; bugfix on 0.1.1.11-alpha.
In 0.3.0.3-alpha, when we made primary guard descriptors necessary
for circuit building, this situation got worse.
When calculating the fraction of nodes that have descriptors, and all
all nodes in the network have zero bandwidths, count the number of nodes
instead.
Fixes bug 23318; bugfix on 0.2.4.10-alpha.
Back in 0.2.4.3-alpha (e106812a77), when we switched from using
double to using uint64 for selecting by bandwidth, I got the math
wrong: I should have used llround(x), or (uint64_t)(x+0.5), but
instead I wrote llround(x+0.5). That means we would always round
up, rather than rounding to the closest integer
Fixes bug 23318; bugfix on 0.2.4.3-alpha.