Build on Ubuntu 10.04 64-bit was failing:
util.c: In function ‘parse_http_time’:
util.c:1370: error: not protecting function: no buffer at least 8 bytes long
We don't want to lose -Werror, and we don't care too much about the
added overhead of protecting even small buffers, so let's simply turn on
SSP for all buffers.
Thanks to Jacob Appelbaum for the pointer and SwissTorExit for the
original report.
Signed-off-by: Andy Isaacson <adi@hexapodia.org>
This patch adds support for two new configure options:
'--enable-gcc-hardening'
This sets CFLAGS to include:
"-D_FORTIFY_SOURCE=2 -fstack-protector-all"
"-fwrapv -fPIE -Wstack-protector -Wformat -Wformat-security"
"-Wpointer-sign"
It sets LDFLAGS to include:
"-pie"
'--enable-linker-hardening'
This sets LDFLAGS to include:
" -z relro -z now"
Works like the --enable-static-openssl/libevent options. Requires
--with-zlib-dir to be set. Note that other dependencies might still
pull in a dynamicly linked zlib, if you don't link them in statically
too.
asprintf() is a GNU extension that some BSDs have picked up: it does a printf
into a newly allocated chunk of RAM.
Our tor_asprintf() differs from standard asprintf() in that:
- Like our other malloc functions, it asserts on OOM.
- It works on windows.
- It always sets its return-field.
For most linking setups, this doesn't matter. But for some setups, when
statically linking openssl, it does matter, since you need to link things
with dependencies before you link things they depend on.
Fix for bug 1237.
This removes the Makefile.am from doc/design-paper and replaces it with
a static Makefile. We don't need to call it during the normal Tor build
process, as we don't need its targets normally. Keeping it around in
case we want to rebuild the pdf or ps files later.
This should be a very faithful conversion, preserving as much of the layout
of the old manpage as possible. This wasn't possible for the nt-service
and the DataDirectory/state parts. See a later commit for some small
cleanups.
Tiago Faria helped with the asciidoc conversion, big thanks!
On this OSX version, there is a stub mlockall() function
that doesn't work, *and* the declaration for it is hidden by
an '#ifdef _P1003_1B_VISIBLE'. This would make autoconf
successfully find the function, but our code fail to build
when no declaration was found.
This patch adds an additional test for the declaration.
This fixes bug 1147:
bionic doesn't have an actual implementation of mlockall();
mlockall() is merely in the headers but not actually in the library.
This prevents Tor compilation with the bionic libc for Android handsets.
Changes to directory request statistics:
- Rename GEOIP statistics to DIRREQ statistics, because they now include
more than only GeoIP-based statistics, whereas other statistics are
GeoIP-dependent, too.
- Rename output file from geoip-stats to dirreq-stats.
- Add new config option DirReqStatistics that is required to measure
directory request statistics.
- Clean up ChangeLog.
Also ensure that entry guards statistics have access to a local GeoIP
database.
This patch adds a new compat_libevent.[ch] set of files, and moves our
Libevent compatibility and utilitity functions there. We build them
into a separate .a so that nothing else in src/commmon depends on
Libevent (partially fixing bug 507).
Also, do not use our own built-in evdns copy when we have Libevent
2.0, whose evdns is finally good enough (thus fixing Bug 920).
Now, when you call tor --digests, it dumps the SHA1 digest of each
source file that Tor was built with. We support both 'sha1sum' and
'openssl sha1'. If the user is building from a tarball and they
haven't edited anything, they don't need any program that calculates
SHA1. If they _have_ modified a file but they don't have a program to
calculate SHA1, we try to build so we do not output digests.
GCC's interpretation of the C99 aliasing rules, to be charitable,
creates a dialect of C intended for a better programmers than I am
certain of my ability to be in all times. I just spent 2 hours
tracking down a platform-hyperspecific libevent bug that turned out to
be because of this, and darned if I ever want to do *that* again.
One of Linus's recent rants will give you a picture of why GCC's
behavior here can lead to fun surprises in your binaries:
http://lwn.net/Articles/316126/
svn:r18351
are stored when the --enable-local-appdata option is configured. This
changes the Windows path from %APPDATA% to a host local
%USERPROFILE%\Local Settings\Application Data\ path (aka,
LOCAL_APPDATA).
Patch from coderman.
svn:r18122
Unfortunately, old Libevents don't _put_ a version in their headers, so
this can get a little tricky. Fortunately, the only binary-compatibility
issue we care about is the size of struct event. Even more fortunately,
Libevent 2.0 will let us keep binary compatiblity forever by letting us
decouple ourselves from the structs, if we like.
svn:r18014
Oops. We had been telling people to use --with-ssl-dir, which had not worked since 0.2.0.1-alpha: --with-openssl-dir was the one that worked. Make them both work, document --with-openssl-dir, and mark --with-ssl-dir as obsolete. Found by "Dave".
svn:r16625
Try to build correctly on win32 with libevent versions 1.4.x or greater. 1.4.5 should remove the need to do this, but hey. Backport candidate.
svn:r14640
Add a malloc_good_size() implementation to OpenBSD_malloc_Linux.c. Also, make configure.in not use support functions for the platform malloc when we are not using the platform mallocs.
svn:r14010
Add openbsd memory allocator discussed in bug 468, to make it easier for linux users to get non-awful allocation patterns. Use --enable-openbsd-malloc to turn it on. Needs more testing.
svn:r13544
Write a new autoconf macro to test whether a function is declared. It is suboptimal and possibly buggy in some way, but it seems to work for me. use it to test for a declaration of malloc_good_size, so we can workaround operating systems (like older OSX) that have the function in their libc but do not deign to declare it in their headers. Should resolve bug 587.
svn:r13339