Replace the 150 fallbacks originally introduced in Tor 0.3.3.1-alpha in
January 2018 (of which ~115 were still functional), with a list of
148 fallbacks (89 new, 59 existing, 91 removed) generated in
December 2018.
Closes ticket 24803.
If a relay matches at least one fingerprint, IPv4 address, or IPv6
address in the fallback whitelist, it can become a fallback. This
reduces the work required to keep the list up to date.
Closes ticket 28768.
Tor clients on 0.3.5.6-rc? and later will use a consensus that will become
valid up to 24 hours in the future.
Clients on 0.3.5.5-alpha? and earlier won't accept future consensuses.
Update the fallback expiry tolerance to match tor's checks.
Part of 28768, follow-up on 28591.
Tor clients will use a consensus that expired up to 24 hours ago.
Clients on 0.3.5.5-alpha? and earlier won't select guards from an expired
consensus, but they can still bootstrap if they have existing guards.
Update the fallback expiry tolerance to match tor's checks.
Part of 28768, follow-up on 24661.
Rather than initializing the "Dormant" status to "off" and the "last
activity" count to "now", initialize them based on our state file:
stay dormant if we were dormant, or remember the amount of time
we've spent inactive.
Removing a ".auth" file revokes a client access to the service but the
rendezvous circuit is not closed service side because the service simply
doesn't know which circuit is for which client.
This commit notes in the man page that to fully revoke a client access to the
service, the tor process should be restarted.
Closes#28275
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Additionally, use it to test that is_staledesc is set correctly.
Eventually we'll want to test all the other flags, but I'm aiming
for only adding coverage on the changed code here.