Replace master .travis.yml with 034 .travis.yml.
All the changes in master have been backported to the
034 .travis.yml already.
Replace master src/test/test_rust.sh with 034
src/test/test_rust.sh, which was backported from
master. One 033/034-specific commit needs to be
reverted.
Replace 034 .travis.yml with 033 .travis.yml.
Subsequent commits will restore 034 functionality.
Replace 034 src/test/test_rust.sh with 033
src/test/test_rust.sh, which was backported from
master.
Replace 033 .travis.yml with 032 .travis.yml.
Subsequent commits will restore 033 functionality.
src/rust/tor_util/include.am is deleted in 033.
Subsequent commits will apply 032 changes to
src/rust/tor_rust/include.am.
Replace 033 src/test/test_rust.sh with 032
src/test/test_rust.sh, which was backported from
master.
When we fixed 25939 in f7633c1fca, we
introduced a call to rescan_periodic_events() from inside the onion
service logic. But this meant that we could rescan the event list --
thereby running event callbacks! -- from inside the hidden service code.
This could cause us to run some of our event callbacks from an
inconsistent state, if we were in the middle of changing options.
A related bug (#25761) prevented us from rescanning our periodic
events as appropriate, but when we fixed THAT one, this bug reared
its ugly head.
The fix here is that "enabling" an event should cause us to run it
from the event loop, but not immediately from the point where we
enable it.
Fixes bug 27003; bugfix on 0.3.4.1-alpha.
This change also makes tor_ersatz_socketpair() follow the same
interface as socketpair() rather than tor_socketpair(), so it now
needs to be wrapped in the same code as socketpair() does.
This is comparatively straightforward too, except for a couple of
twists:
* For as long as we're building with two crypto libraries, we
want to seed _both_ their RNGs, and use _both_ their RNGs to
improve the output of crypto_strongest_rand()
* The NSS prng will sometimes refuse to generate huge outputs.
When it does, we stretch the output with SHAKE. We only need
this for the tests.
Stop putting ed25519 link specifiers in v3 onion service descriptors,
when the intro point doesn't support ed25519 link authentication.
Fixes bug 26627; bugfix on 0.3.2.4-alpha.
The following bug was causing many issues for this branch in chutney:
In sr_state_get_start_time_of_current_protocol_run() we were using the
consensus valid-after to calculate beginning_of_current_round, but we were
using time(NULL) to calculate the current_round slot. This was causing time
sync issues when the consensus valid-after and time(NULL) were disagreeing on
what the current round is. Our fix is to use the consensus valid-after in both
places.
This also means that we are not using 'now' (aka time(NULL)) anymore in that
function, and hence we can remove that argument from the function (and its
callers). I'll do this in the next commit so that we keep things separated.
Furthermore, we fix a unittest that broke.
Now that the rev counter depends on the local time, we need to be more careful
in the unittests. Some unittests were breaking because they were using
consensus values from 1985, but they were not updating the local time
appropriately. That was causing the OPE module to complain that it was trying
to encrypt insanely large values.
This is meant for use when encrypting the current time within the
period in order to get a monotonically increasing revision counter
without actually revealing our view of the time.
This scheme is far from the most state-of-the-art: don't use it for
anything else without careful analysis by somebody much smarter than
I am.
See ticket #25552 for some rationale for this logic.
also add tests for bw_file_headers.
Headers are all that is found before a correct relay line or
the terminator.
Tests include:
* a empty bandwidth file
* a bandwidth file with only timestamp
* a bandwidth file with v1.0.0 headers
* a bandwidth file with v1.0.0 headers and relay lines
* a bandwidth file with v1.1.0 headers and v1.0.0 relay lines
* a bandwidth file with v1.0.0 headers, malformed relay lines and
relay lines
* a bandwidth file with v1.0.0 headers, malformed relay lines,
relay lines and malformed relay lines
* a bandwidth file with v1.1.0 headers without terminator
* a bandwidth file with v1.1.0 headers with terminator
* a bandwidth file with v1.1.0 headers without terminator and
relay lines
* a bandwidth file with v1.1.0 headers with terminator and relay
lines
* a bandwidth file with v1.1.0 headers without terminator, bad
relay lines and relay lines
* a bandwidth file with v1.1.0 headers with terminator, bad relay
lines and relay lines
* add bwlist_headers argument to dirserv_read_measured_bandwidth
in order to store all the headers found when parsing the file
* add bwlist_headers to networkstatus_t in order to store the
the headers found by the previous function
* include the bandwidth headers as string in vote documents
* add test to check that dirserv_read_measured_bandwidth generates
the bwlist_headers
We need this in our unit tests, since otherwise NSS will notice
we've forked and start cussing us out.
I suspect we'll need a different hack for daemonizing, but this
should be enough for tinytest to work.
These are now part of crypto_init.c. The openssl-only parts now
live in crypto_openssl_mgt.c.
I recommend reviewing this patch with -b and --color-moved.
Fun fact: these files used to be called log.[ch] until we ran into
conflicts with systems having a log.h file. But now that we always
include "lib/log/log.h", we should be fine.
This function has a nasty API, since whether or not it invokes the
resolver depends on whether one of its arguments is NULL. That's a
good way for accidents to happen.
This patch incidentally makes tor-resolve support socks hosts on
IPv6.
This is a very gentle commit that just lays the groundwork in the
build system: it puts the include files to build libtor-app.a into
src/core, and to build the tor executable into src/app. The
executable is now "src/app/tor".
This is temporary, until src/or is split.
Putting this in containers would be another logical alternative,
except that addresses depend on containers, and we don't like
cycles.
Recent Python3 versions seem to require this on Windows.
Fixes bug 26535; bug introduced in f4be34f70d, which
was apparently intended itself as a Python3 workaround.
This code was in compat_threads, since it was _used_ for efficiently
notifying the main libevent thread from another thread. But in
spite of its usage, it's fundamentally a part of the network code.
The "conffile" module knows about includes and filesystem access,
whereas confline doesn't. This will make it possible to put these
functions into libraries without introducing a cycle.
Fixes bug 26480; bug appeared when we re-enabled the geoip tests on
windows. Bug originally introduced by our fix to 25787; bug not in
any released Tor.
This patch fixes a memory leak in new_establish_intro_cell() that could
happen if a test assertion fails and the *cell_out value isn't properly
free'd.
See: Coverity CID 1437445
This patch fixes a memory leak in hs_helper_build_hs_desc_impl() where
if a test assertion would fail we would leak the storage that `desc`
points to.
See: Coverity CID 1437448
This patch fixes a potential memory leak in test_hs_auth_cookies() if a
test-case fails and we goto the done label where no memory clean up is
done.
See: Coverity CID 1437453
This patch fixes a potential memory leak in
hs_helper_build_intro_point() where a `goto done` is called before the
`intro_point` variable have been assigned to the value of the `ip`
variable.
See: Coverity CID 1437460
See: Coverity CID 1437456
This patch:
- introduces an fdio module for low-level fd functions that don't
need to log.
- moves the responsibility for opening files outside of torlog.c,
so it won't need to call tor_open_cloexec.
Out-of-tree builds could fail to run the rust tests if built in
offline mode. cargo expects CARGO_HOME to point to the .cargo
directory, not the directory containing .cargo.
Fixes bug 26455; bug not in any released tor.
When I wrote the first one of these, it needed the path of the geoip
file. But that doesn't translate well in at least two cases:
- Mingw, where the compile-time path is /c/foo/bar and the
run-time path is c:\foo\bar.
- Various CI weirdnesses, where we cross-compile a test binary,
then copy it into limbo and expect it to work.
Together, these problems precluded these tests running on windows.
So, instead let's just generate some minimal files ourselves, and
test against them.
Fixes bug 25787
We'd like to feature gate code that calls C from Rust, as a workaround
to several linker issues when running `cargo test` (#25386), and we
can't feature gate anything out of test code if `cargo test` is called
with `--all-features`.
* FIXES#26400: https://bugs.torproject.org/26400
Previously we had code like this for bad things happening from
signal handlers, but it makes sense to use the same logic to handle
cases when something is happening at a level too low for log.c to be
involved.
My raw_assert*() stuff now uses this code.
We had accumulated a bunch of cruft here. Now let's only include
src and src/ext. (exception: src/trunnel is autogenerated code, and
need to include src/trunnel.)
This commit will break the build hard. The next commit will fix it.
We need this trick because some of our Rust tests depend on our C
code, which in turn depend on other native libraries, which thereby
pulls a whole mess of our build system into "cargo test".
To solve this, we add a build script (build.rs) to set most of the
options that we want based on the contents of config.rust. Some
options can't be set, and need to go to the linker directly: we use
a linker replacement (link_rust.sh) for these. Both config.rust and
link_rust.sh are generated by autoconf for us.
This patch on its own should enough to make the crypto test build,
but not necessarily enough to make it pass.
After the big or.h refactoring, one single unit test file was missing two
headers for node_t and microdesc_t.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>