Because the test is adding entries to the "rend_cache" directly, the
rend_cache_increment_allocation() was never called which made the
rend_cache_clean() call trigger that underflow warning:
rend_cache/clean: [forking] Nov 29 09:55:04.024 [warn] rend_cache_decrement_allocation(): Bug: Underflow in rend_cache_decrement_allocation (on Tor 0.4.0.0-alpha-dev 2240fe63feb9a8cf)
The test is still good and valid.
Fixes#28660
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Prior to this commit, the testsuite was failing on OpenBSD. After
this commit the testsuite runs fine on OpenBSD.
It was previously decided to test for the OpenBSD macro (rather than
__OpenBSD__, etc.) because OpenBSD forks seem to have the former
macro defined. sys/param.h must be included for the OpenBSD macro
definition; however, many files tested for the OpenBSD macro without
having this header included.
This commit includes sys/param.h in the files where the OpenBSD macro
is used (and sys/param.h is not already included), and it also
changes some instances of the __OpenBSD__ macro to OpenBSD.
See commit 27df23abb6 which changed
everything to use OpenBSD instead of __OpenBSD__ or OPENBSD. See
also tickets #6982 and #20980 (the latter ticket is where it was
decided to use the OpenBSD macro).
Signed-off-by: Kris Katterjohn <katterjohn@gmail.com>
If tor terminates due to SIGNAL HALT before test_rebind.py calls
tor_process.terminate(), an OSError 3 (no such process) is thrown.
Fixes part of bug 27968 on 0.3.5.1-alpha.
With the new refresh_service_descriptor() function we had both
refresh_service_descriptor() and update_service_descriptor() which is basically
the same thing.
This commit renames update_service_descriptor() to
update_service_descriptor_intro_points() to make it clear it's not a generic
refresh and it's only about intro points.
Commit changes no code.
Treat backtrace test failures as expected on NetBSD, OpenBSD, and
macOS/Darwin, until we solve bug 17808.
(FreeBSD failures have been treated as expected since 18204 in 0.2.8.)
Fixes bug 27948; bugfix on 0.2.5.2-alpha.
Occasionally, key pinning doesn't catch a relay that shares an ed25519
ID with another relay. Log the identity fingerprints and the shared
ed25519 ID when this happens, instead of making a BUG() warning.
Fixes bug 27800; bugfix on 0.3.2.1-alpha.
It looks to be the case that Rust's standard allocator, jemalloc, is
incompatible with sanitizers. The incompatibility, for whatever reason,
seems to cause segfaults at runtime when jemalloc is linked with
sanitizers.
Without actually trying to figure out what's going on here this commit
instead takes the hammer of "let's remove jemalloc when testing". The
`tor_allocate` crate now by default switches to the system allocator
(eventually this will want to be the tor allocator). Most crates then
link to `tor_allocate` ot pick this up, but the `smartlist` crate had to
manually switch to the system allocator in testing and the `external`
crate had to be sure to link to `tor_allocate`.
The final gotcha here is that this patch also switches to
unconditionally passing `--target` to Cargo. For weird and arcane
reasons passing `--target` with the host target of the compiler (which
Cargo otherwise uses as the default) is different than not passing
`--target` at all. This ensure that our custom `RUSTFLAGS` with
sanitizer options doesn't make its way into build scripts, just the
final testing artifacts.