basically, a twin is a router which is different except it shares
the same keypair. so in cases where we want to find a "next router"
and all we really care is that it can decrypt the next onion layer,
then a twin is just as good.
we still need to decide how to mark twins in the routerinfo_t and in
the routers config file.
svn:r30
The 'or' process can now be told (by the global_role variable) what
roles this server should play -- connect to all ORs, listen for ORs,
listen for OPs, listen for APs, or any combination.
* everything in /src/op/ is now obsolete.
* connection_ap.c now handles all interactions with application proxies
* "port" is now or_port, op_port, ap_port. But routers are still always
referenced (say, in conn_get_by_addr_port()) by addr / or_port. We
should make routers.c actually read these new ports (currently I've
kludged it so op_port = or_port+10, ap_port=or_port+20)
* circuits currently know if they're at the beginning of the path because
circ->cpath is set. They use this instead for crypts (both ways),
if it's set.
* I still obey the "send a 0 back to the AP when you're ready" protocol,
but I think we should phase it out. I can simply not read from the AP
socket until I'm ready.
I need to do a lot of cleanup work here, but the code appears to work, so
now's a good time for a checkin.
svn:r22
Note that there are new keywords in these, etc. Matej, would you be
interested in going through and patching routers.c, config.c, etc, so
they're cleaner?
svn:r19
It should be all you need to do to get working Makefiles on your
platform, whatever your platform is. :)
Let me know if it doesn't generate Makefiles for you. There will still
be some bugs to work out in detecting openssl correctly, in checking for
only the right header files, etc. But we're on our way.
svn:r15
The summary here is that I'm requiring all developers to have
auto* (aclocal, autoconf, automake) installed on their machine.
Since different versions of auto* generate vastly different output,
I'm going to leave its output out of the repository. This means that
whenever you check out a repository, you need to run auto* to generate
a configure file, then run ./configure to get a Makefile, then build.
If you don't have auto* and can't get it, let me know (and I'll try to
convince you to develop on moria).
The benefit here is that while developers have a bit more work to keep
things straight, we can build snapshots that will install just about
anywhere (once we make configure.in work, that is ;)
svn:r12