Be more thorough about memory poisoning and clearing. Add an in-place version of aes_crypt in order to remove a memcpy from relay_crypt_one_payload.
svn:r13414
Add more documentation; change the behavior of read_to_buf_tls to be more consistent. Note a longstanding problem with current read/write interfaces.
svn:r13407
Basic hacks to get TLS handshakes working: remove dead code; fix post-handshake logic; keep servers from writing while the client is supposed to be renegotiating. This may work. Needs testing.
svn:r13122
Here, have some terribly clever new buffer code. It uses a mbuf-like strategy rather than a ring buffer strategy, so it should require far far less extra memory to hold any given amount of data. Also, it avoids access patterns like x=malloc(1024);x=realloc(x,1048576);x=realloc(x,1024);append_to_freelist(x) that might have been contributing to memory fragmentation. I've tested it out a little on peacetime, and it seems to work so far. If you want to benchmark it for speed, make sure to remove the #define PARANOIA; #define NOINLINE macros at the head of the module.
svn:r12983
Add support to get a callback invoked when the client renegotiate a connection. Also, make clients renegotiate. (not enabled yet, until they detect that the server acted like a v2 server)
svn:r12623
Keep track, for each OR connection, of the last time we added a non-padding cell to its outbuf. Use this timestamp, not "lastwritten" to tell if it is time to close a circuitless connection. (We can'tuse lastwritten, since lastwritten is updated when ever the connection flushes anything, and by that point we can no longer tell what is a padding cell and what is not.)
svn:r12437
Fix bug 451. This was a nasty bug, so let's fix it twice: first, by banning recursive calls to connection_handle_write from connection_flushed_some; and second, by not calling connection_finished_flushing() on a closed connection. Backport candidate.
svn:r11882
Add debugging warning to not abort in the case of bug 483. This is probably not an actual error case, so we should figure out what is really causing it and do something more sensible.
svn:r11215
Patch from Robert Hogan: set conn->dns_server_port correctly so that we can close dns server ports when they change, thus avoiding crashes and dangling references and other sources of unhappiness.
svn:r10933
Tweaks on constrained socket buffers patch from coderman: Add a changelog; rename some variables; fix some long lines and whitespace; make ConstrainedSockSize a memunit; pass setsockopt a void.
svn:r10843
Well, that was easier than I thought it would be. Tor is now a DNS proxy as well as a socks proxy. Probably some bugs remain, but since it A) has managed to resolve one address for me successfully, and B) will not affect anybody who leaves DNSPort unset, it feel like a good time to commit.
svn:r10317