If a hostname is supplied to tor-resolve which is too long, it will be
silently truncated, resulting in a different hostname lookup:
$ tor-resolve $(python -c 'print("google.com" + "m" * 256)')
If tor-resolve uses SOCKS5, the length is stored in an unsigned char,
which overflows in this case and leads to the hostname "google.com".
As this one is a valid hostname, it returns an address instead of giving
an error due to the invalid supplied hostname.
Check size argument to memwipe() for underflow.
Closes bug #18089. Reported by "gk", patch by "teor".
Bugfix on 0.2.3.25 and 0.2.4.6-alpha (#7352),
commit 49dd5ef3 on 7 Nov 2012.
The length of auth_data from an INTRODUCE2 cell is checked when the
auth_type is recognized (1 or 2), but not for any other non-zero
auth_type. Later, auth_data is assumed to have at least
REND_DESC_COOKIE_LEN bytes, leading to a client-triggered out of bounds
read.
Fixed by checking auth_len before comparing the descriptor cookie
against known clients.
Fixes#15823; bugfix on 0.2.1.6-alpha.
Determining if OpenSSL structures are opaque now uses an autoconf check
instead of comparing the version number. Some definitions have been
moved to their own check as assumptions which were true for OpenSSL
with opaque structures did not hold for LibreSSL. Closes ticket 21359.
This disregards anything smaller than an IPv6 /64, and rejects ports that
are rejected on an IPv6 /16 or larger.
Adjust existing unit tests, and add more to cover exceptional cases.
No IPv4 behaviour changes.
Fixes bug 21357
This interim fix results in too many IPv6 rejections.
No behaviour change for IPv4 counts, except for overflow fixes that
would require 4 billion redundant 0.0.0.0/0 policy entries to trigger.
Part of 21357
When marking for close a circuit, the reason value, a integer, was assigned to
a uint16_t converting any negative reasons (internal) to the wrong value. On
the HS side, this was causing the client to flag introduction points to be
unreachable as the internal reason was wrongfully converted to a positive
16bit value leading to flag 2 out of 3 intro points to be unreachable.
Fixes#20307 and partially fixes#21056
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
So far, the TTLs for both A and AAAA records were not initialised,
resulting in exit relays sending back the value 60 to Tor clients. This
also impacts exit relays' DNS cache -- the expiry time for all domains
is set to 60.
This fixes <https://bugs.torproject.org/19025>.
The server-side clipping now clamps to one of two values, both
for what to report, and how long to cache.
Additionally, we move some defines to dns.h, and give them better
names.