(This commit was extracted by nickm based on the final outcome of
the project, taking only the changes in the files touched by this
commit from the consdiff_rebased branch. The directory-system
changes are going to get worked on separately.)
This patch removes the `tor_fgets()` wrapper around `fgets(3)` since it
is no longer needed. The function was created due to inconsistency
between the returned values of `fgets(3)` on different versions of Unix
when using `fgets(3)` on non-blocking file descriptors, but with the
recent changes in bug #21654 we switch from unbuffered to direct I/O on
non-blocking file descriptors in our utility module.
We continue to use `fgets(3)` directly in the geoip and dirserv module
since this usage is considered safe.
This patch also removes the test-case that was created to detect
differences in the implementation of `fgets(3)` as well as the changes
file since these changes was not included in any releases yet.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21654
This patch removes the buffered I/O stream usage in process_handle_t and
its related utility functions. This simplifies the code and avoids racy
code where we used buffered I/O on non-blocking file descriptors.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21654
This patch resets `buf` in test_util_fgets_eagain() after each succesful
ivocation to avoid stray artifacts left in the buffer by erroneous
tor_fgets() calls.
(But use bash if it's available.)
This is a workaround until we remove bash-specific code in 19699.
Fixes bug 21581; bugfix on 21562, not in any released version of tor.
This feature makes it possible to turn off memory sentinels (like
those used for safety in buffers.c and memarea.c) when fuzzing, so
that we can catch bugs that they would otherwise prevent.
When encoding a legacy ESTABLISH_INTRO cell, we were using the sizeof() on a
pointer instead of using the real size of the destination buffer leading to an
overflow passing an enormous value to the signing digest function.
Fortunately, that value was only used to make sure the destination buffer
length was big enough for the key size and in this case it always was because
of the overflow.
Fixes#21553
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Instead of returning 404 error code, this led to a NULL pointer being used and
thus a crash of tor.
Fixes#21471
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Fixes bug 20894; bugfix on 0.2.0.16-alpha.
We already applied a workaround for this as 20834, so no need to
freak out (unless you didn't apply 20384 yet).
I think this one probably can't underflow, since the input ranges
are small. But let's not tempt fate.
This patch also replaces the "cmp" functions here with just "eq"
functions, since nothing actually checked for anything besides 0 and
nonzero.
Related to 21278.
According to 21116, it seems to be needed for Wheezy Raspbian build. Also,
manpage of socket(2) does confirm that this errno value should be catched as
well in case of no support from the OS of IPv4 or/and IPv6.
Fixes#21116
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This patch adds checks for expected log messages for failure cases of
different ill-formed ESTABLISH_INTRO cell's.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21266
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
If there are no ephemeral or detached onion services, then
"GETINFO onions/current" or "GETINFO onions/detached" should
return an empty list instead of an error
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.
It is no longer possible for the IPv6 preference options to differ from the
IPv6 usage: preferring IPv6 implies possibly using IPv6.
Also remove the corresponding unit test warning message checks.
(But keep the unit tests themselves - they now run without warnings.)
This commit adds 3 unit tests which validates a wrong signature length, a
wrong authentication key length and a wrong MAC in the cell.
Closes#20992
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Some DNS NXDOMAIN hijackers hijack truly ridiculous domains, like
"invalid-stuff!!" or "1.2.3.4.5". This would provoke unit test
failures where we used addresses like that to force
tor_addr_lookup() to fail. The fix, for testing, is to mock
tor_addr_lookup() with a variant that always fails when it gets
a name with a !.
Fixes bugs 20862 and 20863.
The abort handler masks the exit status of the backtrace generator by
capturing the abort signal from the backtrace handler and exiting with
zero. Because the output of the backtrace generator is meant to be piped
to `bt_test.py`, its exit status is unimportant and is currently
ignored.
The abort handler calls `exit(3)` which is not asynchronous-signal-safe
and calling it in this context is undefined behavior [0].
Closes ticket 21026.
[0] https://www.securecoding.cert.org/confluence/x/34At
Since both the client and service will use that data structure to store the
descriptor decoded data, only the public keys are common to both.
Fixes#20572.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This is an important thing I hadn't considered when writing prop271:
sometimes you have to restrict what guard you use for a particular
circuit. Most frequently, that would be because you plan to use a
certain node as your exit, and so you can't choose that for your
guard.
This change means that the upgrade-waiting-circuits algorithm needs
a slight tweak too: circuit A cannot block circuit B from upgrading
if circuit B needs to follow a restriction that circuit A does not
follow.
George pointed out that (-1,0,1) for (never usable, maybe usable
later, usable right now) was a pretty rotten convention that made
the code harder to read.
This includes:
* making bridge_info_t exposed but opaque
* allowing guards where we don't know an identity
* making it possible to learn the identity of a guard
* creating a guard that lacks a node_t
* remembering a guard's address and port.
* Looking up a guard by address and port.
* Only enforcing the rule that we need a live consensus to update
the "listed" status for guards when we are not using bridges.
Currently, this code doesn't actually have the contexts behave
differently, (except for the legacy context), but it does switch
back and forth between them nicely.