This is a purely cosmetic patch that changes RELAY_BEGINDIR in various
comments to RELAY_BEGIN_DIR, which should make it easier to grep for the
symbols.
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 ensures that we log the size of the inbuf when a directory
client have reached EOF on the connection.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21206
This patch makes the log-statements in `connection_dir_client_reached_eof`
more explicit by writing "body size" instead of just "size" which could
be confused as being the size of the entire response, which would
include HTTP status-line and headers.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21206
This patch adds a debug log statement when sending a request to a
directory server. The information logged includes: the payload size (if
available), the total size of the request, the address and port of the
directory server, and the purpose of the directory connection.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21206
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.
Bug 21242 occurred because we asserted that extend_info_from_node()
had succeeded...even though we already had the code to handle such a
failure. We fixed that in 93b39c5162.
But there were four other cases in our code where we called
extend_info_from_node() and either tor_assert()ed that it returned
non-NULL, or [in one case] silently assumed that it returned
non-NULL. That's not such a great idea. This patch makes those
cases check for a bug of this kind instead.
Fixes bug 21372; bugfix on 0.2.3.1-alpha when
extend_info_from_node() was introduced.
Once a second, we go over all services and consider the validity of the intro
points. Now, also try to remove expiring nodes that have no more circuit
associated to them. This is possible if we moved an intro point object
previously to that list and the circuit actually timed out or was closed by
the introduction point itself.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
In rend_service_intro_has_opened(), this is subject to a possible underflow
because of how the if() casts the results. In the case where the expiring
nodes list length is bigger than the number of IP circuits, we end up in the
following situation where the result will be cast to an unsigned int. For
instance, "5 - 6" is actually a BIG number.
Ultimately leading to closing IP circuits in a non stop loop.
Partially fixes#21302.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Previously the dirserv_orconn_tls_done() function would skip routers
when they advertised an ed25519 key but didn't present it during the
link handshake. But that covers all versions between 0.2.7.2-alpha
and 0.2.9.x inclusive!
Fixes bug 21107; bugfix on 0.3.0.1-alpha.
Because we don't allow client functionalities in non anonymous mode,
recommending Tor2web is a bad idea.
If a user wants to use Tor2web as a client (losing all anonymity), it should
run a second tor, not use it with a single onion service tor.
Fixes#21294.
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
In rend_consider_services_intro_points(), we had a possible interger underflow
which could lead to creating a very large number of intro points. We had a
safe guard against that *except* if the expiring_nodes list was not empty
which is realistic thing.
This commit removes the check on the expiring nodes length being zero. It's
not because we have an empty list of expiring nodes that we don't want to open
new IPs. Prior to this check, we remove invalid IP nodes from the main list of
a service so it should be the only thing to look at when deciding if we need
to create new IP(s) or not.
Partially fixes#21302.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
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
Stop modifying the value of our torrc option HiddenServiceStatistics just
because we're not a bridge or relay. This bug was causing Tor Browser users to
write "HiddenServiceStatistics 0" in their torrc files as if they had chosen
to change the config.
Fixes#21150
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Since we can call this function more than once before we update all
the confirmed_idx fields, we can't rely on all the relays having an
accurate confirmed_idx.
Fixes bug 21129; bugfix on 0.3.0.1-alpha
We need to call it before nt_service_parse_options(), since
nt_service_parse_options() can call back into nt_service_main(),
which calls do_main_loop().
Fixes bug 21356; bugfix on 0.2.9.1-alpha.
In addition to not wanting to build circuits until we can see most
of the paths in the network, and in addition to not wanting to build
circuits until we have a consensus ... we shouldn't build circuits
till all of our (in-use) primary guards have descriptors that we can
use for them.
This is another bug 21242 fix.
Actually, it's _fine_ to use a descriptorless guard for fetching
directory info -- we just shouldn't use it when building circuits.
Fortunately, we already have a "usage" flag that we can use here.
Partial fix for bug 21242.
This relates to the 21242 fix -- entry_guard_pick_for_circuit()
should never yield nodes without descriptors when the node is going
to be used for traffic, since we won't be able to extend through
them.
This assertion triggered in the (error) case where we got a result
from guards_choose_guard() without a descriptor. That's not
supposed to be possible, but it's not worth crashing over.
I broke "GETCONF *Port" in 20956, when I made SocksPort a
subordinate option of the virtual option SocksPortLines, so that I
could make SocksPort and __SocksPort provide qthe same
functionality. The problem was that you can't pass a subordinate
option to GETCONF.
So, this patch fixes that by letting you fetch subordinate options.
It won't always be meaningful to consider these options
out-of-context, but that can be the controller-user's
responsibility to check.
Closes ticket 21300.
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
If tor_mmap_file is called with a file which is larger than SIZE_MAX,
only a small part of the file will be memory-mapped due to integer
truncation.
This can only realistically happen on 32 bit architectures with large
file support.
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.
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>