To run this, say something like
TOR_DEVTOOL_DIR=~/bin scripts/git/git-install-tools.sh all
To see what it would do, give it the -n flag.
To get help, give it the -h flag.
When a service can not upload its descriptor(s), we have no logs on why. This
adds logging for each possible reason for each descriptors.
That logging is emitted every second so it is rate limited for each reason and
per descriptor.
Closes#33400
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This reverts commit a63b414822.
The "typo" wasn't actually a typo. The "r" in the suffixes for the
release branches is meant to make them distinct from the maint
branches.
Now, _right now_, nothing uses release branch suffixes, but it's
important to keep them distinct if we decide to use them in the
future.
In this case, when we're looking for the voting interval, we should
try looking at the _latest_ consensus if we have one. When we're
looking for the start of the current voting period, we can use our
existing fallback logic without complaint, since the voting interval
code will already have given us a reasonable voting interval, and we
want to have a round starting time based on the current time.
This is not as clean a patch as I would like: see the comment on
ASSUME_AUTHORITY_SCHEDULING. This issue here is that the unit tests
sometimes assume that we are going to be looking at the dirauth
options and behaving like a dirauth, but without setting the options
to turn is into one.
This isn't an issue for actually running Tor, as far as I can tell
with chutney.
Most of this function was about recreating a voting schedule on
demand if it didn't exist yet or was not up-to-date. I've made that
into its own function.
This is an automated commit, generated by this command:
./scripts/maint/rename_c_identifier.py \
voting_schedule_recalculate_timing dirauth_sched_recalculate_timing \
voting_schedule_get_start_of_next_interval voting_sched_get_start_of_interval_after \
voting_schedule_get_next_valid_after_time dirauth_sched_get_next_valid_after_time