When this is set, and Tor is running as a relay, it will not
generate or load its secret identity key. You can manage the secret
identity key with --keygen. Implements ticket 16944.
Make sure that signing certs are signed by the right identity key,
to prevent a recurrence of #16530. Also make sure that the master
identity key we find on disk matches the one we have in RAM, if we
have one.
This is for #16581.
When there is a signing key and the certificate lists a key, make
sure that the certificate lists the same signing key.
When there are public key and secret key stored in separate files,
make sure they match.
Use the right file name when we load an encrypted secret key and
then find a problem with it.
This is part of 16581.
When --keygen is provided, we prompt for a passphrase when we make a
new master key; if it is nonempty, we store the secret key in a new
crypto_pwbox.
Also, if --keygen is provided and there *is* an encrypted master key,
we load it and prompt for a passphrase unconditionally.
We make a new signing key unconditionally when --keygen is provided.
We never overwrite a master key.
signing_key can be NULL in ed_key_init_from_file in routerkeys.c.
Discovered by clang 3.7 address sanitizer.
Fix on c03694938e, not in any released version of Tor.
# The first commit's message is:
Regenerate ed25519 keys when they will expire soon.
Also, have testing-level options to set the lifetimes and
expiration-tolerances of all key types, plus a non-testing-level
option to set the lifetime of any auto-generated signing key.
# The 2nd commit message will be skipped:
# fixup! Regenerate ed25519 keys when they will expire soon.
Routers now use TAP and ntor onion keys to sign their identity keys,
and put these signatures in their descriptors. That allows other
parties to be confident that the onion keys are indeed controlled by
the router that generated the descriptor.
For prop220, we have a new ed25519 certificate type. This patch
implements the code to create, parse, and validate those, along with
code for routers to maintain their own sets of certificates and
keys. (Some parts of master identity key encryption are done, but
the implementation of that isn't finished)