When sending the INTRODUCE1 cell, we acquire the needed data for the cell but
if the RP node_t has invalid data, we'll fail the send and completely kill the
SOCKS connection.
Instead, close the rendezvous circuit and return a transient error meaning
that Tor can recover by selecting a new rendezvous point. We'll also do the
same when we are unable to encode the INTRODUCE1 cell for which at that point,
we'll simply take another shot at a new rendezvous point.
Fixes#27774
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
That unit test makes sure we don't have pending SOCK request if the descriptor
turns out to be unusable.
Part of #27410.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Client side, when a descriptor is finally fetched and stored in the cache, we
then go over all pending SOCKS request for that descriptor. If it turns out
that the intro points are unusable, we close the first SOCKS request but not
the others for the same .onion.
This commit makes it that we'll close all SOCKS requests so we don't let
hanging the other ones.
It also fixes another bug which is having a SOCKS connection in RENDDESC_WAIT
state but with a descriptor in the cache. At some point, tor will expire the
intro failure cache which will make that descriptor usable again. When
retrying all SOCKS connection (retry_all_socks_conn_waiting_for_desc()), we
won't end up in the code path where we have already the descriptor for a
pending request causing a BUG().
Bottom line is that we should never have pending requests (waiting for a
descriptor) with that descriptor in the cache (even if unusable).
Fixees #27410.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
If a tor client gets a descriptor that it can't decrypt, chances are that the
onion requires client authorization.
If a tor client is configured with client authorization for an onion but
decryption fails, it means that the configured keys aren't working anymore.
In both cases, we'll log notice the former and log warn the latter and the
rest of the decryption errors are now at info level.
Two logs statement have been removed because it was redundant and printing the
fetched descriptor in the logs when 80% of it is encrypted wat not helping.
Fixes#27550
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
>>>> CID 1439133: Null pointer dereferences (REVERSE_INULL)
>>>> Null-checking "fields" suggests that it may be null, but it
>>>> has already been dereferenced on all paths leading to the check.
>>>> CID 1439132: Null pointer dereferences (REVERSE_INULL)
>>>> Null-checking "fields" suggests that it may be null, but it
>>>> has already been dereferenced on all paths leading to the check.
This commit refactors the existing decryption code to make it compatible with
a new logic for when the client authorization is enabled.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
The new ClientOnionAuthDir option is introduced which is where tor looks to
find the HS v3 client authorization files containing the client private key
material.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This commit won't build yet -- it just puts everything in a slightly
more logical place.
The reasoning here is that "src/core" will hold the stuff that every (or
nearly every) tor instance will need in order to do onion routing.
Other features (including some necessary ones) will live in
"src/feature". The "src/app" directory will hold the stuff needed
to have Tor be an application you can actually run.
This commit DOES NOT refactor the former contents of src/or into a
logical set of acyclic libraries, or change any code at all. That
will have to come in the future.
We will continue to move things around and split them in the future,
but I hope this lays a reasonable groundwork for doing so.