Some of these functions are now public and cpath-specific so their name should
signify the fact they are part of the cpath module:
assert_cpath_layer_ok -> cpath_assert_layer_ok
assert_cpath_ok -> cpath_assert_ok
onion_append_hop -> cpath_append_hop
circuit_init_cpath_crypto -> cpath_init_circuit_crypto
circuit_free_cpath_node -> cpath_free
onion_append_to_cpath -> cpath_extend_linked_list
We are using an opaque pointer so the structure needs to be allocated on the
heap. This means we now need a constructor for crypt_path_t.
Also modify all places initializing a crypt_path_t to use the constructor.
When storing a descriptor in the client cache, if we are about to replace an
existing descriptor, make sure to close every introduction circuits of the old
descriptor so we don't have leftovers lying around.
Ticket 27471 describes a situation where tor is sending an INTRODUCE1 cell on
an introduction circuit for which it doesn't have a matching intro point
object (taken from the descriptor).
The main theory is that, after a new descriptor showed up, the introduction
points changed which led to selecting an introduction circuit not used by the
service anymore thus for which we are unable to find the corresponding
introduction point within the descriptor we just fetched.
Closes#27471.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
It differs from the rest of the rephist code in that it's actually
necessary for Tor to operate, so it should probably go somewhere
else. I'm not sure where yet, so I'll leave it in the same
directory, but give it its own file.
The main.c code is responsible for initialization and shutdown;
the mainloop.c code is responsible for running the main loop of Tor.
Splitting the "generic event loop" part of mainloop.c from the
event-loop-specific part is not done as part of this patch.
There are now separate modules for:
* the list of router descriptors
* the list of authorities and fallbacks
* managing authority certificates
* selecting random nodes
This function was a wrapper around RSA_check_key() in openssl, which
checks for invalid RSA private keys (like those where p or q are
composite, or where d is not the inverse of e, or where n != p*q).
We don't need a function like this in NSS, since unlike OpenSSL, NSS
won't let you import a bogus private key.
I've renamed the function and changed its return type to make it
more reasonable, and added a unit test for trying to read a key
where n != p*q.
In order to switch the default HS version from 2 to 3, we need tor to be smart
and be able to decide on the version by trying to load the service keys during
configuration validation.
Part of #27215
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.