On an hidden service rendezvous circuit, a BEGIN_DIR could be sent
(maliciously) which would trigger a tor_assert() because
connection_edge_process_relay_cell() thought that the circuit is an
or_circuit_t but is an origin circuit in reality.
Fixes#22494
Reported-by: Roger Dingledine <arma@torproject.org>
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This fixes an assertion failure in relay_send_end_cell_from_edge_() when an
origin circuit and a cpath_layer = NULL were passed.
A service rendezvous circuit could do such a thing when a malformed BEGIN cell
is received but shouldn't in the first place because the service needs to send
an END cell on the circuit for which it can not do without a cpath_layer.
Fixes#22493
Reported-by: Roger Dingledine <arma@torproject.org>
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Apparently, the unit tests relied on being able to make ed->x509
link certs even when they hadn't set any server flags in the
options. So instead of making "client" mean "never generate an
ed->x509 cert", we'll have it mean "it's okay not to generate an
ed->x509 cert".
(Going with a minimal fix here, since this is supposed to be a
stable version.)
The tests previously assumed that the link handshake code would be
calling get_my_certs() -- when I changed it to call get_own_cert()
instead for the (case 2) 22460 fix, the tests failed, since the tls
connection wasn't really there.
This change makes us start mocking out the tor_tls_get_own_cert()
function too.
It also corrects the behavior of the mock_get_peer_cert() function
-- it should have been returning a newly allocated copy.
It's okay to call add_ed25519_cert with a NULL argument: so,
document that. Also, add a tor_assert_nonfatal() to catch any case
where we have failed to set own_link_cert when conn_in_server_mode.
Whenever we rotate our TLS context, we change our Ed25519
Signing->Link certificate. But if we've already started a TLS
connection, then we've already sent the old X509 link certificate,
so the new Ed25519 Signing->Link certificate won't match it.
To fix this, we now store a copy of the Signing->Link certificate
when we initialize the handshake state, and send that certificate
as part of our CERTS cell.
Fixes one case of bug22460; bugfix on 0.3.0.1-alpha.
Previously we could sometimes change our signing key, but not
regenerate the certificates (signing->link and signing->auth) that
were signed with it. Also, we would regularly replace our TLS x.509
link certificate (by rotating our TLS context) but not replace our
signing->link ed25519 certificate. In both cases, the resulting
inconsistency would make other relays reject our link handshakes.
Fixes two cases of bug 22460; bugfix on 0.3.0.1-alpha.
The encrypted_data_length_is_valid() function wasn't validating correctly the
length of the encrypted data of a v3 descriptor. The side effect of this is
that an HSDir was rejecting the descriptor and ultimately not storing it.
Fixes#22447
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
When directory authorities reject a router descriptor due to keypinning,
free the router descriptor rather than leaking the memory.
Fixes bug 22370; bugfix on 0.2.7.2-alpha.
We used to not set the guard state in launch_direct_bridge_descriptor_fetch().
So when a bridge descriptor fetch failed, the guard subsystem would never
learn about the fail (and hence the guard's reachability state would not
be updated).