This patch refactors connection_dir_client_reached_eof() to use
compression_method_get_human_name() to set description1 and
description2 variables.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21667
One (HeapEnableTerminationOnCorruption) is on-by-default since win8;
the other (PROCESS_DEP_DISABLE_ATL_THUNK_EMULATION) supposedly only
affects ATL, which (we think) we don't use. Still, these are good
hygiene. Closes ticket 21953.
A descriptor only contains the curve25519 public key in the enc-key field so
the private key should not be in that data structure. The service data
structures will have access to the full keypair (#20657).
Furthermore, ticket #21871 has highlighted an issue in the proposal 224 about
the encryption key and legacy key being mutually exclusive. This is very wrong
and this commit fixes the code to follow the change to the proposal of that
ticket.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
We do this by treating the presence of .z as meaning ZLIB_METHOD,
even if Accept-Encoding does not include deflate.
This fixes bug 22206; bug not in any released tor.
Nothing was setting or inspecting these fields, and they were marked
as OBSOLETE() in config.c -- but somehow we still had them in the
or_options_t structure. Ouch.
There was a bug that got exposed with the removal of ORListenAddress. Within
server_mode(), we now only check ORPort_set which is set in parse_ports().
However, options_validate() is using server_mode() at the start to check if we
need to look at the uname but then the ORPort_set is unset at that point
because the port parsing was done just after. This commit fixes that.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Deprecated in 0.2.9.2-alpha, this commits changes it as OBSOLETE() and cleans
up the code associated with it.
Partially fixes#22060
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Deprecated in 0.2.9.2-alpha, this commits changes it as OBSOLETE() and cleans
up the code associated with it.
Partially fixes#22060
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Deprecated in 0.2.9.2-alpha, this commits changes it as OBSOLETE() and cleans
up the code associated with it.
Partially fixes#22060
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Deprecated in 0.2.9.2-alpha, this commits changes it as OBSOLETE() and cleans
up the code associated with it.
Partially fixes#22060
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Deprecated in 0.2.9.2-alpha, this commits changes it as OBSOLETE() and cleans
up the code associated with it.
Partially fixes#22060
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Deprecated in 0.2.9.2-alpha, this commits changes it as OBSOLETE() and cleans
up the code associated with it.
Partially fixes#22060
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Deprecated in 0.2.9.2-alpha, this commits changes it as OBSOLETE() and cleans
up the code associated with it.
Partially fixes#22060
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Deprecated in 0.2.9.2-alpha, this commits changes it as OBSOLETE() and cleans
up the code associated with it.
Partially fixes#22060
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Deprecated in 0.2.9.2-alpha, this commits changes it as OBSOLETE() and cleans
up the code associated with it.
Partially fixes#22060
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Deprecated in 0.2.9.2-alpha, this commits changes it as OBSOLETE() and cleans
up the code associated with it.
Partially fixes#22060
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This change prevents a no-longer-supported behavior where we change
options that would later be written back to torrc with a SAVECONF.
Also, use the "Pointer to final pointer" trick to build the
normalized list, to avoid special-casing the first element.
Checking all of these parameter lists for every single connection every second
seems like it could be an expensive waste.
Updating globally cached versions when there is a new consensus will still
allow us to apply consensus parameter updates to all existing connections
immediately.
Accomplished via the following:
1. Use NETINFO cells to determine if both peers will agree on canonical
status. Prefer connections where they agree to those where they do not.
2. Alter channel_is_better() to prefer older orconns in the case of multiple
canonical connections, and use the orconn with more circuits on it in case
of age ties.
Also perform some hourly accounting on how many of these types of connections
there are and log it at info or notice level.
This unifies CircuitIdleTimeout and PredictedCircsRelevanceTime into a single
option, and randomizes it.
It also gives us control over the default value as well as relay-to-relay
connection lifespan through the consensus.
Conflicts:
src/or/circuituse.c
src/or/config.c
src/or/main.c
src/test/testing_common.c
This defense will cause Cisco, Juniper, Fortinet, and other routers operating
in the default configuration to collapse netflow records that would normally
be split due to the 15 second flow idle timeout.
Collapsing these records should greatly reduce the utility of default netflow
data for correlation attacks, since all client-side records should become 30
minute chunks of total bytes sent/received, rather than creating multiple
separate records for every webpage load/ssh command interaction/XMPP chat/whatever
else happens to be inactive for more than 15 seconds.
The defense adds consensus parameters to govern the range of timeout values
for sending padding packets, as well as for keeping connections open.
The defense only sends padding when connections are otherwise inactive, and it
does not pad connections used solely for directory traffic at all. By default
it also doesn't pad inter-relay connections.
Statistics on the total padding in the last 24 hours are exported to the
extra-info descriptors.
Right now it just sets an if-modified-since header, but it's about
to get even bigger.
This patch avoids changing indentation; the next patch will be
whitespace fixes.
We need to index diffs by the digest-as-signed of their source
consensus, so that we can find them even from consensuses whose
signatures are encoded differently.
In this patch I add support for "delete through end of file" in our
ed diff handler, and generate our diffs so that they remove
everything after in the consensus after the signatures begin.
This was introduced 90562fc23a adding a code
path where we pass a NULL pointer for the HSDir fingerprint to the control
event subsystem. The HS desc failed function wasn't handling properly that
pointer for a NULL value.
Two unit tests are also added in this commit to make sure we handle properly
the case of a NULL hsdir fingerprint and a NULL content as well.
Fixes#22138
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
config_parse_interval() and config_parse_msec_interval() were checking
whether the variable "ok" (a pointer to an int) was null, rather than
derefencing it. Both functions are static, and all existing callers
pass a valid pointer to those static functions. The callers do check
the variables (also confusingly named "ok") whose addresses they pass
as the "ok" arguments, so even if the pointer check were corrected to
be a dereference, it would be redundant.
Fixes#22103.
This was a >630-line function, which doesn't make anybody happy. It
was also mostly composed of a bunch of if-statements that handled
different directory responses differently depending on the original
purpose of the directory connection. The logical refactoring here
is to move the body of each switch statement into a separate handler
function, and to invoke those functions from a separate switch
statement.
This commit leaves whitespace mostly untouched, for ease of review.
I'll reindent in the next commit.
Inform the control port with an HS_DESC failed event when the client is unable
to pick an HSDir. It's followed by an empty HS_DESC_CONTENT event. In order to
achieve that, some control port code had to be modified to accept a NULL HSDir
identity digest.
This commit also adds a trigger of a failed event when we are unable to
base64-decode the descriptor cookie.
Fixes#22042
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Introduce a way to optionally enable Rust integration for our builds. No
actual Rust code is added yet and specifying the flag has no effect
other than failing the build if rustc and cargo are unavailable.
This commit adds the src/trace directory containing the basics for our tracing
subsystem. It is not used in the code base. The "src/trace/debug.h" file
contains an example on how we can map our tor trace events to log_debug().
The tracing subsystem can only be enabled by tracing framework at compile
time. This commit introduces the "--enable-tracing-debug" option that will
make all "tor_trace()" function be maped to "log_debug()".
Closes#13802
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
That log statement can be triggered if somebody on the Internet behaves badly
which is possible with buggy implementation for instance.
Fixes#21293
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This patch ensures that Tor checks if a given compression method is
supported before printing the version string when calling `tor
--library-versions`.
Additionally, we use the `tor_compress_supports_method()` to check if a
given version is supported for Tor's start-up version string, but here
we print "N/A" if a given compression method is unavailable.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21662
This patch adds the `tor_compress_get_total_allocation()` which returns
an approximate number of bytes currently in use by all the different
compression backends.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21662
This patch adds support for enabling support for Zstandard to our configure
script. By default, the --enable-zstd option is set to "auto" which means if
libzstd is available we'll build Tor with Zstandard support.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21662
This patch adds support for enabling support for LZMA to our configure
script. By default, the --enable-lzma option is set to "auto" which
means if liblzma is available we'll build Tor with LZMA support.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21662
This patch refactors the `torgzip` module to allow us to extend a common
compression API to support multiple compression backends.
Additionally we move the gzip/zlib code into its own module under the
name `compress_zlib`.
See https://bugs.torproject.org/21664
Remove duplicate code that validates a service object which is now in
rend_validate_service().
Add some comments on why we nullify a service in the code path of
rend_config_services().
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This new function validates a service object and is used everytime a service
is successfully loaded from the configuration file.
It is currently copying the validation that rend_add_service() also does which
means both functions validate. It will be decoupled in the next commit.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
In several places in the old code, we had problems that only an
in-memory index of diff status could solve, including:
* Remembering which diffs were in-progress, so that we didn't
re-launch them.
* Remembering which diffs had failed, so that we didn't try to
recompute them over and over.
* Having a fast way to look up the diff from a given consensus to
the latest consensus of a given flavor.
This patch adds a hashtable mapping from (flavor, source diff), to
solve the problem. It maps to a cache entry handle, rather than to
a cache entry directly, so that it doesn't affect the reference
counts of the cache entries, and so that we don't otherwise need to
worry about lifetime management.
This conscache flag tells conscache that it should munmap the
document as soon as reasonably possible, since its usage pattern is
expected to not have a lot of time-locality.
Initial tests. These just try adding a few consensuses, looking
them up, and making sure that consensus diffs are generated in a
more or less reasonable-looking way. It's enough for 87% coverage,
but it leaves out a lot of functionality.
This module's job is to remember old consensus documents, to
calculate their diffs on demand, and to .
There are some incomplete points in this code; I've marked them with
"XXXX". I intend to fix them in separate commits, since I believe
doing it in separate commits will make the branch easier to review.
The GETINFO extra-info/digest/<digest> broke in commit 568dc27a19 that
refactored the base16_decode() API to return the decoded length.
Unfortunately, that if() condition should have checked for the correct length
instead of an error which broke the command in tor-0.2.9.1-alpha.
Fixes#22034
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This commit mainly moves the responsibility for directory request
construction one level higher. It also allows a directory request
to contain a pointer to a routerstatus, which will get turned into
the correct contact information at the last minute.
We do dump HS stats now at log info everytime the intro circuit creation retry
period limit has been reached. However, the log was upgraded to warning if we
actually were over the elapsed time (plus an extra slop).
It is actually something that will happen in tor in normal case. For instance,
if the network goes down for 10 minutes then back up again making
have_completed_a_circuit() return false which results in never updating that
retry period marker for a service.
Fixes#22032
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This patch refactors our streaming compression code to allow us to
extend it with non-zlib/non-gzip based compression schemas.
See https://bugs.torproject.org/21663
To allow us to use the API name `tor_compress` and `tor_uncompress` as
the main entry-point for all compression/uncompression and not just gzip
and zlib.
See https://bugs.torproject.org/21663
The consdiff generation logic would skip over lines added at the start of the
second file, and generate a diff that it would the immediately refuse because
it couldn't be used to reproduce the second file from the first. Fixes#21996.
The reason for making the temporary list public is to keep it encapsulated in
the rendservice subsystem so the prop224 code does not have direct access to
it and can only affect it through the rendservice pruning function.
It also has been modified to not take list as arguments but rather use the
global lists (main and temporary ones) because prop224 code will call it to
actually prune the rendservice's lists. The function does the needed rotation
of pointers between those lists and then prune if needed.
In order to make the unit test work and not completely horrible, there is a
"impl_" version of the function that doesn't free memory, it simply moves
pointers around. It is directly used in the unit test and two setter functions
for those lists' pointer have been added only for unit test.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Now we have separate getters and setters for service-side and relay-side. I
took this approach over adding arguments to the already existing methods to
have more explicit type-checking, and also because some functions would grow
too large and dirty.
This commit also fixes every callsite to use the new function names which
modifies the legacy HS (v2) and the prop224 (v3) code.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
One of the goals of this change is to have trunnel API/ABI being more explicit
so we namespace them with "trn_*". Furthermore, we can now create
hs_cells.[ch] without having to confuse it with trunnel which used to be
"hs_cell_*" before that change.
Here are the perl line that were used for this rename:
perl -i -pe 's/cell_extension/trn_cell_extension/g;' src/*/*.[ch]
perl -i -pe 's/cell_extension/trn_cell_extension/g;' src/trunnel/hs/*.trunnel
perl -i -pe 's/hs_cell_/trn_cell_/g;' src/*/*.[ch]
perl -i -pe 's/hs_cell_/trn_cell_/g;' src/trunnel/hs/*.trunnel
And then "./scripts/codegen/run_trunnel.sh" with trunnel commit id
613fb1b98e58504e2b84ef56b1602b6380629043.
Fixes#21919
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Pinning EntryNodes along with hidden services can be possibly harmful (for
instance #14917 and #21155) so at the very least warn the operator if this is
the case.
Fixes#21155
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Now that base64_decode() checks the destination buffer length against
the actual number of bytes as they're produced, shared_random.c no
longer needs the "SR_COMMIT_LEN+2" workaround.
Note down in the routerstatus_t of a node if the router supports the HSIntro=4
version for the ed25519 authentication key and HSDir=2 version for the v3
descriptor supports.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Some of those defines will be used by the v3 HS protocol so move them to a
common header out of rendservice.c. This is also ground work for prop224
service implementation.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Another building blocks for prop224 service work. This also makes the function
takes specific argument instead of the or_option_t object.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
When a client tried to connect to an invalid port of an hidden service, a
warning was printed:
[warn] connection_edge_process_relay_cell (at origin) failed.
This is because the connection subsystem wants to close the circuit because
the port can't be found and then returns a negative reason to achieve that.
However, that specific situation triggered a warning. This commit prevents it
for the specific case of an invalid hidden service port.
Fixes#16706
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
In order to avoid src/or/hs_service.o to contain no symbols and thus making
clang throw a warning, the functions are now exposed not just to unit tests.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Add a new helper function route_len_for_purpose(), which explicitly
lists all of the known circuit purposes for a circuit with a chosen
exit node (unlike previously, where the default route length for a
chosen exit was DEFAULT_ROUTE_LEN + 1 except for two purposes). Add a
non-fatal assertion for unhandled purposes that conservatively returns
DEFAULT_ROUTE_LEN + 1.
Add copious comments documenting which circuits need an extra hop and
why.
Thanks to nickm and dgoulet for providing background information.
The old implementation had duplicated code in a bunch of places, and
it interspersed spool-management with resource management. The new
implementation should make it easier to add new resource types and
maintain the spooling code.
Closing ticket 21651.
When calculating max sampled size, Tor would only count the number of
bridges in torrc, without considering that our state file might already
have sampled bridges in it. This caused problems when people swap
bridges, since the following error would trigger:
[warn] Not expanding the guard sample any further; just hit the
maximum sample threshold of 1
This patch changes the way we decide when to check for whether it's time
to rotate and/or expiry our onion keys. Due to proposal #274 we can now
have the keys rotate at different frequencies than before and we thus
do the check once an hour when our Tor daemon is running in server mode.
This should allow us to quickly notice if the network consensus
parameter have changed while we are running instead of having to wait
until the current parameters timeout value have passed.
See: See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21641
This patch adds a new timer that is executed when it is time to expire
our current set of old onion keys. Because of proposal #274 this can no
longer be assumed to be at the same time we rotate our onion keys since
they will be updated less frequently.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21641
This patch adds an API to get the current grace period, in days, defined
as the consensus parameter "onion-key-grace-period-days".
As per proposal #274 the values for "onion-key-grace-period-days" is a
default value of 7 days, a minimum value of 1 day, and a maximum value
defined by other consensus parameter "onion-key-rotation-days" also
defined in days.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21641
This patch turns `MIN_ONION_KEY_LIFETIME` into a new function
`get_onion_key_lifetime()` which gets its value from a network consensus
parameter named "onion-key-rotation-days". This allows us to tune the
value at a later point in time with no code modifications.
We also bump the default onion key lifetime from 7 to 28 days as per
proposal #274.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21641
There was a frequent block of code that did "find the next router
line, see if we've hit the end of the list, get the ID hash from the
line, and enforce well-ordering." Per Ahf's review, I'm extracting
it to its own function.
Previously, we operated on smartlists of NUL-terminated strings,
which required us to copy both inputs to produce the NUL-terminated
strings. Then we copied parts of _those_ inputs to produce an
output smartlist of NUL-terminated strings. And finally, we
concatenated everything into a final resulting string.
This implementation, instead, uses a pointer-and-extent pattern to
represent each line as a pointer into the original inputs and a
length. These line objects are then added by reference into the
output. No actual bytes are copied from the original strings until
we finally concatenate the final result together.
Bookkeeping structures and newly allocated strings (like ed
commands) are allocated inside a memarea, to avoid needless mallocs
or complicated should-I-free-this-or-not bookkeeping.
In my measurements, this improves CPU performance by something like
18%. The memory savings should be much, much higher.
Also, add very strict split/join functions, and totally forbid
nonempty files that end with somethig besides a newline. This
change is necessary to ensure that diff/apply are actually reliable
inverse operations.
The 2-line diff changs is needed to make the unit tests actually
test the cases that they thought they were testing.
The bogus free was found while testing those cases
(This commit was extracted by nickm based on the final outcome of
the project, taking only the changes in the files touched by this
commit from the consdiff_rebased branch. The directory-system
changes are going to get worked on separately.)
Also, relaxed the checks of encrypted_data_length_is_valid() since now
only one encrypted section has padding requirements and we don't
actually care to check that all the padding is there.
Consider starting code review from function encode_superencrypted_data().
- Refactor our HS desc crypto funcs to be able to differentiate between
the superencrypted layer and the encrypted layer so that different
crypto constants and padding is used in each layer.
- Introduce some string constants.
- Add some comments.
As part of the work for proposal #274 we are going to remove the need
for MIN_ONION_KEY_LIFETIME and turn it into a dynamic value defined by a
consensus parameter.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21641
The bridges+ipv6-min integration test has a client with bridges:
Bridge 127.0.0.1:5003
Bridge [::1]:5003
which got stuck in guard_selection_have_enough_dir_info_to_build_circuits()
because it couldn't find the descriptor of both bridges.
Specifically, the guard_has_descriptor() function could not find the
node_t of the [::1] bridge, because the [::1] bridge had no identity
digest assigned to it.
After further examination, it seems that during fetching the descriptor
for our bridges, we used the CERTS cell to fill the identity digest of
127.0.0.1:5003 properly. However, when we received a CERTS cell from
[::1]:5003 we actually ignored its identity digest because the
learned_router_identity() function was using
get_configured_bridge_by_addr_port_digest() which was returning the
127.0.0.1 bridge instead of the [::1] bridge (because it prioritizes
digest matching over addrport matching).
The fix replaces get_configured_bridge_by_addr_port_digest() with the
recent get_configured_bridge_by_exact_addr_port_digest() function. It
also relaxes the constraints of the
get_configured_bridge_by_exact_addr_port_digest() function by making it
return bridges whose identity digest is not yet known.
By using the _exact_() function, learned_router_identity() actually
fills in the identity digest of the [::1] bridge, which then allows
guard_has_descriptor() to find the right node_t and verify that the
descriptor is there.
FWIW, in the bridges+ipv6-min test both 127.0.0.1 and [::1] bridges
correspond to the same node_t, which I guess makes sense given that it's
actually the same underlying bridge.
This patch removes the `tor_fgets()` wrapper around `fgets(3)` since it
is no longer needed. The function was created due to inconsistency
between the returned values of `fgets(3)` on different versions of Unix
when using `fgets(3)` on non-blocking file descriptors, but with the
recent changes in bug #21654 we switch from unbuffered to direct I/O on
non-blocking file descriptors in our utility module.
We continue to use `fgets(3)` directly in the geoip and dirserv module
since this usage is considered safe.
This patch also removes the test-case that was created to detect
differences in the implementation of `fgets(3)` as well as the changes
file since these changes was not included in any releases yet.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21654
Make hidden services with 8 to 10 introduction points check for failed
circuits immediately after startup. Previously, they would wait for 5
minutes before performing their first checks.
Fixes bug 21594; bugfix on commit 190aac0eab in Tor 0.2.3.9-alpha.
Reported by alecmuffett.
This change is the only one necessary to allow future versions of
the microdescriptor consensus to replace every 'published' date with
e.g. 2038-01-01 00:00:00; this will save 50-75% in compressed
microdescriptor diff size, which is quite significant.
This commit is a minimal change for 0.2.9; future series will
reduce the use of the 'published' date even more.
Implements part of ticket 21642; implements part of proposal 275.
Previously, they would stop checking when they exceeded their intro point
creation limit.
Fixes bug 21596; bugfix on commit d67bf8b2f2 in Tor 0.2.7.2-alpha.
Reported by alecmuffett.
Previously, they would stop checking when they exceeded their intro point
creation limit.
Fixes bug 21596; bugfix on commit d67bf8b2f2 in Tor 0.2.7.2-alpha.
Reported by alecmuffett.
In that chutney test, the bridge client is configured to connect to
the same bridge at 127.0.0.1:5003 _and_ at [::1]:5003, with no
change in transports.
That meant, I think, that the descriptor is only assigned to the
first bridge when it arrives, and never the second.
- Make sure we check at least two guards for descriptor before making
circuits. We typically use the first primary guard for circuits, but
it can also happen that we use the second primary guard (e.g. if we
pick our first primary guard as an exit), so we should make sure we
have descriptors for both of them.
- Remove BUG() from the guard_has_descriptor() check since we now know
that this can happen in rare but legitimate situations as well, and we
should just move to the next guard in that case.
Previously I'd made a bad assumption in the implementation of
prop271 in 0.3.0.1-alpha: I'd assumed that there couldn't be two
guards with the same identity. That's true for non-bridges, but in
the bridge case, we allow two bridges to have the same ID if they
have different addr:port combinations -- in order to have the same
bridge ID running multiple PTs.
Fortunately, this assumption wasn't deeply ingrained: we stop
enforcing the "one guard per ID" rule in the bridge case, and
instead enforce "one guard per <id,addr,port>".
We also needed to tweak our implementation of
get_bridge_info_for_guard, since it made the same incorrect
assumption.
Fixes bug 21027; bugfix on 0.3.0.1-alpha.
This feature makes it possible to turn off memory sentinels (like
those used for safety in buffers.c and memarea.c) when fuzzing, so
that we can catch bugs that they would otherwise prevent.
Teor thinks that this connection_dirserv_add_dir_bytes_to_outbuf()
might be the problem, if the "remaining" calculation underflows. So
I'm adding a couple of checks there, and improving the casts.
When encoding a legacy ESTABLISH_INTRO cell, we were using the sizeof() on a
pointer instead of using the real size of the destination buffer leading to an
overflow passing an enormous value to the signing digest function.
Fortunately, that value was only used to make sure the destination buffer
length was big enough for the key size and in this case it always was because
of the overflow.
Fixes#21553
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
strto* and _atoi64 accept +, -, and various whitespace before numeric
characters. And permitted whitespace is different between POSIX and Windows.
Fixes bug 21507 and part of 21508; bugfix on 0.0.8pre1.
This patch makes us store the number of sent and received RELAY_DATA
cells used for directory connections. We log the numbers after we have
received an EOF in connection_dir_client_reached_eof() from the
directory server.
Instead of returning 404 error code, this led to a NULL pointer being used and
thus a crash of tor.
Fixes#21471
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Fixes bug 20894; bugfix on 0.2.0.16-alpha.
We already applied a workaround for this as 20834, so no need to
freak out (unless you didn't apply 20384 yet).
This should be "impossible" without making a SHA1 collision, but
let's not keep the assumption that SHA1 collisions are super-hard.
This prevents another case related to 21278. There should be no
behavioral change unless -ftrapv is on.
I think this one probably can't underflow, since the input ranges
are small. But let's not tempt fate.
This patch also replaces the "cmp" functions here with just "eq"
functions, since nothing actually checked for anything besides 0 and
nonzero.
Related to 21278.
Fix for TROVE-2017-001 and bug 21278.
(Note: Instead of handling signed ints "correctly", we keep the old
behavior, except for the part where we would crash with -ftrapv.)
This is a purely cosmetic patch that changes RELAY_BEGINDIR in various
comments to RELAY_BEGIN_DIR, which should make it easier to grep for the
symbols.
This patch ensures that we log the size of the inbuf when a directory
client have reached EOF on the connection.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21206
This patch makes the log-statements in `connection_dir_client_reached_eof`
more explicit by writing "body size" instead of just "size" which could
be confused as being the size of the entire response, which would
include HTTP status-line and headers.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21206
This reverts commit 5446cb8d3d.
The underlying revert was done in 0.2.6, since we aren't backporting
seccomp2 loosening fixes to 0.2.6. But the fix (for 17354) already
went out in 0.2.7.4-rc, so we shouldn't revert it in 0.2.7.
This patch adds a debug log statement when sending a request to a
directory server. The information logged includes: the payload size (if
available), the total size of the request, the address and port of the
directory server, and the purpose of the directory connection.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21206
maint-0.2.7-redux is an attempt to try to re-create a plausible
maint-0.2.7 branch. I've started from the tor-0.2.7.6, and then I
merged maint-0.2.6 into the branch.
This has produced 2 conflicts: one related to the
rendcommon->rendcache move, and one to the authority refactoring.
The length of auth_data from an INTRODUCE2 cell is checked when the
auth_type is recognized (1 or 2), but not for any other non-zero
auth_type. Later, auth_data is assumed to have at least
REND_DESC_COOKIE_LEN bytes, leading to a client-triggered out of bounds
read.
Fixed by checking auth_len before comparing the descriptor cookie
against known clients.
Fixes#15823; bugfix on 0.2.1.6-alpha.
Bug 21242 occurred because we asserted that extend_info_from_node()
had succeeded...even though we already had the code to handle such a
failure. We fixed that in 93b39c5162.
But there were four other cases in our code where we called
extend_info_from_node() and either tor_assert()ed that it returned
non-NULL, or [in one case] silently assumed that it returned
non-NULL. That's not such a great idea. This patch makes those
cases check for a bug of this kind instead.
Fixes bug 21372; bugfix on 0.2.3.1-alpha when
extend_info_from_node() was introduced.
Once a second, we go over all services and consider the validity of the intro
points. Now, also try to remove expiring nodes that have no more circuit
associated to them. This is possible if we moved an intro point object
previously to that list and the circuit actually timed out or was closed by
the introduction point itself.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
In rend_service_intro_has_opened(), this is subject to a possible underflow
because of how the if() casts the results. In the case where the expiring
nodes list length is bigger than the number of IP circuits, we end up in the
following situation where the result will be cast to an unsigned int. For
instance, "5 - 6" is actually a BIG number.
Ultimately leading to closing IP circuits in a non stop loop.
Partially fixes#21302.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Previously the dirserv_orconn_tls_done() function would skip routers
when they advertised an ed25519 key but didn't present it during the
link handshake. But that covers all versions between 0.2.7.2-alpha
and 0.2.9.x inclusive!
Fixes bug 21107; bugfix on 0.3.0.1-alpha.
Because we don't allow client functionalities in non anonymous mode,
recommending Tor2web is a bad idea.
If a user wants to use Tor2web as a client (losing all anonymity), it should
run a second tor, not use it with a single onion service tor.
Fixes#21294.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
In rend_consider_services_intro_points(), we had a possible interger underflow
which could lead to creating a very large number of intro points. We had a
safe guard against that *except* if the expiring_nodes list was not empty
which is realistic thing.
This commit removes the check on the expiring nodes length being zero. It's
not because we have an empty list of expiring nodes that we don't want to open
new IPs. Prior to this check, we remove invalid IP nodes from the main list of
a service so it should be the only thing to look at when deciding if we need
to create new IP(s) or not.
Partially fixes#21302.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This disregards anything smaller than an IPv6 /64, and rejects ports that
are rejected on an IPv6 /16 or larger.
Adjust existing unit tests, and add more to cover exceptional cases.
No IPv4 behaviour changes.
Fixes bug 21357
This interim fix results in too many IPv6 rejections.
No behaviour change for IPv4 counts, except for overflow fixes that
would require 4 billion redundant 0.0.0.0/0 policy entries to trigger.
Part of 21357
Stop modifying the value of our torrc option HiddenServiceStatistics just
because we're not a bridge or relay. This bug was causing Tor Browser users to
write "HiddenServiceStatistics 0" in their torrc files as if they had chosen
to change the config.
Fixes#21150
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Since we can call this function more than once before we update all
the confirmed_idx fields, we can't rely on all the relays having an
accurate confirmed_idx.
Fixes bug 21129; bugfix on 0.3.0.1-alpha
We need to call it before nt_service_parse_options(), since
nt_service_parse_options() can call back into nt_service_main(),
which calls do_main_loop().
Fixes bug 21356; bugfix on 0.2.9.1-alpha.
In addition to not wanting to build circuits until we can see most
of the paths in the network, and in addition to not wanting to build
circuits until we have a consensus ... we shouldn't build circuits
till all of our (in-use) primary guards have descriptors that we can
use for them.
This is another bug 21242 fix.
Actually, it's _fine_ to use a descriptorless guard for fetching
directory info -- we just shouldn't use it when building circuits.
Fortunately, we already have a "usage" flag that we can use here.
Partial fix for bug 21242.
This relates to the 21242 fix -- entry_guard_pick_for_circuit()
should never yield nodes without descriptors when the node is going
to be used for traffic, since we won't be able to extend through
them.
This assertion triggered in the (error) case where we got a result
from guards_choose_guard() without a descriptor. That's not
supposed to be possible, but it's not worth crashing over.
I broke "GETCONF *Port" in 20956, when I made SocksPort a
subordinate option of the virtual option SocksPortLines, so that I
could make SocksPort and __SocksPort provide qthe same
functionality. The problem was that you can't pass a subordinate
option to GETCONF.
So, this patch fixes that by letting you fetch subordinate options.
It won't always be meaningful to consider these options
out-of-context, but that can be the controller-user's
responsibility to check.
Closes ticket 21300.
If there are no ephemeral or detached onion services, then
"GETINFO onions/current" or "GETINFO onions/detached" should
return an empty list instead of an error
When marking for close a circuit, the reason value, a integer, was assigned to
a uint16_t converting any negative reasons (internal) to the wrong value. On
the HS side, this was causing the client to flag introduction points to be
unreachable as the internal reason was wrongfully converted to a positive
16bit value leading to flag 2 out of 3 intro points to be unreachable.
Fixes#20307 and partially fixes#21056
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
- Also remove LCOV marks from blocks of code that can be reachable by tests
if we mock relay_send_command_from_edge().
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
With the previous commit, we validate the circuit _before_ calling
rend_mid_introduce() which handles the INTRODUCE1 payload.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Adds a better semantic and it also follows the same interface for the
INTRODUCE1 API which is circuit_is_suitable_for_introduce1().
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
That way, when we are parsing the options and LearnCircuitBuildTimeout is set
to 0, we don't assert trying to get the options list with get_options().
Fixes#21062
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This patch refactors duplicated code, to check if a given router
supports fetching the extra-info document, into a common macro called
SKIP_MISSING_TRUSTED_EXTRAINFO.
This patch generalizes the two functions
router_is_already_dir_fetching_rs and router_is_already_dir_fetching_ds
into a single function, router_is_already_dir_fetching_, by lifting the
passing of the IPv4 & IPv6 addresses and the directory port number to
the caller.
So far, the TTLs for both A and AAAA records were not initialised,
resulting in exit relays sending back the value 60 to Tor clients. This
also impacts exit relays' DNS cache -- the expiry time for all domains
is set to 60.
This fixes <https://bugs.torproject.org/19025>.
The server-side clipping now clamps to one of two values, both
for what to report, and how long to cache.
Additionally, we move some defines to dns.h, and give them better
names.
An operator couldn't set the number of introduction point below the default
value which is 3. With this commit, from 0 to the hardcoded maximum is now
allowed.
Closes#21033
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Our config code is checking correctly at DataDirectoryGroupReadable but then
when we initialize the keys, we ignored that option ending up at setting back
the DataDirectory to 0700 instead of 0750. Patch by "redfish".
Fixes#19953
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
In the past, when we exhausted all guards in our sampled set, we just
waited there till we mark a guard for retry again (usually takes 10 mins
for a primary guard, 1 hour for a non-primary guard). This patch marks
all guards as maybe-reachable when we exhaust all guards (this can
happen when network is down for some time).
Let A = UseBridges
Let B = ClientUseIPv4
Then firewall_is_fascist_impl expands and simplifies to:
B || (!(A || ...) && A)
B || (!A && ... && A)
B || 0
B
The microdesc consensus does not contain any IPv6 addresses.
When a client has a microdesc consensus but no microdescriptor, make it
use the hard-coded IPv6 address for the node (if available).
(Hard-coded addresses can come from authorities, fallback directories,
or configured bridges.)
If there is no hard-coded address, log a BUG message, and fail the
connection attempt. (All existing code checks for a hard-coded address
before choosing a node address.)
Fixes 20996, fix on b167e82 from 19608 in 0.2.8.5-alpha.
It is no longer possible for the IPv6 preference options to differ from the
IPv6 usage: preferring IPv6 implies possibly using IPv6.
Also remove the corresponding unit test warning message checks.
(But keep the unit tests themselves - they now run without warnings.)
In order to help an HS operator knowing if the application configured behind
it is not working properly, add a log at warning level for the connection
refused or timeout case. This log will only be printed if a client connection
fails and is rate limited.
Closes#21019
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
In 8a0ea3ee43 we added a
temp_service_list local variable to rend_config_services, but we
didn't add a corresponding "free" for it to all of the exit paths.
Fixes bug 20987; bugfix on 0.3.0.1-alpha.
Add the "sr/current" and "sr/previous" keys for the GETINFO command in order
to get through the control port the shared random values from the consensus.
Closes#19925
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
These relays need to be contacted over their ORPorts using a begindir
connection, and relays try not to use begindir connections.
Fixes bug 20711; bugfix on 0.2.8.2-alpha.
We switched these to be "if (1) " a while back, so we could keep
the indentation and avoid merge conflicts. But it's nice to clean
up from time to time.
Previously we were marking directory guards up in
..._process_inbuf(), but that's wrong: we call that function on
close as well as on success. Instead, we're marking the dirguard up
only after we parse the HTTP headers. Closes 20974.
When marking for close a circuit, the reason value, a integer, was assigned to
a uint16_t converting any negative reasons (internal) to the wrong value. On
the HS side, this was causing the client to flag introduction points to be
unreachable as the internal reason was wrongfully converted to a positive
16bit value leading to flag 2 out of 3 intro points to be unreachable.
Fixes#20307 and partially fixes#21056
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
First, this commit moves the code used to prune the service list when
reloading Tor (HUP signal for instance) to a function from
rend_config_services().
Second, fix bug #21054, improve the code by using the newly added
circuit_get_next_service_intro_circ() function instead of poking at the global
list directly and add _many_ more comments.
Fixes#21054.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This helps protect against bugs where any part of a buf_t's memory
is passed to a function that expects a NUL-terminated input.
It also closes TROVE-2016-10-001 (aka bug 20384).
Replace the 81 remaining fallbacks of the 100 originally introduced
in Tor 0.2.8.3-alpha in March 2016, with a list of 177 fallbacks
(123 new, 54 existing, 27 removed) generated in December 2016.
Resolves ticket 20170.
In get_token(), we could read one byte past the end of the
region. This is only a big problem in the case where the region
itself is (a) potentially hostile, and (b) not explicitly
nul-terminated.
This patch fixes the underlying bug, and also makes sure that the
one remaining case of not-NUL-terminated potentially hostile data
gets NUL-terminated.
Fix for bug 21018, TROVE-2016-12-002, and CVE-2016-1254
They broke stem, and breaking application compatibility is usually a
bad idea.
This reverts commit 6e10130e18,
commit 78a13df158, and
commit 62f52a888a.
We might re-apply this later, if all the downstream tools can handle
it, and it turns out to be useful for some reason.
Since both the client and service will use that data structure to store the
descriptor decoded data, only the public keys are common to both.
Fixes#20572.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
The "sig_len" fields was moved below the "end_sig_fields" in the trunnel
specification so when signing the cell content, the function generating such a
cell needed to be adjust.
Closes#20991
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Previously, we had NumEntryGuards kind of hardwired to 1. Now we
have the code (but not the configuarability) to choose randomly from
among the first N primary guards that would work, where N defaults
to 1.
Part of 20831 support for making NumEntryGuards work again.
Since we already had a separate function for getting the universe of
possible guards, all we had to do was tweak it to handle very the
GS_TYPE_RESTRICTED case.
asn found while testing that this function can be reached with
GUARD_STATE_COMPLETE circuits; I believe this happens when
cannibalization occurs.
The added complexity of handling one more state made it reasonable
to turn the main logic here into a switch statement.
Letting the maximum sample size grow proportionally to the number of
guards defeats its purpose to a certain extent. Noted by asn during
code review.
Fixes bug 20920; bug not in any released (or merged) version of Tor.
- Correctly maintain the previous guard selection in choose_guard_selection().
- Print bridge identifier instead of nothing in entry_guard_describe()._
If a complete circuit C2 doesn't obey the restrictions of C1, then
C2 cannot block C1.
The patch here is a little big-ish, since we can no longer look
through all the complete circuits and all the waiting circuits on a
single pass: we have to find the best waiting circuit first.
This is an important thing I hadn't considered when writing prop271:
sometimes you have to restrict what guard you use for a particular
circuit. Most frequently, that would be because you plan to use a
certain node as your exit, and so you can't choose that for your
guard.
This change means that the upgrade-waiting-circuits algorithm needs
a slight tweak too: circuit A cannot block circuit B from upgrading
if circuit B needs to follow a restriction that circuit A does not
follow.
I had been asking myself, "hey, doesn't the new code need to look at
this "info" parameter? The old code did!" But it turns out that the
old code hasn't, since 05f7336624.
So instead of "support this!" the comment now says "we can remove
this!"
George pointed out that (-1,0,1) for (never usable, maybe usable
later, usable right now) was a pretty rotten convention that made
the code harder to read.
Here we handle most (all?) of the remaining tasks, and fix some
bugs, in the prop271 bridge implementation.
* We record bridge identities as we learn them.
* We only call deprecated functions from bridges.c when the
deprecated guard algorithm is in use.
* We update any_bridge_descriptors_known() and
num_bridges_usable() to work correctly with the new backend
code. (Previously, they called into the guard selection logic.
* We update bridge directory fetches to work with the new
guard code.
* We remove some erroneous assertions where we assumed that we'd
never load a guard that wasn't for the current selection.
Also, we fix a couple of typos.
Still missing is functionality for picking bridges when we don't
know a descriptor for them yet, and functionality for learning a
bridge ID.
Everything else remains (basically) the same. Neat!
This includes:
* making bridge_info_t exposed but opaque
* allowing guards where we don't know an identity
* making it possible to learn the identity of a guard
* creating a guard that lacks a node_t
* remembering a guard's address and port.
* Looking up a guard by address and port.
* Only enforcing the rule that we need a live consensus to update
the "listed" status for guards when we are not using bridges.
This is safe, because no entry_guard_t ever outlives its
guard_selection_t.
I want this because now that multiple guard selections can be active
during one tor session, we should make sure that any information we
register about guards is with respect to the selection that they came
from.
Currently, this code doesn't actually have the contexts behave
differently, (except for the legacy context), but it does switch
back and forth between them nicely.
If a guard becomes primary as a result of confirming it, consider
the circuit through that guard as a primary circuit.
Also, note open questions on behavior when confirming nonprimary guards
Some of these will get torrc options to override them too; this
is just the mechanical conversion.
Also, add documentation for a couple of undocumented (but now used)
parameters.
The new HS circuitmap API replaces old public functions as follows:
circuit_clear_rend_token -> hs_circuitmap_remove_circuit
circuit_get_rendezvous -> hs_circuitmap_get_rend_circ
circuit_get_intro_point -> hs_circuitmap_get_intro_circ_v2
circuit_set_rendezvous_cookie -> hs_circuitmap_register_rend_circ
circuit_set_intro_point_digest -> hs_circuitmap_register_intro_circ_v2
This commit also removes the old rendinfo code that is now unused.
It also fixes the broken rendinfo unittests.
The HS circuitmap is a hash table that maps introduction and rendezvous
tokens to specific circuits such that given a token it's easy to find
the corresponding circuit. It supports rend circuits and v2/v3 intro
circuits.
It will be used by the prop224 ESTABLISH_INTRO code to register and
lookup v3 introduction circuits.
The next commit after this removes the old code and fixes the unittests.
Please consult both commits while reviewing functionality differences
between the old and new code. Let me know if you want this rebased
differently :)
WRT architectural differences, this commit removes the rendinfo pointer
from or_circuit_t. It then adds an hs_token_t pointer and a hashtable
node for the HS circuitmap. IIUC, this adds another pointer to the
weight of or_circuit_t. Let me know if you don't like this, or if you
have suggestions on improving it.
Back when Roger had do do most of our testing on the moria host, we
needed a higher limit for the number of relays running on a single
IP address when that limit was shared with an authority. Nowadays,
the idea is pretty obsolete.
Also remove the router_addr_is_trusted_dir() function, which served
no other purpose.
Closes ticket 20960.
In c35fad2bde, merged in
0.2.4.7-alpha, we removed the code to parse v1 directory
objects. When we did so, we removed everything that could set the
CST_CHECK_AUTHORITY flag for check_signature_token().
So in this code, we remove the flag itself, the code to handle the
flag, and a function that only existed to handle the flag.
The signed_descriptor_move() was not releasing memory inside the destination
object before overwriting it with the source object. This commit adds a reset
function that free that memory inside a signed descriptor object and zero it.
Closes#20715.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
If a node can prove its Ed25519 identity, don't consider connections
to it canonical unless they match both identities.
Includes link handshake changes needed to avoid crashing with bug
warnings, since the tests now reach more parts of the code.
Closes ticket 20355
(Only run the connection_or_group_set_badness_() function on groups
of channels that have the same RSA and Ed25519 identities.)
There's a possible opportunity here where we might want to set a
channel to "bad" if it has no ed25519 identity and some other
channel has some. Also there's an opportunity to add a warning if
we ever have an Ed mismatch on open connections with the same RSA
ID.
This function has never gotten testing for the case where an
identity had been set, and then got set to something else. Rather
than make it handle those cases, we forbid them.
If there is some horrible bug in our ed25519 link authentication
code that causes us to label every single ed25519-having node as
non-running, we'll be glad we had this. Otherwise we can remove it
later.
This patch makes two absolutely critical changes:
- If an ed25519 identity is not as expected when creating a channel,
we call that channel unsuccessful and close it.
- When a client creating a channel or an extend cell for a circuit, we
only include the ed25519 identity if we believe that the node on
the other side supports ed25519 link authentication (from
#15055). Otherwise we will insist on nodes without the right
link protocol authenticating themselves.
- When deciding to extend to another relay, we only upgrade the
extend to extend by ed25519 ID when we know the ed25519 ID _and_
we know that the other side can authenticate.
This patch also tells directory servers, when probing nodes, to
try to check their ed25519 identities too (if they can authenticate
by ed25519 identity).
Also, handle the case where we connect by RSA Id, and learn the
ED25519 ID for the node in doing so.
I need to be able to turn on Ed25519 support in client generation
of extend cells so I can test it, but leave it off-by-default until
enough clients support it for us to turn it on for a bunch at once.
This is part of #15056 / prop#220.
- forbid extending to the previous hop by Ed25519 ID.
- If we know the Ed25519 ID for the next hop and the client doesn't,
insist on the one from the consensus.
Right now, there's only a mechanism to look for a channel where the
RSA ID matches *and* the ED ID matches. We can add a separate map
later if we want.
This resolves two issues:
* the checks in rend_add_services were only being performed when adding
the service, and not when the service was validated,
(this meant that duplicate checks were not being performed, and some SETCONF
commands appeared to succeed when they actually failed), and
* if one service failed while services were being added, then the service
list would be left in an inconsistent state (tor dies when this happens,
but the code is cleaner now).
Fixes#20860.
When computing old Tor protocol line version in protover, we were looking at
0.2.7.5 twice instead of the specific case for 0.2.9.1-alpha.
Fixes#20810
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
newconn->address is strdup'ed twice when new_type == CONN_TYPE_AP
and conn->socket_family == AF_UNIX. Whilst here, juggle code to
make sure newconn->port is assigned from an initialised value in
the above case.
Instead, refuse to start tor until the misconfigurations have been corrected.
Fixes bug 20559; bugfix on multiple commits in 0.2.7.1-alpha and earlier.
Instead, refuse to start tor if any hidden service key has been used in
a different hidden service anonymity mode.
Fixes bug 20638; bugfix on 17178 in 0.2.9.3-alpha; reported by ahf.
The original single onion service poisoning code checked poisoning state
in options_validate, and poisoned in options_act. This was problematic,
because the global array of hidden services had not been populated in
options_validate (and there were ordrering issues with hidden service
directory creation).
This patch fixes this issue in rend_service_check_dir_and_add, which:
* creates the directory, or checks permissions on an existing directory, then
* checks the poisoning state of the directory, then
* poisons the directory.
When validating, only the permissions checks and the poisoning state checks
are perfomed (the directory is not modified).
To do this, it makes sense to treat legacy guards as a separate
guard_selection_t *, and handle them separately. This also means we
add support here for having multiple guard selections.
Note that we don't persist pathbias information yet; that will take
some refactoring.
This patch doesn't cover every case; omitted cases are marked with
"XXXX prop271", as usual. It leaves both the old interface and the
new interface for guard status notification, since they don't
actually work in the same way: the new API wants to be told when a
circuit has failed or succeeded, whereas the old API wants to know
when a channel has failed or succeeded.
I ran into some trouble with directory guard stuff, since when we
pick the directory guard, we don't actually have a circuit to
associate it with. I solved that by allowing guard states to be
associated with directory connections, not just circuits.
I expect we'll be ripping this out somewhere in 0.3.0, but let's
keep it around for a little while in case it turns out to be the
only way to avert disaster?
This state corresponds to the WAITING_FOR_BETTER_GUARD state; it's
for circuits that are 100% constructed, but which we won't use until
we are sure that we wouldn't use circuits with a better guard.
When a nonprimary guard's circuit is complete, we don't call it
actually usable until we are pretty sure that every better guard
is indeed not going to give us a working circuit.
Here we add a little bit of state to origin circuits, and set up
the necessary functions for the circuit code to call in order to
find guards, use guards, and decide when circuits can be used.
There's also an incomplete function for the hard part of the
circuit-maintenance code, where we figure out whether any waiting
guards are ready to become usable.
(This patch finally uses the handle.c code to make safe handles to
entry_guard_t objects, so that we are allowed to free an
entry_guard_t without checking whether any origin_circuit_t is
holding a reference to it.)
This code handles:
* Maintaining the sampled set, the filtered set, and the
usable_filtered set.
* Maintaining the confirmed and primary guard lists.
* Picking guards for circuits, and updating guard state when
circuit state changes.
Additionally, I've done code structure movement: even more constants
and structures from entrynodes.c have become ENTRYNODES_PRIVATE
fields of entrynodes.h.
I've also included a bunch of documentation and a bunch of unit
tests. Coverage on the new code is pretty high.
I've noted important things to resolve before this branch is done
with the /XXXX.*prop271/ regex.
These are taken from the proposal, and defined there. Some of them
should turn into consensus parameters.
Also, remove some dead code that was there to make compilation work,
and use ATTR_UNUSED like a normal person.
The previous commit, in moving a bunch of functions to bridges.c,
broke compilation because bridges.c required two entry points to
entrynodes.c it didn't have.
This patch is just:
* Code movement
* Adding headers here and there as needed
* Adding a bridges_free_all() with a call to it.
It breaks compilation, since the bridge code needed to make exactly
2 calls into entrynodes.c internals. I'll fix those in the next
commit.
The encoding code is very straightforward. The decoding code is a
bit tricky, but clean-ish. The sampling code is untested and
probably needs more work.
This was a relatively mechanical change. First, I added an accessor
function for the pathbias-state field of a guard. Then I did a
search-and-replace in circpathbias.c to replace "guard->pb." with
"pb->". Finally, I made sure that "pb" was declared whenever it was
needed.
The entry_guard_t structure should really be opaque, so that we
can change its contents and have the rest of Tor not care.
This commit makes it "mostly opaque" -- circpathbias.c can still see
inside it. (I'm making circpathbias.c exempt since it's the only
part of Tor outside of entrynodes.c that made serious use of
entry_guard_t internals.)
This affects clients with FetchUselessDescriptors 1.
It might also cause subtle bugs on directory mirrors and authorities,
causing them to consider all full descriptors as failed or old.
Improve the messages logged when Tor wants or needs to load the master ed25519 identity key so the user is explicitly informed when further action is required or not. Fixes ticket #20650.
(We only create HS directories if we are acting on the config.)
Log a BUG warning if the directories aren't present immediately before they
are used, then fail.
For relays that don't know their own address, avoid attempting
a local hostname resolve for each descriptor we download. Also cut
down on the number of "Success: chose address 'x.x.x.x'" log lines.
Fixes bugs 20423 and 20610; bugfix on 0.2.8.1-alpha.
Single onion services and Tor2web deliberately create long-term one-hop
circuits to their intro and rend points, respectively.
These log messages are intended to diagnose issue 8387, which relates to
circuits hanging around forever for no reason.
Fixes bug 20613; bugfix on 0.2.9.1-alpha. Reported by "pastly".
This field indicates if the service is a Single Onion Service if present in
the descriptor.
Closes#19642
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Because as Teor puts it: "[Resetting on 503] is exactly what we
don't want when relays are busy - imagine clients doing an automatic
reset every time they DoS a relay..."
Fixes bug 20593.
As of #19899, we decided to allow any relay understanding the onion service
version 3 protocol to be able to use it. The service and client will be the
one controlled by a consensus parameter (different one for both of them) but
if you are a relay and you can understand a protocol, basically you should use
the feature.
Closes#19899
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
It's only safe to remove the failure limit (per 20536) if we are in
fact waiting a bit longer each time we try to download.
Fixes bug 20534; bugfix on 0.2.9.1-alpha.
If a consensus expires while we are waiting for certificates to download,
stop waiting for certificates.
If we stop waiting for certificates less than a minute after we started
downloading them, do not consider the certificate download failure a
separate failure.
Fixes bug 20533; bugfix on commit e0204f21 in 0.2.0.9-alpha.
Relays do not deliberately launch multiple attempts, so the impact of this
bug should be minimal. This fix also defends against bugs like #20499.
Bugfix on 0.2.8.1-alpha.
Note that the "signed key" in the signing key certificate is the
signing key. The "signing key" in the signing key certificate is
the key that signs the certificate -- that is, the blinded key.
This parameter controls if onion services version 3 (first version of prop224)
is enabled or not. If disabled, the tor daemon will not support the protocol
for all components such as relay, directory, service and client. If the
parameter is not found, it's enabled by default.
Closes#19899
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Signed-off-by: George Kadianakis <desnacked@riseup.net>
This implements the proposal 224 directory descriptor cache store and lookup
functionalities. Furthermore, it merges the OOM call for the HSDir cache with
current protocol v2 and the new upcoming v3.
Add hs_cache.{c|h} with store/lookup API.
Closes#18572
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Signed-off-by: George Kadianakis <desnacked@riseup.net>
Add hs_descriptor.{c|h} with the needed ABI to represent a descriptor and
needed component.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Signed-off-by: George Kadianakis <desnacked@riseup.net>
In order to implement proposal 224, we need the data structure rend_data_t to
be able to accomodate versionning that is the current version of hidden
service (2) and the new version (3) and future version.
For that, we implement a series of accessors and a downcast function to get
the v2 data structure. rend_data_t becomes a top level generic place holder.
The entire rend_data_t API has been moved to hs_common.{c|h} in order to
seperate code that is shared from between HS versions and unshared code (in
rendcommon.c).
Closes#19024
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Signed-off-by: George Kadianakis <desnacked@riseup.net>
This function is allowed to return NULL if the certified key isn't
RSA. But in a couple of places we were treating this as a bug or
internal error, and in one other place we weren't checking for it at
all!
Caught by Isis during code review for #15055. The serious bug was
only on the 15055 branch, thank goodness.
This was a stopgap method, designed on the theory that some routers
might support it before they could support Ed25519. But it looks
like everybody who supports RFC5705 will also have an Ed25519 key,
so there's not a lot of reason to have this even supported.
This code stores the ed certs as appropriate, and tries to check
them. The Ed25519 result is not yet used, and (because of its
behavior) this will break RSA authenticate cells. That will get
fixed as we go, however.
This should implement 19157, but it needs tests, and it needs
to get wired in.
In particular, these functions are the ones that set the identity of
a given connection or channel, and/or confirm that we have learned
said IDs.
There's a lot of stub code here: we don't actually need to use the
new keys till we start looking up connections/channels by Ed25519
IDs. Still, we want to start passing the Ed25519 IDs in now, so it
makes sense to add these stubs as part of 15055.
The impact here isn't too bad. First, the only affected certs that
expire after 32-bit signed time overflows in Y2038. Second, it could
only make it seem that a non-expired cert is expired: it could never
make it seem that an expired cert was still live.
Fixes bug 20027; bugfix on 0.2.7.2-alpha.
Also, adjust signing approach to more closely match the signing
scheme in the proposal.
(The format doesn't quite match the format in the proposal, since
RSA signatures aren't fixed-length.)
Closes 19020.
See proposal 244. This feature lets us stop looking at the internals
of SSL objects, *and* should let us port better to more SSL libraries,
if they have RFC5705 support.
Preparatory for #19156
We no longer generate certs cells by pasting the certs together one
by one. Instead we use trunnel to generate them.
Preliminary work for 19155 (send CERTS cell with ed certs)
Fixes bug 19969; bugfix on b1d56fc58. We can fix this some more in
later Tors, but for now, this is probably the simplest fix possible.
This is a belt-and-suspenders fix, where the earlier fix ("Ask
event_base_loop to finish when we add a pending stream") aims to respond
to new streams as soon as they arrive, and this one aims to make sure
that we definitely respond to all of the streams.
ome policies are default-reject, some default-accept. But
policy_is_reject_star() assumed they were all default_reject. Fix
that!
Also, document that policy_is_reject_star() treats a NULL policy as
empty. This allows us to simplify the checks in
parse_reachable_addresses() by quite a bit.
Fxes bug 20306; bugfix on 0.2.8.2-alpha.
(Also, refactor the code to create a hidden service directory into a
separate funcion, so we don't have to duplicate it.)
Fixes bug 20484; bugfix on 0.2.9.3-alpha.
This simplifies the function: if we have an ntor key, use ntor/EXTEND2,
otherwise, use TAP/EXTEND.
Bugfix on commit 10aa913 from 19163 in 0.2.9.3-alpha.
I had replaced a comment implying that a set of ifs was meant to be
exhaustive with an actual check for exhaustiveness. It turns out,
they were exhaustive, but not in the way I had assumed. :(
Bug introduced in f3e158edf7, not in any released Tor.
Use the following coccinelle script to change uses of
smartlist_add(sl, tor_strdup(str)) to
smartlist_add_strdup(sl, string) (coccinelle script from nickm
via bug 20048):
@@
expression a;
expression b;
@@
- smartlist_add
+ smartlist_add_strdup
(a,
- tor_strdup(
b
- )
)
The tor_fragile_assert() bug has existed here since c8a5e2d588
in tor-0.2.1.7-alpha forever, but tor_fragile_assert() was mostly a
no-op until 0.2.9.1-alpha.
Fixes bug 19869.
When we refactored purpose_needs_anonymity(), we made it so _all_
bridge requests required anonymity. But that missed the case
that we are allowed to ask a bridge for its own descriptor.
With this patch, we consider the resource, and allow "authority.z"
("your own descriptor, compressed") for a bridge's server descriptor
to be non-anonymous.
Fix for bug 20410; bug not in any released Tor.
I believe that this should never trigger, but if it does, it
suggests that there was a gap between is_sensitive_dir_purpose and
purpose_needs_anonymity that we need to fill. Related to 20077.
This helps protect against bugs where any part of a buf_t's memory
is passed to a function that expects a NUL-terminated input.
It also closes TROVE-2016-10-001 (aka bug 20384).
This commit adds or improves the module-level documenation for:
buffers.c circuitstats.c command.c connection_edge.c control.c
cpuworker.c crypto_curve25519.c crypto_curve25519.h
crypto_ed25519.c crypto_format.c dircollate.c dirserv.c dns.c
dns_structs.h fp_pair.c geoip.c hibernate.c keypin.c ntmain.c
onion.c onion_fast.c onion_ntor.c onion_tap.c periodic.c
protover.c protover.h reasons.c rephist.c replaycache.c
routerlist.c routerparse.c routerset.c statefile.c status.c
tor_main.c workqueue.c
In particular, I've tried to explain (for each documented module)
what each module does, what's in it, what the big idea is, why it
belongs in Tor, and who calls it. In a few cases, I've added TODO
notes about refactoring opportunities.
I've also renamed an argument, and fixed a few DOCDOC comments.
(I've done this instead of changing the semantics of
router_compare_to_my_exit_policy, because dns.c uses
router_compare_to_my_exit_policy too, in a slightly weird way.)
Some compilers apparently noticed that p2len was allowed to be equal
to msg, and so maybe we would be doing memset(prompt2, ' ', 0), and
decided that we probably meant to do memset(prompt2, 0, 0x20);
instead.
Stupid compilers, doing optimization before this kind of warning!
My fix is to just fill the entire prompt2 buffer with spaces,
because it's harmless.
Bugfix on e59f0d4cb9, not in any released Tor.
Previously, we would reject even rendezvous connections to IPv6
addresses when IPv6Exit was false. But that doesn't make sense; we
don't count that as "exit"ing. I've corrected the logic and tried
to make it a lottle more clear.
Fixes bug 18357; this code has been wrong since 9016d9e829 in
0.2.4.7-alpha.
We removed that feature in 0.2.4.2-alpha, but some comments seem to
have lingered.
I didn't add a changes/ file since this is just internal code cleanup.
(like clients do) rather than old-style router descriptors. Now bridges
will blend in with clients in terms of the circuits they build.
Fixes bug 6769; bugfix on 0.2.3.2-alpha.
Clients that use bridges were ignoring their cached microdesc-flavor
consensus files, because they only thought they should use the microdesc
flavor once they had a known-working bridge that could offer microdescs,
and at first boot no bridges are known-working.
This bug caused bridge-using clients to download a new microdesc consensus
on each startup.
Fixes bug 20269; bugfix on 0.2.3.12-alpha.
The client addr is essentially meaningless in this context (yes, it is
possible to explicitly `bind()` AF_LOCAL client side sockets to a path,
but no one does it, and there are better ways to grant that sort of
feature if people want it like using `SO_PASSCRED`).
As before, we check server protocols whenever server_mode(options)
is true and we check client protocols whenever server_mode(options)
is false.
Additionally, we now _also_ check client protocols whenever any
client port is set.
(Technically, we could just remove extend2 cell checking entirely,
since all Tor versions on our network are required to have it, but
let's keep this around as an example of How To Do It.)
(Despite the increased size of the consensus, this should have
approximately zero effect on the compressed consensus size, since
the "proto" line should be completely implied by the "v" line.)
[This is a brute-force method that potentially uses way too much
RAM. Need to rethink this a little. Right now you can DOS an
authority by saying "Foo=1-4294967295".]
Not telling the cmux would sometimes cause an assertion failure in
relay.c when we tried to get an active circuit and found an "active"
circuit with no cells.
Additionally, replace that assert with a test and a log message.
Fix for bug 20203. This is actually probably a bugfix on
0.2.8.1-alpha, specifically my code in 8b4e5b7ee9 where I
made circuit_mark_for_close_() do less in order to simplify our call
graph. Thanks to "cypherpunks" for help diagnosing.
It's a macro that calls down to a function whose behavior has been
getting progresively more complicated.... but we named it as if it
were a variable. That's not so smart. So, replace it with a
function call to a function that was just doing "return
current_consensus".
Fixes bug 20176.
Commit 41cc1f612b introduced a "dns_request"
configuration value which wasn't set to 1 for an entry connection on the
DNSPort leading to a refusal to resolve the given hostname.
This commit set the dns_request flag by default for every entry connection
made to the DNSPort.
Fixes#20109
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
For a brief moment in networkstatus_set_current_consensus(), the old
consensus has been freed, but the node_t objects still have dead
pointers to the routerstatus_t objects within it. During that
interval, we absolutely must not do anything that would cause Tor to
look at those dangling pointers.
Unfortunately, calling the (badly labeled!) current_consensus macro
or anything else that calls into we_use_microdescriptors_for_circuits(),
can make us look at the nodelist.
The fix is to make sure we identify the main consensus flavor
_outside_ the danger zone, and to make the danger zone much much
smaller.
Fixes bug 20103. This bug has been implicitly present for AGES; we
just got lucky for a very long time. It became a crash bug in
0.2.8.2-alpha when we merged 35bbf2e4a4 to make
find_dl_schedule start looking at the consensus, and 4460feaf28
which made node_get_all_orports less (accidentally) tolerant of
nodes with a valid ri pointer but dangling rs pointer.
* Check consistency between the two single onion torrc options
* Use the more relevant option each time we check for single onion mode
* Clarify log messages
* Clarify comments
* Otherwise, no behaviour change
Tor checks that the flag matches the configured onion service anonymity.
Tor refuses to create unflagged onion service using ADD_ONION, if they
would be non-anonymous. The error is:
512 Tor is in non-anonymous onion mode
Similarly, if the NonAnonymous flag is present, and Tor has the default
anonymous onion config:
512 Tor is in anonymous onion mode
Parse the value to UseEntryNodes_option, then set UseEntryNodes before
validating options.
This way, Authorities, Tor2web, and Single Onion Services don't write
spurious "UseEntryNodes 0" lines to their configs. Document the fact that
these tor configurations ignore UseEntryNodes in the manual page.
Also reorder options validation so we modify UseEntryNodes first, then
check its value against EntryNodes.
And silence a warning about disabled UseEntryNodes for hidden services
when we're actually in non-anonymous single onion service mode.
We log this message every time we validate tor's options.
There's no need to log a duplicate in main() as well.
(It is impossible to run main() without validating our options.)
The changes in #19973 fixed ReachableAddresses being applied
too broadly, but they also broke Tor2web (somewhat unintentional)
compatibility with ReachableAddresses.
This patch restores that functionality, which makes intro and
rend point selection is consistent between Tor2web and Single Onion
Services.
Add experimental OnionServiceSingleHopMode and
OnionServiceNonAnonymousMode options. When both are set to 1, every
hidden service on a tor instance becomes a non-anonymous Single Onion
Service. Single Onions make one-hop (direct) connections to their
introduction and renzedvous points. One-hop circuits make Single Onion
servers easily locatable, but clients remain location-anonymous.
This is compatible with the existing hidden service implementation, and
works on the current tor network without any changes to older relays or
clients.
Implements proposal #260, completes ticket #17178. Patch by teor & asn.
squash! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! Implement Prop #260: Single Onion Services
Redesign single onion service poisoning.
When in OnionServiceSingleHopMode, each hidden service key is poisoned
(marked as non-anonymous) on creation by creating a poison file in the
hidden service directory.
Existing keys are considered non-anonymous if this file exists, and
anonymous if it does not.
Tor refuses to launch in OnionServiceSingleHopMode if any existing keys
are anonymous. Similarly, it refuses to launch in anonymous client mode
if any existing keys are non-anonymous.
Rewrite the unit tests to match and be more comprehensive.
Adds a bonus unit test for rend_service_load_all_keys().
(We check consensus method when deciding whether to assume a node is
valid. No need to check the consensus method for Running, since
we will never see a method before 13.)
Closes ticket 20001
g
The functions it warns about are:
assert, memcmp, strcat, strcpy, sprintf, malloc, free, realloc,
strdup, strndup, calloc.
Also, fix a few lingering instances of these in the code. Use other
conventions to indicate _intended_ use of assert and
malloc/realloc/etc.
Users can't run an anonymous client and non-anonymous single
onion service at the same time. We need to know whether we have
any client ports or sockets open to do this check.
When determining whether a client port (SOCKS, Trans, NATD, DNS)
is set, count unix sockets when counting client listeners. This
has no user-visible behaviour change, because these options are
set once and never read in the current tor codebase.
Don't count sockets when setting ControlPort_set, that's what
ControlSocket is for. (This will be reviewed in #19665.)
Don't count sockets when counting server listeners, because the code
that uses these options expects to count externally-visible ports.
(And it would change the behaviour of Tor.)
Check NoOnionTraffic before attaching a stream.
NoOnionTraffic refuses connections to all onion hostnames,
but permits non-onion hostnames and IP addresses.
Check NoDNSRequest, NoIPv4Traffic, and NoIPv6Traffic before
attaching a stream.
NoDNSRequest refuses connections to all non-onion hostnames,
but permits IP addresses.
NoIPv4Traffic refuses connections to IPv4 addresses, but resolves
hostnames.
NoIPv6Traffic refuses connections to IPv6 addresses, but resolves
hostnames.
Combined, they refuse all non-onion hostnames and IP addresses.
OnionTrafficOnly is equivalent to NoDNSRequest, NoIPv4Traffic,
and NoIPv6Traffic.
Add unit tests for parsing and checking option validity.
Add documentation for each flag to the man page.
Add changes file for all of #18693.
Parsing only: the flags do not change client behaviour (yet!)
Rely on onion_populate_cpath to check that we're only using
TAP for the rare hidden service cases.
Check and log if handshakes only support TAP when they should support
ntor.
When a client connects to an intro point not in the client's consensus,
or a hidden service connects to a rend point not in the hidden service's
consensus, we are stuck with using TAP, because there is no ntor link
specifier.
This bug had existed since 0.2.4.7-alpha, but now that we have
FallbackDirs by default, it actually matters.
Fixes bug 19947; bugfix on 0.2.4.7-alpha or maybe 0.2.8.1-alpha.
Rubiate wrote the patch; teor wrote the changes file.
Longer and more explicit log message so we don't confuse users with behind NAT with working configurations and state that public IP addresses only should be provided with "Address", won't work with internal addresses.
These functions were there so that we could abstract the differences
between evbuffer and buf_t. But with the bufferevent removal, this
no longer serves a purpose.
If we know a node's version, and it can't do ntor, consider it not running.
If we have a node's descriptor, and it doesn't have a valid ntor key,
consider it not running.
Refactor these checks so they're consistent between authorities and clients.
Before, they checked for version 0.2.4.18-rc or later, but this
would not catch relays without version lines, or buggy or malicious
relays missing an ntor key.
This fixes#19608, allowing IPv6-only clients to use
microdescriptors, while preserving the ability of bridge clients
to have some IPv4 bridges and some IPv6 bridges.
Fix on c281c036 in 0.2.8.2-alpha.
I grepped and hand-inspected the "it's" instances, to see if any
were supposed to be possessive. While doing that, I found a
"the the", so I grepped to see if there were any more.
Keep the base16 representation of the RSA identity digest in the commit object
so we can use it without using hex_str() or dynamically encoding it everytime
we need it. It's used extensively in the logs for instance.
Fixes#19561
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This patch also updates a comment in the same function for accuracy.
Found by Coverity issue 1362985. Partily fixes#19567.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Only some very ancient distributions don't ship with Libevent 2 anymore,
even the oldest supported Ubuntu LTS version has it. This allows us to
get rid of a lot of compat code.
Our sandboxing code would not allow us to write to stats/hidserv-stats,
causing tor to abort while trying to write stats. This was previously
masked by bug#19556.
When sandboxing is enabled, we could not write any stats to disk.
check_or_create_data_subdir("stats"), which prepares the private stats
directory, calls check_private_dir(), which also opens and not just stats() the
directory. Therefore, we need to also allow open() for the stats dir in our
sandboxing setup.
The *get* state query functions for the SRVs now only return const pointers
and the DEL action needs to be used to delete the SRVs from the state.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This patch makes us retain the intermediate list of K=V entries for
the duration of computing our vote, and lets us use that list with
a new function in order to look up parameters before the consensus
is published.
We can't actually use this function yet because of #19011: our
existing code to do this doesn't actually work, and we'll need a new
consensus method to start using it.
Closes ticket #19012.
Commit and reveal length macro changed from int to unsigned long int
(size_t) because of the sizeof().
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
See ticket #19132 for the clang/llvm warning.
Since voting_schedule is a global static struct, it will be initialized
to zero even without explicitly initializing it with {0}.
This is what the C spec says:
If an object that has automatic storage duration is not initialized
explicitly, its value is indeterminate. If an object that has static
storage duration is not initialized explicitly, then:
— if it has pointer type, it is initialized to a null pointer;
— if it has arithmetic type, it is initialized to (positive or unsigned) zero;
— if it is an aggregate, every member is initialized (recursively) according to these rules;
— if it is a union, the first named member is initialized (recursively) according to these rules.
Code has been changed so every RSA fingerprint for a commit in our state is
validated before being used. This fixes the unit tests by mocking one of the
key function and updating the hardcoded state string.
Also, fix a time parsing overflow on platforms with 32bit time_t
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Signed-off-by: George Kadianakis <desnacked@riseup.net>
We assert on it using the ASSERT_COMMIT_VALID() macro in critical places
where we use them expecting a commit to be valid.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
The prop250 code used the RSA identity key fingerprint to index commit in a
digestmap instead of using the digest.
To behavior change except the fact that we are actually using digestmap
correctly.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This commit makes it that tor now uses the shared random protocol by
initializing the subsystem.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Signed-off-by: George Kadianakis <desnacked@riseup.net>
One of the last piece that parses the votes and consensus in order to update
our state and make decision for the SR values.
We need to inform the SR subsystem when we set the current consensus because
this can be called when loaded from file or downloaded from other authorities
or computed.
The voting schedule is used for the SR timings since we are bound to the
voting system.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Signed-off-by: George Kadianakis <desnacked@riseup.net>
This commit adds the commit(s) line in the vote as well as the SR values. It
also has the mechanism to add the majority SRVs in the consensus.
Signed-off-by: George Kadianakis <desnacked@riseup.net>
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This adds the logic of commit and SR values generation. Furthermore, the
concept of a protocol run is added that is commit is generated at the right
time as well as SR values which are also rotated before a new protocol run.
Signed-off-by: George Kadianakis <desnacked@riseup.net>
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
From 0.2.7.2-alpha onwards, Exits would reject all the IP addresses
they knew about in their exit policy. But this may have disclosed
addresses that were otherwise unlisted.
Now, only advertised addresses are rejected by default by
ExitPolicyRejectPrivate. All known addresses are only rejected when
ExitPolicyRejectLocalInterfaces is explicitly set to 1.
If we manually remove fallbacks in C by adding '/*' and '*/' on separate
lines, stem still parses them as being present, because it only looks at
the start of a line.
Add a comment to this effect in the generated source code.
Remove a fallback that changed its fingerprint after it was listed
This happened after to a software update:
https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-relays/2016-June/009473.html
Remove a fallback that changed IPv4 address
Remove two fallbacks that were slow to deliver consensuses,
we can't guarantee they'll be fast in future.
Blacklist all these fallbacks until operators confirm they're stable.
This commit introduces two new files with their header.
"shared_random.c" contains basic functions to initialize the state and allow
commit decoding for the disk state to be able to parse them from disk.
"shared_random_state.c" contains everything that has to do with the state
for both our memory and disk. Lots of helper functions as well as a
mechanism to query the state in a synchronized way.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Signed-off-by: George Kadianakis <desnacked@riseup.net>
base16_decodes() now returns the number of decoded bytes. It's interface
changes from returning a "int" to a "ssize_t". Every callsite now checks the
returned value.
Fixes#14013
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
When deleting an ephemeral HS, we were only iterating on circuit with an
OPEN state. However, it could be possible that an intro point circuit didn't
reached the open state yet.
This commit makes it that we close the circuit regardless of its state
except if it was already marked for close.
Fixes#18604
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
The FetchHidServDescriptors check was placed before the descriptor cache
lookup which made the option not working because it was never using the
cache in the first place.
Fixes#18704
Patched-by: twim
Signef-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
When you divide an int by an int and get a fraction and _then_ cast
to double, coverity assumes that you meant to cast to a double
first.
In my fix for -Wfloat-conversion in 493499a339, I
did something like this that coverity didn't like.
Instead, I'm taking another approach here.
Fixes CID 1232089, I hope.
This is a big-ish patch, but it's very straightforward. Under this
clang warning, we're not actually allowed to have a global variable
without a previous extern declaration for it. The cases where we
violated this rule fall into three roughly equal groups:
* Stuff that should have been static.
* Stuff that was global but where the extern was local to some
other C file.
* Stuff that was only global when built for the unit tests, that
needed a conditional extern in the headers.
The first two were IMO genuine problems; the last is a wart of how
we build tests.
This warning triggers on silently promoting a float to a double. In
our code, it's just a sign that somebody used a float by mistake,
since we always prefer double.
This warning, IIUC, means that the compiler doesn't like it when it
sees a NULL check _after_ we've already dereferenced the
variable. In such cases, it considers itself free to eliminate the
NULL check.
There are a couple of tricky cases:
One was the case related to the fact that tor_addr_to_in6() can
return NULL if it gets a non-AF_INET6 address. The fix was to
create a variant which asserts on the address type, and never
returns NULL.
Previously, we used !directory_fetches_from_authorities() to predict
that we would tunnel connections. But the rules have changed
somewhat over the course of 0.2.8
So, back long ago, XXX012 meant, "before Tor 0.1.2 is released, we
had better revisit this comment and fix it!"
But we have a huge pile of such comments accumulated for a large
number of released versions! Not cool.
So, here's what I tried to do:
* 0.2.9 and 0.2.8 are retained, since those are not yet released.
* XXX+ or XXX++ or XXX++++ or whatever means, "This one looks
quite important!"
* The others, after one-by-one examination, are downgraded to
plain old XXX. Which doesn't mean they aren't a problem -- just
that they cannot possibly be a release-blocking problem.
There was a > that should have been an ==, and a missing !. These
together prevented us from issuing a warning in the case that a
nickname matched an Unnamed node only.
Fixes bug 19203; bugfix on 0.2.3.1-alpha.
Remove support for "GET /tor/bytes.txt" DirPort request, and
"GETINFO dir-usage" controller request, which were only available
via a compile-time option in Tor anyway.
Feature was added in 0.2.2.1-alpha. Resolves ticket 19035.
I introduced this bug when I moved signing_key_cert into
signed_descriptor_t. Bug not in any released Tor. Fixes bug 19175, and
another case of 19128.
Just like signed_descriptor_from_routerinfo(), routerlist_reparse_old()
copies the fields from one signed_descriptor_t to another, and then
clears the fields from the original that would have been double-freed by
freeing the original. But when I fixed the s_d_f_r() bug [#19128] in
50cbf22099, I missed the fact that the code was duplicated in
r_p_o().
Duplicated code strikes again!
For a longer-term solution here, I am not only adding the missing fix to
r_p_o(): I am also extracting the duplicated code into a new function.
Many thanks to toralf for patiently sending me stack traces until
one made sense.
Now that the field exists in signed_descriptor_t, we need to make
sure we free it when we free a signed_descriptor_t, and we need to
make sure that we don't free it when we convert a routerinfo_t to a
signed_descriptor_t.
But not in any released Tor. I found this while working on #19128.
One problem: I don't see how this could cause 19128.
With the fix for #17150, I added a duplicate certificate here. Here
I remove the original location in 0.2.8. (I wouldn't want to do
that in 027, due to the amount of authority-voting-related code
drift.)
Closes 19073.
This API change makes it so that routerinfo_incompatible...() no
longer takes a routerinfo_t, so that it's obvious that it should
only look at fields from the signed_descriptor_t.
This change should prevent a recurrence of #17150.
We need this field to be in signed_descriptor_t so that
routerinfo_incompatible_with_extrainfo can work correctly (#17150).
But I don't want to move it completely in this patch, since a great
deal of the code that messes with it has been in flux since 0.2.7,
when this ticket was opened. I should open another ticket about
removing the field from routerinfo_t and extrainfo_t later on.
This patch fixes no actual behavior.
The routerinfo we pass to routerinfo_incompatible_with_extrainfo is
the latest routerinfo for the relay. The signed_descriptor_t, on
the other hand, is the signed_descriptor_t that corresponds to the
extrainfo. That means we should be checking the digest256 match
with that signed_descriptor_t, not with the routerinfo.
Fixes bug 17150 (and 19017); bugfix on 0.2.7.2-alpha.
When parsing detached signature, we make sure that we use the length of the
digest algorithm instead of an hardcoded DIGEST256_LEN in order to avoid
comparing bytes out of bound with a smaller digest length such as SHA1.
Fixes#19066
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
We know there are overflows in curve25519-donna-c32, so we'll have
to have that one be fwrapv.
Only apply the asan, ubsan, and trapv options to the code that does
not need to run in constant time. Those options introduce branches
to the code they instrument.
(These introduced branches should never actually be taken, so it
might _still_ be constant time after all, but branch predictors are
complicated enough that I'm not really confident here. Let's aim for
safety.)
Closes 17983.
Make directory authorities write the v3-status-votes file out
to disk earlier in the consensus process, so we have the votes
even if we abort the consensus process later on.
Resolves ticket 19036.
In dirserv_compute_performance_thresholds, we allocate arrays based
on the length of 'routers', a list of routerinfo_t, but loop over
the nodelist. The 'routers' list may be shorter when relays were
filtered by routers_make_ed_keys_unique, leading to an out-of-bounds
write on directory authorities.
This bug was originally introduced in 26e89742, but it doesn't look
possible to trigger until routers_make_ed_keys_unique was introduced
in 13a31e72.
Fixes bug 19032; bugfix on tor 0.2.8.2-alpha.
This was one of our longest functions, at 600 lines. It makes a nice
table-driven URL-based function instead.
The code is a bit ugly, it leave the indentation as it is in hopes of
making pending directory.c changes easier to merge. Later we can
clean up the indentation.
Also, remove unused mallinfo export code from directory.c
Closes ticket 16698
Previously, we were using the generic schedule for some downloads,
and the consensus schedule for others.
Resolves ticket 18816; fix on fddb814fe in 0.2.4.13-alpha.
We used to be locked in to the "tap" handshake length, and now we can
handle better handshakes like "ntor".
Resolves ticket 18998.
I checked that relay_send_command_from_edge() behaves fine when you
hand it a payload with length 0. Clients behave fine too, since current
clients remain strict about the required length in the rendezvous2 cells.
(Clients will want to become less strict once they have an alternate
format that they're willing to receive.)
we should avoid launching a consensus fetch if we don't want one,
but if we do end up with an extra one, we should let the other checks
take care of it.
We'll back off from the request in connection_ap_handshake_attach_circuit,
or cancel it in connection_dir_close_consensus_fetches, and those are the
only places we need to check.
Tor stores client authorization cookies in two slightly different forms.
The service's client_keys file has the standard base64-encoded cookie,
including two chars of padding. The hostname file and the client remove
the two padding chars, and store an auth type flag in the unused bits.
The distinction makes no sense. Refactor all decoding to use the same
function, which will accept either form, and use a helper function for
encoding the truncated format.
(torspec says hop counts are 1-based.)
Closes ticket 18982, bugfix on 0275b6876 in tor 0.2.6.2-alpha
and 907db008a in tor 0.2.4.5-alpha.
Credit to Xiaofan Li for reporting this issue.
This improves client anonymity and avoids directory header tampering.
The extra load on the authorities should be offset by the fallback
directories feature.
This also simplifies the fixes to #18809.
Delete an unnecessary check for non-preferred IP versions.
Allows clients which can't reach any directories of their
preferred IP address version to get directory documents.
Patch on #17840 in 0.2.8.1-alpha.
After #17840 in 0.2.8.1-alpha, we incorrectly chose an IPv4
address for all DIRIND_ONEHOP directory connections,
even if the routerstatus didn't have an IPv4 address.
This likely affected bridge clients with IPv6 bridges.
Resolves#18921.
The problem is that "q" is always set on the first iteration even
if the question is not a supported question. This set of "q" is
not necessary, and will be handled after exiting the loop if there
if a supported q->type was found.
[Changes file by nickm]
lease enter the commit message for your changes. Lines starting
Decide to advertise begindir support in a similar way to how
we decide to advertise DirPort.
Fix up the associated descriptor-building unit tests.
Resolves#18616, bugfix on 0c8e042c30 in #12538 in 0.2.8.1-alpha.
Apparently somewhere along the line we decided that MIN might be
missing.
But we already defined it (if it was missing) in compat.h, which
everybody includes.
Closes ticket 18889.
When we connect to a hidden service as a client we may need three internal
circuits, one for the descriptor retrieval, introduction, and rendezvous.
Let's try to make sure we have them. Closes#13239.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
Unlike tor_assert(), these macros don't abort the process. They're
good for checking conditions we want to warn about, but which don't
warrant a full crash.
This commit also changes the default implementation for
tor_fragile_assert() to tor_assert_nonfatal_unreached_once().
Closes ticket 18613.
When the directory authorities refuse a bad relay's descriptor,
encourage the relay operator to contact us. Many relay operators
won't notice this line in their logs, but it's a win if even a
few learn why we don't like what their relay was doing.
Resolves ticket 18760.
I didn't specify a contact mechanism (e.g. an email address), because
every time we've done that in the past, a few years later we noticed
that the code was pointing people to an obsolete contact address.
This changes simply renames them by removing "Testing" in front of them and
they do not require TestingTorNetwork to be enabled anymore.
Fixes#18481
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
Only when we were actually flushing the cell stats to a controller
would we free them. Thus, they could stay in RAM even after the
circuit was freed (eg if we didn't have any controllers).
Fixes bug 18673; bugfix on 0.2.5.1-alpha.
They incorrectly summarized what the function was planning to do,
leading to wrong behavior like making an http request to an orport,
or making a begindir request to a dirport.
This change backs out some of the changes made in commit e72cbf7a, and
most of the changes made in commit ba6509e9.
This patch resolves bug 18625. There more changes I want to make
after this one, for code clarity.
This change allows us to simplify path selection for clients, and it
should have minimal effect in practice since >99% of Guards already have
the Stable flag. Implements ticket 18624.
Commit e72cbf7a4 introduced a change to directory_initiate_command_rend()
that made tor use the ORPort when making a directory request to the DirPort.
The primary consequence was that a relay couldn't selftest its DirPort thus
failing to work and join the network properly.
The main issue was we were always considering an anonymized connection to be
an OR connection which is not true.
Fixes#18623
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
Regardless of the setting of ExtendAllowPrivateAddresses.
This fixes a bug with pluggable transports that ignore the
(potentially private) address in their bridge line.
Fixes bug 18517; bugfix on 23b088907f in tor-0.2.8.1-alpha.
When requesting extrainfo descriptors from a trusted directory
server, check whether it is an authority or a fallback directory
which supports extrainfo descriptors.
Fixes bug 18489; bugfix on 90f6071d8d in tor-0.2.4.7-alpha.
Reported by "atagar", patch by "teor".
Make it clearer that they are about outgoing connection attempts.
Specify the options involved where they were missing from one log
message.
Clarify a comment.
Downgrade logs and backtraces about IP versions to
info-level. Only log backtraces once each time tor runs.
Assists in diagnosing bug 18351; bugfix on c3cc8e16e in
tor-0.2.8.1-alpha.
Reported by "sysrqb" and "Christian", patch by "teor".
commit edeba3d4 removed a switch, but left the "break" lines in
from that switch. fortunately the resulting behavior was not wrong,
since there was an outer switch that it was ok to break from.
no actual changes here -- but the new indenting makes it clear
that the fixes in #18332 were not as good as they should have been.
the next commit will deal with that.
We've got to make sure that every single subsequent calculation in
dirserv_generate_networkstatus_vote_obj() are based on the list of
routerinfo_t *after* we've removed possible duplicates, not before.
Fortunately, none of the functions that were taking a routerlist_t
as an argument were actually using any fields other than this list
of routers.
Resolves issue 18318.DG3.
I had a half-built mechanism to track, during the voting process,
whether the Ed25519 value (or lack thereof) reflected a true
consensus among the authorities. But we never actually inserted this
field in the consensus.
The key idea here is that we first attempt to match up votes by pairs
of <Ed,RSA>, where <Ed> can be NULL if we're told that there is no
Ed key. If this succeeds, then we can treat all those votes as 'a
consensus for Ed'. And we can include all other votes with a
matching RSA key and no statement about Ed keys as being "also about
the same relay."
After that, we look for RSA keys we haven't actually found an entry
for yet, and see if there are enough votes for them, NOT considering
Ed keys. If there are, we match them as before, but we treat them
as "not a consensus about ed".
When we include an entry in a consensus, if it does not reflect a
consensus about ed keys, then we include a new NoEdConsensus flag on
it.
This is all only for consensus method 22 or later.
Also see corresponding dir-spec patch.
When generating a vote, and we have two routerinfos with the same ed
key, omit the one published earlier.
This was supposed to have been solved by key pinning, but when I
made key pinning optional, I didn't realize that this would jump up
and bite us. It is part of bug 18318, and the root cause of 17668.
If we're a server with no address configured, resolve_my_hostname
will need this. But not otherwise. And the preseeding itself can
consume a few seconds if like tails we have no resolvers.
Fixes bug 18548.
I didn't want to grant blanket permissions for chmod() and chown(),
so here's what I had to do:
* Grant open() on all parent directories of a unix socket
* Write code to allow chmod() and chown() on a given file only.
* Grant chmod() and chown() on the unix socket.
This is a part of a fix for 18253; bugfix on 0.2.8.1-alpha.
Alternatively, we could permit chmod/chown in the sandbox, but I
really don't like giving the sandbox permission to alter
permissions.
Launching 7 descriptor fetches makes a connection to each HSDir that is 6
and the seventh one fails to pick an HSDir because they are all being used
already so it was killing all pending connections at once.
Fixes#15937
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
When we made HidServDirectoryV2 always 1, we removed the situation
where a relay could choose not to be an HSDir. Now simplify the
rest of the code to reflect this decision.
(We have to remove two apparently unrelated free() calls in the unit
tests, since they used to free stuff that we created as a side effect
of calling router_get_my_routerinfo(), and now we no longer call that.)
This simplifies relay behavior, because the relay offers the hsdir
functionality independent of whether the directory authorities have
decided this relay is suitable for clients to use yet.
Implements ticket 18332.
The transproxy feature is only enabled when __FreeBSD__ is defined, and
only regular FreeBSD does that. Change this to __FreeBSD_kernel__ which
is defined on derivatives as well.
This enables the relevant options/validate__transproxy test on FreeBSD
derivatives.
Allow fallback directories which have been stable for 7 days
to work around #18050, which causes relays to submit descriptors
with 0 DirPorts when restarted. (Particularly during Tor version
upgrades.)
Ignore low fallback directory count in alpha builds.
Set the target count to 50.
This is in accordance with our usual policy against freelists,
now that working allocators are everywhere.
It should also make memarea.c's coverage higher.
I also doubt that this code ever helped performance.
Previously, I had left in some debugging code with /*XXX*/ after it,
which nobody noticed. Live and learn! Next time I will use /*XXX
DO NOT COMMIT*/ or something.
We need to define a new consensus method for this; consensus method
21 shouldn't actually be used.
Fixes bug 17702; bugfix on 0.2.7.2-alpha.
We already write out bootstrapping progress (see bug 9927) per new
microdesc batch. There's no need to do a full "I learned some more
directory information, but not enough to..." line each time too.
Now, when a user who has set EntryNodes finishes bootstrapping, Tor
automatically repopulates the guard set based on this new directory
information. Fixes bug 16825; bugfix on 0.2.3.1-alpha.