The issue was that we overlooked the possibility of reverse DNS success
at the end of connection_ap_handshake_socks_resolved(). Issue discovered
by katmagic, thanks!
We were using strncpy before, which isn't our style for stuff like
this.
This isn't a bug, though: before calling strncpy, we were checking
that strlen(src) was indeed == HEX_DIGEST_LEN, which is less than
sizeof(dst), so there was no way we could fail to NUL-terminate.
Still, strncpy(a,b,sizeof(a)) is an idiom that we ought to squash
everyplace.
Fixes CID #427.
Using strncpy meant that if listenaddress were ever >=
sizeof(sockaddr_un.sun_path), we would fail to nul-terminate
sun_path. This isn't a big deal: we never read sun_path, and the
kernel is smart enough to reject the sockaddr_un if it isn't
nul-terminated. Nonetheless, it's a dumb failure mode. Instead, we
should reject addresses that don't fit in sockaddr_un.sun_path.
Coverity found this; it's CID 428. Bugfix on 0.2.0.3-alpha.
When we rejected a descriptor for not being the one we wanted, we
were letting the parsed descriptor go out of scope.
Found by Coverity; CID # 30.
Bugfix on 0.2.1.26.
(No changes file yet, since this is not in any 0.2.1.x release.)
I'm not one to insist on C's miserly stack limits, but allocating a
256K array on the stack is too much even for me.
Bugfix on 0.2.1.7-alpha. Found by coverity. Fixes CID # 450.
Every node_t has either a routerinfo_t or a routerstatus_t, so every
node_t *should* have a nickname. Nonetheless, let's make sure in
hex_digest_nickname_matches().
Should quiet CID 434.
This is a little error-prone when the local has a different type
from the parameter, and is very error-prone with both have the same
type. Let's not do this.
Fixes CID #437,438,439,440,441.
For some inexplicable reason, Coverity departs from its usual
standards of avoiding false positives here, and warns about all
sscanf usage, even when the formatting strings are totally safe.
Addresses CID # 447, 446.
A couple of places in control.c were using connection_handle_write()
to flush important stuff (the response to a SIGNAL command, an
ERR-level status event) before Tor went down. But
connection_handle_write() isn't meaningful for bufferevents, so we'd
crash.
This patch adds a new connection_flush() that works for all connection
backends, and makes control.c use that instead.
Fix for bug 3367; bugfix on 0.2.3.1-alpha.
libnatpmp-20110618 changed the API that tor-fw-helper used and for a time
tor-fw-helper could not build against the newest libnatpmp. This patch brings
support for libnatpmp to tor-fw-helper.