It's not okay to use the same varargs list twice, and apparently
some windows build environments produce code here that would leave
tor_asprintf() broken. Fix for bug 20560; bugfix on 0.2.2.11-alpha
when tor_asprintf() was introduced.
(OpenSSL 1.1 makes EVP_CIPHER_CTX opaque, _and_ adds acceleration
for counter mode on more architectures. So it won't work if we try
the older approach, and it might help if we try the newer one.)
Fixes bug 20588.
In our code to write public keys to a string, for some unfathomable
reason since 253f0f160e, we would allocate a memory BIO, then
set the NOCLOSE flag on it, extract its memory buffer, and free it.
Then a little while later we'd free the memory buffer with
BUF_MEM_free().
As of openssl 1.1 this doesn't work any more, since there is now a
BIO_BUF_MEM structure that wraps the BUF_MEM structure. This
BIO_BUF_MEM doesn't get freed in our code.
So, we had a memory leak!
Is this an openssl bug? Maybe. But our code was already pretty
silly. Why mess around with the NOCLOSE flag here when we can just
keep the BIO object around until we don't need the buffer any more?
Fixes bug 20553; bugfix on 0.0.2pre8
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.
All supported Tors (0.2.4+) require versions of openssl that can
handle this.
Now that our link certificates are RSA2048, this might actually help
vs fingerprinting a little.
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
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
- )
)
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.
(Specifically, carriage return after a quoted value in a config
line. Fixes bug 19167; bugfix on 0.2.0.16-alpha when we introduced
support for quoted values. Unit tests, changes file, and this
parenthetical by nickm.)
This is a kludge to deal with the fact that `tor_addr_t` doesn't contain
`sun_path`. This currently ONLY happens when circuit isolation is being
checked, for an isolation mode that is force disabled anyway, so the
kludge is "ugly but adequate", but realistically, making `tor_addr_t`
and the AF_UNIX SocksPort code do the right thing is probably the better
option.
Closes ticket 20303.
The LIBRESSL_VERSION_NUMBER check is needed because if our openssl
is really libressl, it will have an openssl version number we can't
really believe.
When deleting unsuitable addresses in get_interface_address6_list(), to
avoid reordering IPv6 interface addresses and keep the order returned by
the OS, use SMARTLIST_DEL_CURRENT_KEEPORDER() instead of
SMARTLIST_DEL_CURRENT().
This issue was reported by René Mayrhofer.
[Closes ticket 20163; changes file written by teor. This paragraph
added by nickm]
Sierra provides clock_gettime(), but not pthread_condattr_setclock.
So we had better lot try to use CLOCK_MONOTONIC as our source for
time when waiting, since we ccan never actually tell the condition
that we mean CLOCK_MONOTONIC.
This isn't a tor bug yet, since we never actually pass a timeout to
tor_cond_wait() outside of the unit tests.
Previously, the IV and key were stored in the structure, even though
they mostly weren't needed. The only purpose they had was to
support a seldom-used API where you could pass NULL when creating
a cipher in order to get a random key/IV, and then pull that key/IV
back out.
This saves 32 bytes per AES instance, and makes it easier to support
different key lengths.
We have a mock for our RSA key generation function, so we now wire
it to pk_generate(). This covers all the cases that were not using
pk_generate() before -- all ~93 of them.
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.
Previously setup_capture_of_logs would prevent log messages from
going to the console entirely. That's a problem, since sometimes
log messages are bugs! Now setup_capture_of_logs() acts sensibly.
If you really do need to keep a message from going to the console
entirely, there is setup_full_capture_of_logs(). But only use that
if you're prepared to make sure that there are no extraneous
messages generated at all.
OpenBSD removes this function, and now that Tor requires Libevent 2,
we should also support the OpenBSD Libevent 2.
Fixes bug 19904; bugfix on 0.2.5.4-alpha.
To maintain precision, to get nanoseconds, we were multiplying our
tick count by a billion, then dividing by ticks-per-second. But
that apparently isn't such a great idea, since ticks-per-second is
sometimes a billion on its own, so our intermediate result was
giving us attoseconds.
When you're counting in attoseconds, you can only fit about 9
seconds into an int64_t, which is not so great for our purposes.
Instead, we now simplify the 1000000000/1000000000 fraction before
we start messing with nanoseconds. This has potential to mess us
up if some future MS version declares that performance counters will
use 1,000,000,007 units per second, but let's burn that bridge when
we come to it.
* Raise limit: 16k isn't all that high.
* Don't log when limit exceded; log later on.
* Say "over" when we log more than we say we log.
* Add target version to changes file