It did a good idea, but the code-quality of libupnpc and libnatpnp
is so dodgy that I'm not really comfortable including them alongside
Tor proper. Instead, we'll recommend that people do the pure-go
reimplementation instead. Closes ticket 13338.
Make sure that signing certs are signed by the right identity key,
to prevent a recurrence of #16530. Also make sure that the master
identity key we find on disk matches the one we have in RAM, if we
have one.
This is for #16581.
When there is a signing key and the certificate lists a key, make
sure that the certificate lists the same signing key.
When there are public key and secret key stored in separate files,
make sure they match.
Use the right file name when we load an encrypted secret key and
then find a problem with it.
This is part of 16581.
Add a new and slow unit test that checks if libscrypt_scrypt() and
EBP_PBE_scrypt() yield the same keys from test vectors.
squash! Assert interoperability betweeen libscrypt and OpenSSL EBP_PBE_scrypt().
squash! Assert interoperability betweeen libscrypt and OpenSSL EBP_PBE_scrypt().
squash! Assert interoperability betweeen libscrypt and OpenSSL EBP_PBE_scrypt().
When cleaning up extra circuits that we've opened for performance reason, we
need to count all the introduction circuit and not only the established ones
else we can end up with too many introduction points.
This also adds the check for expiring nodes when serving an INTRODUCE cell
since it's possible old clients are still using them before we have time to
close them.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
To upload a HS descriptor, this commits makes it that we wait for all
introduction point to be fully established.
Else, the HS ends up uploading a descriptor that may contain intro points
that are not yet "valid" meaning not yet established or proven to work. It
could also trigger three uploads for the *same* descriptor if every intro
points takes more than 30 seconds to establish because of desc_is_dirty
being set at each intro established.
To achieve that, n_intro_points_established varialbe is added to the
rend_service_t object that is incremented when we established introduction
point and decremented when we remove a valid intro point from our list.
The condition to upload a descriptor also changes to test if all intro
points are ready by making sure we have equal or more wanted intro points
that are ready.
The desc_id_dirty flag is kept to be able to still use the
RendInitialPostPeriod option.
This partially fixes#13483.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
There is a case where if the introduction circuit fails but the node is
still in the consensus, we clean up the intro point and choose an other one.
This commit fixes that by trying to reuse the existing intro point with a
maximum value of retry.
A retry_nodes list is added to rend_services_introduce() and when we remove
an invalid intro points that fits the use case mentionned before, we add the
node to the retry list instead of removing it. Then, we retry on them before
creating new ones.
This means that the requirement to remove an intro point changes from "if no
intro circuit" to "if no intro circuit then if no node OR we've reached our
maximum circuit creation count".
For now, the maximum retries is set to 3 which it completely arbitrary. It
should also at some point be tied to the work done on detecting if our
network is down or not.
Fixes#8239
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
The reasoning for refactoring this function is that removing the
introduction point adaptative algorithm (#4862) ended up changing quite a
bit rend_services_introduce(). Also, to fix some open issues (#8239, #8864
and #13483), this work had to be done.
First, this removes time_expiring variable in an intro point object and
INTRO_POINT_EXPIRATION_GRACE_PERIOD trickery and use an expiring_nodes list
where intro nodes that should expire are moved to that list and cleaned up
only once the new descriptor is successfully uploaded. The previous scheme
was adding complexity and arbitrary timing to when we expire an intro point.
We keep the intro points until we are sure that the new descriptor is
uploaded and thus ready to be used by clients. For this,
rend_service_desc_has_uploaded() is added to notify the HS subsystem that
the descriptor has been successfully uploaded. The purpose of this function
is to cleanup the expiring nodes and circuits if any.
Secondly, this adds the remove_invalid_intro_points() function in order to
split up rend_services_introduce() a bit with an extra modification to it
that fixes#8864. We do NOT close the circuit nor delete the intro point if
the circuit is still alive but the node was removed from the consensus. Due
to possible information leak, we let the circuit and intro point object
expire instead.
Finally, the whole code flow is simplified and large amount of documentation
has been added to mostly explain the why of things in there.
Fixes#8864
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
The runtime sanity checking is slightly different from the optimized
basepoint stuff in that it uses a given implementation's self tests if
available, and checks if signing/verification works with a test vector
from the IETF EdDSA draft.
The unit tests include a new testcase that will fuzz donna against ref0,
including the blinding and curve25519 key conversion routines. If this
is something that should be done at runtime (No?), the code can be
stolen from there.
Note: Integrating batch verification is not done yet.
Integration work scavanged from nickm's `ticket8897_9663_v2` branch,
with minor modifications. Tor will still sanity check the output but
now also attempts to catch extreme breakage by spot checking the
optimized implementation vs known values from the NaCl documentation.
Implements feature 9663.
This needs to be done to allow for the possibility of removing the
ref10 code at a later date, though it is not performance critical.
When integrated by kludging it into tor, it passes unit tests, and is
twice as fast.
Integrating it the "wrong" way into common/crypto_ed25519.c passes
`make check`, and there appear to be some known answer tests for this,
so I assume I got it right.
Blinding a public key goes from 139.10 usec to 70.78 usec using
ed25519-donna (NB: Turboboost/phase of moon), though the code isn't
critical path, so supporting it is mostly done for completeness.
Integrate ed25519-donna into the build process, and provide an
interface that matches the `ref10` code. Apart from the blinding and
Curve25519 key conversion, this functions as a drop-in replacement for
ref10 (verified by modifying crypto_ed25519.c).
Tests pass, and the benchmarks claim it is quite a bit faster, however
actually using the code requires additional integration work.
The following arguments change how chutney verifies the network:
--bytes n sends n bytes per test connection (10 KBytes)
--connections n makes n test connections per client (1)
--hs-multi-client 1 makes each client connect to each HS (0)
Requires the corresponding chutney performance testing changes.
Note: using --connections 7 or greater on a HS will trigger #15937.
Patch by "teor".
This is a way to specify the amount of introduction points an hidden service
can have. Maximum value is 10 and the default is 3.
Fixes#4862
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
When we ran out of intro points for a hidden service (which could
happen on a newnym), we would change the connection's state back to
"waiting for hidden service descriptor." But this would make an
assertion fail if we went on to call circuit_get_open_circ_or_launch
again.
This fixes bug 16013; I believe the bug was introduced in
38be533c69, where we made it possible for
circuit_get_open_circ_or_launch() to change the connection's state.
RFC 952 is approximately 30 years old, and people are failing to comply,
by serving A records with '_' as part of the hostname. Since relaxing
the check is a QOL improvement for our userbase, relax the check to
allow such abominations as destinations, especially since there are
likely to be other similarly misconfigured domains out there.
When I fixed#11243, I made it so we would take the digest of a
descriptor before tokenizing it, so we could desist from download
attempts if parsing failed. But when I did that, I didn't remove an
assertion that the descriptor began with "onion-key". Usually, this
was enforced by "find_start_of_next_microdescriptor", but when
find_start_of_next_microdescriptor returned NULL, the assertion was
triggered.
Fixes bug 16400. Thanks to torkeln for reporting and
cypherpunks_backup for diagnosing and writing the first fix here.
Every functions and objects that are used for hidden service descriptor
caches are moved to rendcache.{c|h}.
This commit does NOT change anything, just moving code around.
Fixes#16399
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
For now, rend_cache_entry_t has been moved from or.h to rendcache.h and
those files have been added to the build system.
In the next commit, these will contain hidden service descriptor cache ABI
and API for both client and directory side. The goal is to consolidate the
descriptor caches in one location to ease development, maintenance, review
and improve documentation for each cache behavior and algorithm.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
When --keygen is provided, we prompt for a passphrase when we make a
new master key; if it is nonempty, we store the secret key in a new
crypto_pwbox.
Also, if --keygen is provided and there *is* an encrypted master key,
we load it and prompt for a passphrase unconditionally.
We make a new signing key unconditionally when --keygen is provided.
We never overwrite a master key.
If crypto_early_init fails, a typo in a return value from tor_init
means that tor_main continues running, rather than returning
an error value.
Fixes bug 16360; bugfix on d3fb846d8c in 0.2.5.2-alpha,
introduced when implementing #4900.
Patch by "teor".
This reverts commit 9407040c59.
Small fix, "e->received" had to be removed since that variable doesn't exist
anymore.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
clang complains that the address of struct member in an assert in
SSL_SESSION_get_master_key is always non-NULL.
Instead, check each pointer argument is non-NULL before using it.
Fix on f90a704f12 from 27 May 2015, not in any released version of tor.