Frequently, when a patch fails, it has failures in several files.
Using the "-k" flag will let us learn all the compilation errors,
not just the first one that the compiler hits.
Based on a patch by rl1987.
New IP address from 194.109.206.212 to 45.66.33.45.
Signed request from Alex de Joode, operator of dizum:
https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/31406
Published descriptor by dizum on August 12th, 2019:
--
r dizum fqbq1v2DCDxTj0QDi7+gd1h911U GZmZtCLaPDQNxkhIFj8UcgTRAuA 2019-08-12 15:28:40 45.66.33.45 443 80
s Authority Fast Running Stable V2Dir Valid
v Tor 0.4.0.5
pr Cons=1-2 Desc=1-2 DirCache=1-2 HSDir=1-2 HSIntro=3-4 HSRend=1-2 Link=1-5 LinkAuth=1,3 Microdesc=1-2 Relay=1-2 Padding=1
w Bandwidth=20 Unmeasured=1
p reject 1-65535
--
Finally, confirmed by DNS:
$ dig +short tor.dizum.com
45.66.33.45
Closes#31406
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
On some windows builds, time_t is 64 bits but long is not. This is
causing appveyor builds to fail.
Also, one of our uses of labs() on time_t was logically incorrect:
it was telling us to accept NETINFO cells up to three minutes
_before_ the message they were responding to, which doesn't make
sense.
This patch adds a time_abs() function that we should eventually move
to intmath.h or something. For now, though, it will make merges
easier to have it file-local in channeltls.c.
Fixes bug 31343; bugfix on 0.2.4.4-alpha.
Replace the 157 fallbacks originally introduced in Tor 0.3.5.6-rc
in December 2018 (of which ~122 were still functional), with a
list of 148 fallbacks (70 new, 78 existing, 79 removed) generated
in June 2019.
Closes ticket 28795.
Note that we created extra lists from DE and US, but they didn't add
any more fallbacks when we tried to merge them.
Update the fallback directory mirrors by merging the current list with:
fallback_dirs_2019-06-28-08-58-39_AU_f0437a39ddbc8459.inc
Part of 28795, see that ticket for logs.
Update the fallback directory mirrors by replacing the old list with:
fallback_dirs_2019-06-25-11-49-10_AU_a37adb956fbb5cd2.inc
Part of 28795, see that ticket for logs.
Previously we had "make check" launched whenever DISTCHECK was
false. Now we'd like to turn it off in a few other circumstances,
like running chutney. Maybe stem too?
If tor is compiled on a system with neither vasprintf nor _vscprintf,
the fallback implementation exposes a logic flaw which prevents
proper usage of strings longer than 127 characters:
* tor_vsnprintf returns -1 if supplied buffer is not large enough,
but tor_vasprintf uses this function to retrieve required length
* the result of tor_vsnprintf is not properly checked for negative
return values
Both aspects together could in theory lead to exposure of uninitialized
stack memory in the resulting string. This requires an invalid format
string or data that exceeds integer limitations.
Fortunately tor is not even able to run with this implementation because
it runs into asserts early on during startup. Also the unit tests fail
during a "make check" run.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Stoeckmann <tobias@stoeckmann.org>
[backported to 0.2.9 by nickm]
In 0.3.4 and later, these functions are declared in rephist.h:
STATIC uint64_t find_largest_max(bw_array_t *b);
STATIC void commit_max(bw_array_t *b);
STATIC void advance_obs(bw_array_t *b);
But in 0.2.9, they are declared in rephist.c and test_relay.c.
So compilers fail with a "must use 'struct' tag" error.
We add the missing struct typedef in test_relay.c, to match the
declarations in rephist.c.
(Merge commit 813019cc57 moves these functions into rephist.h instead.)
Fixes bug 30184; not in any released version of Tor.
In 0.3.4 and later, we declare write_array as:
extern struct bw_array_t *write_array;
...
typedef struct bw_array_t bw_array_t;
But in 0.2.9, we declare write_array as:
typedef struct bw_array_t bw_array_t;
extern bw_array_t *write_array;
And then again in rephist.c:
typedef struct bw_array_t bw_array_t;
So some compilers fail with a duplicate declaration error.
We backport 684b396ce5, which removes the duplicate declaration.
And this commit deals with the undeclared type error.
Backports a single line from merge commit 813019cc57.
Fixes bug 30184; not in any released version of Tor.
If the concatenation of connection buffer and the buffer of linked
connection exceeds INT_MAX bytes, then buf_move_to_buf returns -1 as an
error value.
This value is currently casted to size_t (variable n_read) and will
erroneously lead to an increasement of variable "max_to_read".
This in turn can be used to call connection_buf_read_from_socket to
store more data inside the buffer than expected and clogging the
connection buffer.
If the linked connection buffer was able to overflow INT_MAX, the call
of buf_move_to_buf would have previously internally triggered an integer
overflow, corrupting the state of the connection buffer.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Stoeckmann <tobias@stoeckmann.org>
Many buffer functions have a hard limit of INT_MAX for datalen, but
this limitation is not enforced in all functions:
- buf_move_all may exceed that limit with too many chunks
- buf_move_to_buf exceeds that limit with invalid buf_flushlen argument
- buf_new_with_data may exceed that limit (unit tests only)
This patch adds some annotations in some buf_pos_t functions to
guarantee that no out of boundary access could occur even if another
function lacks safe guards against datalen overflows.
[This is a backport of the submitted patch to 0.2.9, where the
buf_move_to_buf and buf_new_with_data functions did not exist.]
When classifying a client's selection of TLS ciphers, if the client
ciphers are not yet available, do not cache the result. Previously,
we had cached the unavailability of the cipher list and never looked
again, which in turn led us to assume that the client only supported
the ancient V1 link protocol. This, in turn, was causing Stem
integration tests to stall in some cases. Fixes bug 30021; bugfix
on 0.2.4.8-alpha.