Also make IPv6-only clients wait for microdescs for relays, even if we were
previously using descriptors (or were using them as a bridge) and have
a cached descriptor for them.
But if node_is_a_configured_bridge(), stop waiting for its IPv6 address in
a microdescriptor, because we'll never use it.
Implements #23827.
Split hs_circuitmap_get_rend_circ_client_side(). One returns only established
circuits (hs_circuitmap_get_established_rend_circ_client_side()) and the other
returns all kinds of circuits.
Fixes#23459
Signed-off-by: Fernando Fernandez Mancera <ffernandezmancera@gmail.com>
Previously, circuit_stream_is_being_handled incorrectly reported
that (1) an exit port was "handled" by a circuit regardless of
whether the circuit was already isolated in some way, and
(2) that a stream could be "handled" by a circuit even if their
isolation settings were incompatible.
As a result of (1), in Tor Browser, circuit_get_unhandled_ports was
reporting that all ports were handled even though all non-internal
circuits had already been isolated by a SOCKS username+password.
Therefore, circuit_predict_and_launch_new was declining to launch
new exit circuits. Then, when the user visited a new site in Tor
Browser, a stream with new SOCKS credentials would be initiated,
and the stream would have to wait while a new circuit with those
credentials could be built. That wait was making the
time-to-first-byte longer than it needed to be.
Now, clean, not-yet-isolated circuit(s) will be automatically
launched ahead of time and be ready for use whenever a new stream
with new SOCKS credentials (or other isolation criteria) is
initiated.
Fixes bug 18859. Thanks to Nick Mathewson for improvements.
Instead of using the cwd to specify the location of Cargo.toml, we
use the --manifest-path option to specify its location explicitly.
This works around the bug that isis diagnosed on our jenkins builds.
Making errno error log more useful for getrandom() call. Adding if statement to
make difference between ENOSYS and other errors.
Fixes#24500
Signed-off-by: Fernando Fernandez Mancera <ffernandezmancera@gmail.com>
First, hs_service_intro_circ_has_closed() is now called in circuit_mark_for
close() because the HS subsystem needs to learn when an intro point is
actually not established anymore as soon as possible. There is a time window
between a close and a free.
Second, when we mark for close, we also remove it from the circuitmap because
between the close and the free, a service can launch an new circuit to that
same intro point and thus register it which only succeeds if the intro point
authentication key is not already in the map.
However, we still do a remove from the circuitmap in circuit_free() in order
to also cleanup the circuit if it wasn't marked for close prior to the free.
Fixes#23603
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
In the KIST main loop, if the channel happens to be not opened, set its state
to IDLE so we can release it properly later on. Prior to this fix, the channel
was in PENDING state, removed from the channel pending list and then kept in
that state because it is not opened.
This bug was introduced in commit dcabf801e5 for
which we made the scheduler loop not consider unopened channel.
This has no consequences on tor except for an annoying but harmless BUG()
warning.
Fixes#24502
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Some platforms don't have good monotonic time support so don't warn when the
diff between the last run of the scheduler time and now is negative. The
scheduler recovers properly from this so no need to be noisy.
Fixes#23696
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
When creating a routerstatus (vote) from a routerinfo (descriptor),
set the IPv6 address to the unspecified IPv6 address, and explicitly
initialise the port to zero.
Also clarify the documentation for the function.
Fixes bug 24488; bugfix on 0.2.4.1-alpha.
Modified -Wnormalized flag to nfkc option in configure.ac to avoid source code
identifier confusion.
Fixes#24467
Signed-off-by: Fernando Fernandez Mancera <ffernandezmancera@gmail.com>
Fortunately, use_cached_ipv4_answers was already 0, so we wouldn't
actually use this info, but it's best not to have it.
Fixes bug 24050; bugfix on 0.2.6.3-alpha
TROVE-2017-12. Severity: Medium
When choosing a random node for a circuit, directly use our router
descriptor to exclude ourself instead of the one in the global
descriptor list. That list could be empty because tor could be
downloading them which could lead to not excluding ourself.
Closes#21534
TROVE-2017-12. Severity: Medium
Thankfully, tor will close any circuits that we try to extend to
ourselves so this is not problematic but annoying.
Part of #21534.
TROVE-2017-13. Severity: High.
In the unlikely case that a hidden service could be missing intro circuit(s),
that it didn't have enough directory information to open new circuits and that
an intro point was about to expire, a use-after-free is possible because of
the intro point object being both in the retry list and expiring list at the
same time.
The intro object would get freed after the circuit failed to open and then
access a second time when cleaned up from the expiring list.
Fixes#24313
Going from 4 hours to 24 hours in order to try reduce the efficiency of guard
discovery attacks.
Closes#23856
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Stop checking for bridge descriptors when we actually want to know if
any bridges are usable. This avoids potential bootstrapping issues.
Fixes bug 24367; bugfix on 0.2.0.3-alpha.
Stop stalling when bridges are changed at runtime. Stop stalling when
old bridge descriptors are cached, but they are not in use.
Fixes bug 24367; bugfix on 23347 in 0.3.2.1-alpha.
Previously, if store_multiple() reported a partial success, we would
store all the handles it gave us as if they had succeeded. But it's
possible for the diff to be only partially successful -- for
example, if LZMA failed but the other compressors succeeded.
Fixes bug 24086; bugfix on 0.3.1.1-alpha.
If we can't read a file because of an FS issue, we say "we can't
read that" and move on. But if we can't read it because it's empty,
because it has no labels, or because its labels are misformatted, we
should remove it.
Fixes bug 24099; bugfix on 0.3.1.1-alpha.
A circuit with purpose C_INTRODUCING means that its state is opened but the
INTRODUCE1 cell hasn't been sent yet. We shouldn't consider that circuit when
looking for timing out "building circuit". We have to wait on the rendezvous
circuit to be opened before sending that cell so the intro circuit needs to be
kept alive for at least that period of time.
This patch makes that the purpose C_INTRODUCING is ignored in the
circuit_expire_building() which means that we let the circuit idle timeout
take care of it if we end up never using it.
Fixes#23681
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
We don't want to allow general signals to be sent, but there's no
problem sending a kill(0) to probe whether a process is there.
Fixes bug 24198; bugfix on 0.2.5.1-alpha when the seccomp2 sandbox
was introduced.
When we close a connection via connection_close_immediately, we kill
its events immediately. But if it had been blocked on bandwidth
read/write, we could try to re-add its (nonexistent) events later
from connection_bucket_refill -- if we got to that callback before
we swept the marked connections.
Fixes bug 24167. Fortunately, this hasn't been a crash bug since we
introduced connection_check_event in 0.2.9.10, and backported it.
This is a bugfix on commit 89d422914a, I believe, which
appeared in Tor 0.1.0.1-rc.
Commit 56c5e282a7 suppressed that same log
statement in directory_info_has_arrived() for microdescriptors so do the same
for the descriptors. As the commit says, we already have the bootstrap
progress for this.
Fixes#23861
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
evdns is allowed to give us unrecognized object types; it is allowed
to give us non-IPv4 answer types, and it is (even) allowed to give
us empty answers without an error.
Closes ticket 24097.
Due to #23662 this can happen under natural causes and does not disturb
the functionality of the service. This is a simple 0.3.2 fix for now,
and we plan to fix this properly in 0.3.3.
Clients add rendezvous point IPv6 addresses to introduce cell link specifiers,
when the node has a valid IPv6 address.
Also check the node's IPv4 address is valid before adding any link specifiers.
Implements #23577.
This function -- a mock replacement used only for fuzzing -- would
have a buffer overflow if it got an RSA key whose modulus was under
20 bytes long.
Fortunately, Tor itself does not appear to have a bug here.
Fixes bug 24247; bugfix on 0.3.0.3-alpha when fuzzing was
introduced. Found by OSS-Fuzz; this is OSS-Fuzz issue 4177.
On failure to upload, the HS_DESC event would report "UPLOAD_FAILED" as the
Action but it should have reported "FAILED" according to the spec.
Fixes#24230
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
DisableNetwork is a subset of net_is_disabled(), which is (now) a
subset of should_delay_dir_fetches().
Some of these changes are redundant with others higher or lower in
the call stack. The ones that I think are behavior-relevant are
listed in the changes file. I've also added comments in a few
places where the behavior is subtle.
Fixes bug 12062; bugfix on various versions.
When we have fewer than 15 descriptors to fetch, we will delay the
fetch for a little while. That's fine, if we can go ahead and build
circuits... but if not, it's a poor choice indeed.
Fixes bug 23985; bugfix on 0.1.1.11-alpha.
In 0.3.0.3-alpha, when we made primary guard descriptors necessary
for circuit building, this situation got worse.
When calculating the fraction of nodes that have descriptors, and all
all nodes in the network have zero bandwidths, count the number of nodes
instead.
Fixes bug 23318; bugfix on 0.2.4.10-alpha.
Back in 0.2.4.3-alpha (e106812a77), when we switched from using
double to using uint64 for selecting by bandwidth, I got the math
wrong: I should have used llround(x), or (uint64_t)(x+0.5), but
instead I wrote llround(x+0.5). That means we would always round
up, rather than rounding to the closest integer
Fixes bug 23318; bugfix on 0.2.4.3-alpha.
The flush cells process can close a channel if the connection write fails but
still return that it flushed at least one cell. This is due because the error
is not propagated up the call stack so there is no way of knowing if the flush
actually was successful or not.
Because this would require an important refactoring touching multiple
subsystems, this patch is a bandaid to avoid the KIST scheduler to handle
closed channel in its loop.
Bandaid on #23751.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
If it decrypts something that turns out to start with a NUL byte,
then decrypt_desc_layer() will return 0 to indicate the length of
its result. But 0 also indicates an error, which causes the result
not to be freed by decrypt_desc_layer()'s callers.
Since we're trying to stabilize 0.3.2.x, I've opted for the simpler
possible fix here and made it so that an empty decrypted string will
also count as an error.
Fixes bug 24150 and OSS-Fuzz issue 3994.
The original bug was present but unreachable in 0.3.1.1-alpha. I'm
calling this a bugfix on 0.3.2.1-alpha since that's the first version
where you could actually try to decrypt these descriptors.
The node_get_ed25519_id() warning can actually be triggered by a relay flagged
with NoEdConsensus so instead of triggering a warning on all relays of the
network, downgrade it to protocol warning.
Fixes#24025
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
When a BUG() occurs, this macro will print extra information about the state
of the scheduler and the given channel if any. This will help us greatly to
fix future bugs in the scheduler especially when they occur rarely.
Fixes#23753
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
When running "make test-network-all", test that IPv6-only clients can use
microdescriptors. IPv6-only microdescriptor client support was fixed in
tor 0.3.0.1-alpha.
Requires chutney master 61c28b9 or later.
Closes ticket 24109.
When the directory information changes, callback to the HS client subsystem so
it can check if any pending SOCKS connections are waiting for a descriptor. If
yes, attempt a refetch for those.
Fixes#23762
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
The new decryption function performs no decryption, skips the salt,
and doesn't check the mac. This allows us to fuzz the
hs_descriptor.c code using unencrypted descriptor test, and exercise
more of the code.
Related to 21509.
If the intro point supports ed25519 link authentication, make sure we don't
have a zeroed key which would lead to a failure to extend to it.
We already check for an empty key if the intro point does not support it so
this makes the check on the key more consistent and symmetric.
Fixes#24002
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Turns out that when reloading a tor configured with hidden service(s), we
weren't copying all the needed information between the old service object to
the new one.
For instance, the desc_is_dirty timestamp wasn't which could lead to the
service uploading its desriptor much later than it would need to.
The replaycache wasn't also moved over and some intro point information as
well.
Fixes#23790
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Bridge relays can use it to add a "bridge-distribution-request" line
to their bridge descriptor, which tells BridgeDB how they'd like their
bridge address to be given out.
Implements tickets 18329.
Fixes bug 23908; bugfix on 0.3.1.6-rc when we made the keypin
failure message really long.
Backport from 0.3.2's 771fb7e7ba,
where arma said "get rid of the scary 256-byte-buf landmine".
At first, we put the tor_git_revision constant in tor_main.c, so
that we wouldn't have to recompile config.o every time the git
revision changed. But putting it there had unintended side effect
of forcing every program that wanted to link libor.a (including
test, test-slow, the fuzzers, the benchmarks, etc) to declare their
own tor_git_revision instance.
That's not very nice, especially since we want to start supporting
others who want to link against Tor (see 23846).
So, create a new git_revision.c file that only contains this
constant, and remove the duplicated boilerplate from everywhere
else.
Part of implementing ticket 23845.
This feature should help programs that want to launch and manage a
Tor process, as well as programs that want to launch and manage a
Tor instance in a separate thread. Right now, they have to open a
controlport, and then connect to it, with attendant authentication
issues. This feature allows them to just start with an
authenticated connection.
Bug 23900.
Stop attempting to unconditionally mirror the tor repository in GitLab
CI. This prevented developers from enabling GitLab CI on master
because the "update" job would attempt to run, causing an unuseful CI
failure. Fixes bug 23755.
Skip test_config_include_no_permission() when running as root, because
it will get an unexpected success from config_get_lines_include().
This affects some continuous integration setups. Fixes bug 23758.
Add more explanation in doc/HACKING about how to read gcov output,
including a reference to the gcov documentation in the GCC manual.
Also add details about how our postprocessing scripts modify gcov
output.
When we added HTTPTunnelPort, the answer that we give when you try
to use your SOCKSPort as an HTTP proxy became wrong. Now we explain
that Tor sorta _is_ an HTTP proxy, but a SOCKSPort isn't.
I have left the status line the same, in case anything is depending
on it. I have removed the extra padding for Internet Explorer,
since the message is well over 512 bytes without it.
Fixes bug 23678; bugfix on 0.3.2.1-alpha.
Without this fix, changes from client to bridge don't trigger
transition_affects_workers(), so we would never have actually
initialized the cpuworkers.
Fixes bug 23693. Bugfix on 3bcdb26267 0.2.6.3-alpha, which
fixed bug 14901 in the general case, but not on the case where
public_server_mode() did not change.
Because our monotonic time interface doesn't play well with value set to 0,
always initialize to now() the scheduler_last_run at init() of the KIST
scheduler.
Fixes#23696
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
When a channel is scheduled and flush cells returns 0 that is no cells to
flush, we flag it back in waiting for cells so it doesn't get stuck in a
possible infinite loop.
It has been observed on moria1 where a closed channel end up in the scheduler
where the flush process returned 0 cells but it was ultimately kept in the
scheduling loop forever. We suspect that this is due to a more deeper problem
in tor where the channel_more_to_flush() is actually looking at the wrong
queue and was returning 1 for an empty channel thus putting the channel in the
"Case 4" of the scheduler which is to go back in pending state thus
re-considered at the next iteration.
This is a fix that allows the KIST scheduler to recover properly from a not
entirelly diagnosed problem in tor.
Fixes#23676
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
When we added single_conn_free_bytes(), we cleared the outbuf on a
connection without setting outbuf_flushlen() to 0. This could cause
an assertion failure later on in flush_buf().
Fixes bug 23690; bugfix on 0.2.6.1-alpha.
This caused a BUG log when we noticed that the circuit had no
channel. The likeliest culprit for exposing that behavior is
d769cab3e5, where we made circuit_mark_for_close() NULL out
the n_chan and p_chan fields of the circuit.
Fixes bug 8185; bugfix on 0.2.5.4-alpha, I think.
My current theory is that this is just a marked circuit that hasn't
closed yet, but let's gather more information in case that theory is
wrong.
Diagnostic for 8185.
This patch ensures that we return TOR_COMPRESS_BUFFER_FULL in case we
have a input bytes left to process, but are out of output buffer or in
case we need to finish where the compression implementation might need
to write an epilogue.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/23551
Make the "Exit" flag assignment only depend on whether the exit
policy allows connections to ports 80 and 443. Previously relays
would get the Exit flag if they allowed connections to one of
these ports and also port 6667.
Resolves ticket 23637.
Back in 0.2.4.3-alpha (e106812a77), when we switched from using
double to using uint64 for selecting by bandwidth, I got the math
wrong: I should have used llround(x), or (uint64_t)(x+0.5), but
instead I wrote llround(x+0.5). That means we would always round
up, rather than rounding to the closest integer
Fixes bug 23318; bugfix on 0.2.4.3-alpha.
The clock_skew_warning() refactoring allowed calls from
or_state_load() to control_event_bootstrap_problem() to occur prior
bootstrap phase 0, causing an assertion failure. Initialize the
bootstrap status prior to calling clock_skew_warning() from
or_state_load().
or_state_load() was using an incorrect sign convention when calling
clock_skew_warning() to warn about state file clock skew. This caused
the wording of the warning to be incorrect about the direction of the
skew.
Previously we would detect the system openssl on OSX, and then fail
to use it, since we required Open 1.0.1 or later. That's silly!
Instead of looking for RAND_add(), look for TLSv1_1_method(): it was
introduced in 1.0.1, and is also present in LibreSSL.
Also, add the hombebrew path to our search path here.
Fixes bug 23602; bugfix on 0.2.7.2-alpha.
Authority IPv6 addresses were originally added in 0.2.8.1-alpha.
This leaves 3/8 directory authorities with IPv6 addresses, but there
are also 52 fallback directory mirrors with IPv6 addresses.
Resolves 19760.
RENDEZVOUS1 cell is 84 bytes long in v3 and 168 bytes long in v2 so this
commit pads with random bytes the v3 cells up to 168 bytes so they all look
alike at the rendezvous point.
Closes#23420
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This warning is caused by a different tv_usec data type on macOS
compared to the system on which the patch was developed.
Fixes 23575 on 0.3.2.1-alpha.
An unnecessary routerlist check in the NETINFO clock skew detection in
channel_tls_process_netinfo_cell() was preventing clients from
reporting NETINFO clock skew to controllers.
This patch replaces a few calls to router_get_by_id_digest ("do we
have a routerinfo?") with connection_or_digest_is_known_relay ("do
we know this relay to be in the consensus, or have been there some
time recently?").
Found while doing the 21585 audit; fixes bug 23533. Bugfix on
0.3.0.1-alpha.
Make download status next attempts reported over the control port
consistent with the time used by tor. This issue only occurs if a
download status has not been reset before it is queried over the
control port.
Fixes 23525, not in any released version of tor.
If future code asks if there are any running bridges, without checking
if bridges are enabled, log a BUG warning rather than crashing.
Fixes 23524 on 0.3.0.1-alpha
Directory servers now include a "Date:" http header for response
codes other than 200. Clients starting with a skewed clock and a
recent consensus were getting "304 Not modified" responses from
directory authorities, so without a Date header the client would
never hear about a wrong clock.
Fixes bug 23499; bugfix on 0.0.8rc1.
This change refactors find_dl_schedule() to only call dependent functions
as needed. In particular, directory_fetches_from_authorities() only needs
to be called on clients.
Stopping spurious directory_fetches_from_authorities() calls on every
download on public relays has the following impacts:
* fewer address resolution attempts, particularly those mentioned in 21789
* fewer descriptor rebuilds
* fewer log messages, particularly those limited in 20610
Fixes 23470 in 0.2.8.1-alpha.
The original bug was introduced in commit 35bbf2e as part of prop210.
OpenBSD doesn't like tricks where you use a too-wide sscanf argument
for a too-narrow array, even when you know the input string
statically. The fix here is just to use bigger buffers.
Fixes 15582; bugfix on a3dafd3f58 in 0.2.6.2-alpha.
But when clients are just starting, make them try each bridge a few times
before giving up on it.
These changes make the bridge download schedules more explicit: before
17750, they relied on undocumented behaviour and specific schedule
entries. (And between 17750 and this fix, they were broken.)
Fixes 23347, not in any released version of tor.
The download schedule tells Tor to wait 15 minutes before downloading
bridge descriptors. But 17750 made Tor ignore that and start immediately.
Since we fixed 17750, Tor waits 15 minutes for bridge client bootstrap,
like the schedule says.
This fixes the download schedule to start immediately, and to try each
bridge 3 times in the first 30 seconds. This should make bridge bootstraps
more reliable.
Fixes 23347.
When option validation or transition is happening, there are no
"current options" -- only "old options" and "maybe new options".
Looking at get_options() is likely a mistake, so have a nonfatal
assertion let us know if we do that.
Closes 22281.
Before, this function meant "can we connect to this node and
authenticate it using its ed25519 key?" Now it can additionally
mean, "when somebody else connects to this node, do we expect that
they can authenticate using the node's ed25519 key"?
This change lets us future-proof our link authentication a bit.
Closes ticket 20895. No backport needed, since ed25519 link
authentication support has not been in any LTS release yet, and
existing releases with it should be obsolete before any releases
without support for linkauth=3 are released.
Undeprecate it;
rename it to TestingClientDNSRejectInternalAddresses;
add the old name as an alias;
reject configurations where it is set but TestingTorNetwork is not;
change the documentation accordingly.
Closes tickets 21031 and 21522.
There are two reasons this is likeliest to happen -- no kernel
support, and some bug in Tor. We'll ask people to check the former
before they report. Closes 23090.
The chdir() call in RunAsDaemon makes the behavior here surprising,
and either way of trying to resolve the surprise seems sure to
startle a significant fraction of users. Instead, let's refuse to
guess, and refuse these configurations.
Closes ticket 22731.
The function was never returning an error code on failure to parse the
OutboundAddress* options.
In the process, it was making our test_options_validate__outbound_addresses()
not test the right thing.
Fixes#23366
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Some parentheses were missing making the rend_max_intro_circs_per_period()
return a lower value than it was suppose to.
The calculation is that a service at most will open a number of intro points
that it wants which is 3 by default or HiddenServiceNumIntroductionPoints. Two
extra are launched for performance reason. Finally, this can happen twice for
two descriptors for the current and next time period.
From:
2 * n_intro_wanted + 2
...which resulted in 8 for 3 intro points, this commit fixes it to:
(n_intro_wanted + 2) * 2
... resulting in 12 possible intro point circuit which is the correct maximum
intro circuit allowed per period.
Last, this commit rate limits the the log message if we ever go above that
limit else over a INTRO_CIRC_RETRY_PERIOD, we can print it often!
Fixes#22159
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
We removed this documentation in 607724c696, when we removed
Naming Authoritative Directories, but actually this file is still
used by authorities to indicate rejected and invalid fingerprints.
Closes ticket 21148.
This change should improve overhead for downloading small numbers of
descriptors and microdescriptors by improving compression
performance and lowering directory request overhead.
Closes ticket 23220.
The old implementation would fail with super-long inputs. We never
gave it any, but still, it's nicer to dtrt here.
Reported by Guido Vranken. Fixes bug 19281.
Fixes bug 23106; bugfix on 0.2.4.8-alpha.
Fortunately, we only support big-endian and little-endian platforms,
and on both of those, hton*() and ntoh*() behave the same. And if
we did start to support middle endian systems (haha, no), most of
_those_ have hton*(x) == ntoh*(x) too.
Since we start with desc_clean_since = 0, we should have been
starting with non-null desc_dirty_reason.
Fixes bug 22884; bugfix on 0.2.3.4-alpha when X-Desc-Gen-Reason was
added.
Patch from Vort; fixes bug 23081; bugfix on fd992deeea in
0.2.1.16-rc when set_main_thread() was introduced.
See the changes file for a list of all the symptoms this bug has
been causing when running Tor as a Windows Service.
The condition was always true meaning that we would reconsider updating our
directory information every 2 minutes.
If valid_until is 6am today, then now - 24h == 1pm yesterday which means that
"valid_until < (now - 24h)" is false. But at 6:01am tomorrow, "valid_until <
(now - 24h)" becomes true which is that point that we shouldn't trust the
consensus anymore.
Fixes#23091
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
One log statement was a warning and has been forgotten. It is triggered for a
successful attempt at introducting from a client.
It has been reported here:
https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-relays/2017-August/012689.html
Three other log_warn() statement changed to protocol warning because they are
errors that basically can come from the network and thus triggered by anyone.
Fixes#23078.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
We don't actually want Coverity to complain when a BUG() check can
never fail, since such checks can prevent us from introducing bugs
later on.
Closes ticket 23054. Closes CID 1415720, 1415724.
Now that half the threads are permissive and half are strict, we
need to make sure we have at least two threads, so that we'll
have at least one of each kind.
Each piece of queued work now has an associated priority value; each
priority goes on a separate queue.
With probability (N-1)/N, the workers will take work from the highest
priority nonempty queue. Otherwise, they'll look for work in a
queue of lower priority. This behavior is meant to prevent
starvation for lower-priority tasks.
In the Linux kernel, the BUG() macro causes an instant panic. Our
BUG() macro is different, however: it generates a nonfatal assertion
failure, and is usable as an expression.
Additionally, this patch tells util_bug.h to make all assertion
failures into fatal conditions when we're building with a static
analysis tool, so that the analysis tool can look for instances
where they're reachable.
Fixes bug 23030.
Wow, it sure seems like some compilers can't implement isnan() and
friends in a way that pleases themselves!
Fixes bug 22915. Bug trigged by 0.2.8.1-alpha and later; caused by
clang 4.
We need to keep these around for TAP and old-style hidden services,
but they're obsolete, and we shouldn't encourage anyone to use them.
So I've added "obsolete" to their names, and a comment explaining
what the problem is.
Closes ticket 23026.
In zstd 1.3.0, once you have called ZSTD_endStream and been told
that your putput buffer is full, it really doesn't want you to call
ZSTD_compressStream again. ZSTD 1.2.0 didn't seem to mind about
this.
This patch fixes the issue by making sure never to call
ZSTD_endStream if there's any more data on the input buffer to
process, by flushing even when we're about to call "endStream", and
by never calling "compress" or "flush" after "endStream".
Fix for 22924. Bugfix on 0.2.9.1-alpha when the test was introducd
-- though it couldn't actually overflow until we fixed 17750.
Additionally, this only seems to overflow on 32-bit, and only when
the compiler doesn't re-order the (possibly dead) assignment out of
the way. We ran into it on a 32-bit ubuntu trusty builder.
Clang didn't like that we were passing uint64_t values to an API
that wanted uint32_t. GCC has either not cared, or has figured out
that the values in question were safe to cast to uint32_t.
Fixes bug22916; bugfix on 0.2.7.2-alpha.
These statistics were largely ununsed, and kept track of statistical information
on things like how many time we had done TLS or how many signatures we had
verified. This information is largely not useful, and would only be logged
after receiving a SIGUSR1 signal (but only if the logging severity level was
less than LOG_INFO).
* FIXES#19871.
* REMOVES note_crypto_pk_op(), dump_pk_op(), and pk_op_counts from
src/or/rephist.c.
* REMOVES every external call to these functions.
Relay operators (especially bridge operators) can use this to lower
or raise the number of consensuses that they're willing to hold for
diff generation purposes.
This enables a workaround for bug 22883.
This reverts part of commit 706c44a6ce.
It was a mistake to remove these includes: they were needed on
systems where we have openssl 1.1.0 *and* libscrypt, and where we
were validating the one against the other.
Fixes bug 22892; bugfix on 0.3.1.1-alpha.
This change prevents us from generating corrupt messages when we
are confused about codepage settings, and makes Windows errors
consistent with the rest of our logs.
Fixes bug 22520; bugfix on 0.1.2.8-alpha. Patch from "Vort".
When setting the maximum number of connections allowed by the OS,
always allow some extra file descriptors for other files.
Fixes bug 22797; bugfix on 0.2.0.10-alpha.
We just have to suppress these warnings: Mingw's math.h uses gcc's
__builtin_choose_expr() facility to declare isnan, isfinite, and
signbit. But as implemented in at least some versions of gcc,
__builtin_choose_expr() can generate type warnings even from
branches that are not taken.
Fixes bug 22801; bugfix on 0.2.8.1-alpha.
When the new path selection logic went into place, I accidentally
dropped the code that considered the _family_ of the exit node when
deciding if the guard was usable, and we didn't catch that during
code review.
This patch makes the guard_restriction_t code consider the exit
family as well, and adds some (hopefully redundant) checks for the
case where we lack a node_t for a guard but we have a bridge_info_t
for it.
Fixes bug 22753; bugfix on 0.3.0.1-alpha. Tracked as TROVE-2016-006
and CVE-2017-0377.
This patch fixes a crash in our LZMA module where liblzma will allocate
slightly more data than it is allowed to by its limit, which leads to a
crash.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/22751
As of ac2f6b608a in 0.2.1.19-alpha,
Sebastian fixed bug 888 by marking descriptors as "impossible" by
digest if they got rejected during the
router_load_routers_from_string() phase. This fix stopped clients
and relays from downloading the same thing over and over.
But we never made the same change for descriptors rejected during
dirserv_add_{descriptor,extrainfo}. Instead, we tried to notice in
advance that we'd reject them with dirserv_would_reject().
This notice-in-advance check stopped working once we added
key-pinning and didn't make a corresponding key-pinning change to
dirserv_would_reject() [since a routerstatus_t doesn't include an
ed25519 key].
So as a fix, let's make the dirserv_add_*() functions mark digests
as undownloadable when they are rejected.
Fixes bug 22349; I am calling this a fix on 0.2.1.19-alpha, though
you could also argue for it being a fix on 0.2.7.2-alpha.
This mistake causes two possible bugs. I believe they are both
harmless IRL.
BUG 1: memory stomping
When we call the memset, we are overwriting two 0 bytes past the end
of packed_cell_t.body. But I think that's harmless in practice,
because the definition of packed_cell_t is:
// ...
typedef struct packed_cell_t {
TOR_SIMPLEQ_ENTRY(packed_cell_t) next;
char body[CELL_MAX_NETWORK_SIZE];
uint32_t inserted_time;
} packed_cell_t;
So we will overwrite either two bytes of inserted_time, or two bytes
of padding, depending on how the platform handles alignment.
If we're overwriting padding, that's safe.
If we are overwriting the inserted_time field, that's also safe: In
every case where we call cell_pack() from connection_or.c, we ignore
the inserted_time field. When we call cell_pack() from relay.c, we
don't set or use inserted_time until right after we have called
cell_pack(). SO I believe we're safe in that case too.
BUG 2: memory exposure
The original reason for this memset was to avoid the possibility of
accidentally leaking uninitialized ram to the network. Now
remember, if wide_circ_ids is false on a connection, we shouldn't
actually be sending more than 512 bytes of packed_cell_t.body, so
these two bytes can only leak to the network if there is another bug
somewhere else in the code that sends more data than is correct.
Fortunately, in relay.c, where we allocate packed_cell_t in
packed_cell_new() , we allocate it with tor_malloc_zero(), which
clears the RAM, right before we call cell_pack. So those
packed_cell_t.body bytes can't leak any information.
That leaves the two calls to cell_pack() in connection_or.c, which
use stack-alocated packed_cell_t instances.
In or_handshake_state_record_cell(), we pass the cell's contents to
crypto_digest_add_bytes(). When we do so, we get the number of
bytes to pass using the same setting of wide_circ_ids as we passed
to cell_pack(). So I believe that's safe.
In connection_or_write_cell_to_buf(), we also use the same setting
of wide_circ_ids in both calls. So I believe that's safe too.
I introduced this bug with 1c0e87f6d8
back in 0.2.4.11-alpha; it is bug 22737 and CID 1401591
If COMPRESS_OK occurs but data is neither consumed nor generated,
treat it as a BUG and a COMPRESS_ERROR.
This change is meant to prevent infinite loops in the case where
we've made a mistake in one of our compression backends.
Closes ticket 22672.
This prevents us from calling
allowed_anonymous_connection_compression_method() on the unused
guessed method (if any), and rejecting something that was already
safe to use.
Rationale: When use a guessed compression method, we already gave a
PROTOCOL_WARN when our guess differed from the declared method,
AND we gave a PROTOCOL_WARN when the declared method failed. It is
not a protocol problem that the guessed method failed too; it's just
a recovery attempt that failed.
A cached_dir_t object (for now) is always compressed with
DEFLATE_METHOD, but in handle_get_status_vote() to we were using the
general compression-negotiation code decide what compression to
claim we were using.
This was one of the reasons behind 22502.
Fixes bug 22669; bugfix on 0.3.1.1-alpha
Many places in our code assume that uint8_t is the same type as
unsigned char. Test this assumption in the configure script. This is
important because of the privileged aliasing properties of character
types in C.
Fixes#22410.
Move the HTTPProxy option to the deprecated list so for now it will only warn
users but feature is still in the code which will be removed in a future
stable version.
Fixes#20575
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>