Bionic has a recent coccinelle version, which passes our CI tests.
But Bionic (and Xenial) cause permissions errors for chutney.
We'll fix those in 32240.
Part of 31919.
hs_client_purge_state() and hs_cache_clean_as_client() can remove a descriptor
from the client cache with a NEWNYM or simply when the descriptor expires.
Which means that for an INTRO circuit being established during that time, once
it opens, we lookup the descriptor to get the IP object but hey surprised, no
more descriptor.
The approach here is minimalist that is accept the race and close the circuit
since we can not continue. Before that, the circuit would stay opened and the
client wait the SockTimeout.
Fixers #28970.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Relays now respect their AccountingMax bandwidth again. When relays
entered "soft" hibernation (which typically starts when we've hit
90% of our AccountingMax), we had stopped checking whether we should
enter hard hibernation. Soft hibernation refuses new connections and
new circuits, but the existing circuits can continue, meaning that
relays could have exceeded their configured AccountingMax.
This commit rolls back some of the cpu-saving fixes, where we tried
to avoid calling so many of our events while we're off the network.
That's because PERIODIC_EVENT_FLAG_NEED_NET checks net_is_disabled(),
which returns true even if we're only in soft hibernation.
Fixes bug 32108; bugfix on 0.4.0.1-alpha.
* actually sleep when tor has not logged anything
* log at debug level when waiting for tor to log something
* backslash-replace bad UTF-8 characters in logs
* format control messages as ASCII: tor does not accept UTF-8 control commands
Fixes bug 31837; bugfix on 0.3.5.1-alpha.
This patch removes an overly strict tor_assert() and an ignorable BUG()
expression. Both of these would trigger if a PT was unable to configure
itself during startup. The easy way to trigger this is to configure an
obfs4 bridge where you make the obfs4 process try to bind on a port
number under 1024.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/31091
This patch adds a test to check for whether the exit callback is always
called when process_exec() fails, both on Windows and Unix.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/31810
This patch fixes an issue where the exit handler is not called for the
given process_t in case CreateProcessA() fails. This could, for example,
happen if the user tries to execute a binary that does not exist.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/31810
This patch removes a call to tor_assert_unreached() after execve()
failed. This assertion leads to the child process emitting a stack trace
on its standard output, which makes the error harder for the user to
demystify, since they think it is an internal error in Tor instead of
"just" being a "no such file or directory" error.
The process will now instead output "Error from child process: X" where
X is the stringified version of the errno value.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/31810
When tearing down all periodic events during shutdown, disable them first so
their enable flag is updated.
This allows the tor_api.h to relaunch tor properly after a clean shutdown.
Fixes#32058
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Code adapted from Rob's proposed patch in #30344.
Also add a comment in connection_mark_for_close_internal_() on why we should
not be adding extra code there without a very good reason.
When encoding introduction points, we were not checking if that intro points
had an established circuit.
When botting up, the service will pick, by default, 3 + 2 intro points and the
first 3 that establish, we use them and upload the descriptor.
However, the intro point is removed from the service descriptor list only when
the circuit has opened and we see that we have already enough intro points, it
is then removed.
But it is possible that the service establishes 3 intro points successfully
before the other(s) have even opened yet.
This lead to the service encoding extra intro points in the descriptor even
though the circuit is not opened or might never establish (#31561).
Fixes#31548
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Since Rust on macOS is slow, don't wait for the macOS Rust job to finish.
Instead, split rust into slow rust (macOS) and fast rust (Linux). And
allow the build to finish before slow rust finishes.
Also make sure that we have:
* a Rust build on each platform,
* a Rust build with each compiler, and
* a check on all our Rust builds.
Finally, sort builds: allow fail last, macOS first, slowest first.
Closes 31859 for 0.3.5.
Since Travis macOS has IPv6 support (and Travis Linux does not), chutney
will now run its IPv6 networks as part of Travis CI.
But since chutney is slow, don't wait for the macOS chutney to finish.
(Travis have fixed the duplicate notification bug in fast_finish. So we
can use fast_finish and allow_failure to finish early. Unfortunately,
allow_failure also means we ignore failures in macOS chutney.)
Also make sure that we have:
* a compile on each platform, with each compiler,
* a check on each platform, and
* a check on each compiler.
Finally, sort builds: allow fail last, macOS first, slowest first.
Closes ticket 30860.
Closes ticket 31859 for 0.2.9.