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.
Closes bug 22964. Based on Teor's replacement there, but tries
to put the comment in a more logical place, and explain why we're
actually disabling compression in the first place.
There isn't much of a point of this buggy test afterall to add twice the same
service object but with a different key which ultinately can end up failing
the test because 1/N_BUCKETS of probability that we end up to put the service
in the same bucket.
Fixes#23023
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
* CHANGE .travis.yml so that commands for different purposes (e.g. getting
dependencies, building, testing) are in separate config lines and sections.
* CHANGE .travis.yml to use their mechanism for installing dependencies via
apt. [0] This also allows us to not need sudo (the "sudo: false" line).
* CHANGE Travis CI tests (the "script:" section) to build and run tests in the
same manner as Jenkins (i.e. with --enable-fatal-warnings and
--disable-silent-rules and run `make check`).
* ADD Travis configuration to do all the target builds with both GCC and clang.
* ADD make flags to build with both of the cores available.
* ADD notifications for IRC, and configure email notifications (to the author
of the commit) only if the branch was previously building successfully and
the latest commit broke it.
* ADD the ability to run the Travis build matrix for OSX as well, but leave it
commented out by default (because it takes roughly ten times longer, due to a
shortage of OSX build machines).
* ADD Travis config option to cancel/fail the build early if one target has
already failed ("fast_finish: true").
* ADD comments to describe what our Travis config is doing and why it is
configured that way.
[0]: https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/installing-dependencies/#Installing-Packages-on-Container-Based-Infrastructure)
* CHANGE .travis.yml so that commands for different purposes (e.g. getting
dependencies, building, testing) are in separate config lines and sections.
* CHANGE .travis.yml to use their mechanism for installing dependencies via
apt. [0] This also allows us to not need sudo (the "sudo: false" line).
* CHANGE Travis CI tests (the "script:" section) to build and run tests in the
same manner as Jenkins (i.e. with --enable-fatal-warnings and
--disable-silent-rules and run `make check`).
* CHANGE Travis config to install nightly rustc and cargo.
* CHANGE Travis config to split rust install into commands for getting
dependencies ("before_install:") and commands for installing them
("install:").
* REMOVE shell redirection when downloading the rustup.sh script.
* CHANGE cargo to be in "online mode" so that we can get our Rust dependencies.
There's not really a way to get the dependencies without using cargo
right now. See https://bugs.torproject.org/22830 for more info.
* REMOVE cargo "offline mode" envvars from rustup.sh invocation.
* ADD commands to get more info about rustc and cargo before building.
* FIX sourcing the cargo/toolchain environment that rustup creates. (Without
this, our build scripts don't know about anything called "rustc" or "cargo".)
* ADD Travis configuration to do all the target builds with both GCC and clang.
* ADD make flags to build with both of the cores available.
* ADD notifications for IRC, and configure email notifications (to the author
of the commit) only if the branch was previously building successfully and
the latest commit broke it.
* ADD the ability to run the Travis build matrix for OSX as well, but leave it
commented out by default (because it takes roughly ten times longer, due to a
shortage of OSX build machines).
* ADD Travis config option to cancel/fail the build early if one target has
already failed ("fast_finish: true").
* ADD comments to describe what our Travis config is doing and why it is
configured that way.
[0]: https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/installing-dependencies/#Installing-Packages-on-Container-Based-Infrastructure)
Installs dependencies (including rust) and runs the existing test suite.
TODO: Introduce build matrix utilizing the rust toolchain to run test
suites both with and without the rust components.
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.
Installs dependencies (including rust) and runs the existing test suite.
TODO: Introduce build matrix utilizing the rust toolchain to run test
suites both with and without the rust components.
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.
It makes more sense to have the version in the configuration object of the
service because it is afterall a torrc option (HiddenServiceVersion).
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
The added function frees any allocated pointers in a service configuration
object and reset all values to 0.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
As per nickm suggestion, an array of config handlers will not play well with
our callgraph tool.
Instead, we'll go with a switch case on the version which has a good side
effect of allowing us to control what we pass to the function intead of a fix
set of parameters.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Add a helper function to parse uint64_t and also does logging so we can reduce
the amount of duplicate code.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This tests our hs_config.c API to properly load v3 services and register them
to the global map. It does NOT test the service object validity, that will be
the hs service unit test later on.
At this commit, we have 100% code coverage of hs_config.c.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Every hidden service option don't apply to every version so this new function
makes sure we don't have for instance an option that is only for v2 in a v3
configured service.
This works using an exclude lists for a specific version. Right now, there is
only one option that is not allowed in v3. The rest is common.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Try to load or/and generate service keys for v3. This write both the public
and private key file to disk along with the hostname file containing the onion
address.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This also adds unit test and a small python script generating a deterministic
test vector that a unit test tries to match.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This commit adds the support in the HS subsystem for loading a service from a
set of or_options_t and put them in a staging list.
To achieve this, service accessors have been created and a global hash map
containing service object indexed by master public key. However, this is not
used for now. It's ground work for registration process.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>