Initial conversion of uint32_t addr to tor_addr_t addr in connection_t and related types. Most of the Tor wire formats using these new types are in, but the code to generate and use it is not. This is a big patch. Let me know what it breaks for you.
svn:r16435
Never allow a circuit to be created with the same circid as a circuit that has been marked for close. May be a fix for bug 779. Needs testing. Backport candidate.
svn:r16136
Answer one xxx020 item; move 7 other ones to a new "XXX020rc" category: they should get fixed before we cut a release candidate. arma: please review these to see whether you have fixes/answers for any. Please check out the other 14 XXX020s to see if any look critical for the release candidate.
svn:r13640
Re-tune mempool parametes based on testing on peacetime: use smaller chuncks, free them a little more aggressively, and try very hard to concentrate allocations on fuller chunks. Also, lots of new documentation.
svn:r13484
Fix some XXX020s in command.c, and make it not-allowed to negotiate v1 using the v2 connection protocol: it is too hard to test, and pointless to support.
svn:r13460
More protocol negotiation work. Make the negotiation actually complete and set the state to open. Fix a crash bug that occured when we forcibly stopped the connection from writing.
svn:r13434
The SSL portion of the revised handshake now seems to work: I just finally got a client and a server to negotiate versions. Now to make sure certificate verification is really happening, connections are getting opened, etc.
svn:r13409
Initial attempts to track down bug 600, and refactor possibly offending code. 1) complain early if circuit state is set to OPEN when an onionskin is pending. 2) refactor onionskin field into one only used when n_conn is pending, and a separate onionskin field waiting for attention by a cpuworker. This might even fix the bug. More likely, it will make it fail with a more useful core.
svn:r13394
Basic hacks to get TLS handshakes working: remove dead code; fix post-handshake logic; keep servers from writing while the client is supposed to be renegotiating. This may work. Needs testing.
svn:r13122
on but your ORPort is off.
Add a new config option BridgeRelay that specifies you want to
be a bridge relay. Right now the only difference is that it makes
you answer begin_dir requests, and it makes you cache dir info,
even if your DirPort isn't on.
Refactor directory_caches_dir_info() into some more functions.
svn:r12668
Start getting freaky with openssl callbacks in tortls.c: detect client ciphers, and if the list doesn't look like the list current Tors use, present only a single cert do not ask for a client cert. Also, support for client-side renegotiation. None of this is enabled unless you define V2_HANDSHAKE_SERVER.
svn:r12622
Initial version of circuit-based cell queues. Instead of hammering or_conns with piles of cells, queue cells on their corresponding circuits, and append them to the or_conn as needed. This seems to work so far, but needs a bit more work. This will break the memory-use-limitation patch for begin_dir conns: the solution will be a fun but fiddly.
svn:r9904
Fix an XXX in handling destroy cells: when we get a destroy cell with reason FOO, do not tell the controller REASON=FOO. Instead, say REASON=DESTROYED REMOTE_REASON=FOO. Suggested by a conversation with Mike Perry.
svn:r8760
Apply patch from Mike Perry: add more reasons for circuit destroys. (Slightly tweaked to avoid allocating a number for an "internal" reason.)
svn:r8739
Refactor connection_t into edge, or, dir, control, and base subtypes. This might save some RAM on busy exit servers, but really matters most in terms of correctness.
svn:r6906
circuit_t into origin_circuit_t and or_circuit_t. I fixed some
segaults; there may be more. We still need to move more rendezvous
stuff into subtypes.
This is a trial run for splitting up connection_t; if the approach is
insane, please say so soon so we can do something smarter.
Also, this discards the old HALF_OPEN code, which nobody seems to
want.
svn:r6817
we screwed up the formatting in wild and unpredictable ways.
fix it before it becomes convention to format logs in wild and
unpredictable ways.
still need to do src/common/ someday.
svn:r5551
choose circuit ID types. This is important because our view of "the
nickname of the router on the other side of this connection" is
skewed, and depends on whether we think the other rotuer is
verified--and there's no way to know whether another router thinks you
are verified.
For backward compatibility, we notice when the other router chooses
the same circuit ID type as us (because it's running an old version),
and switch our type to be polite.
svn:r2797
Now we can try setting an option but back out if it fails to parse, or
if it's disallowed (e.g. changing RunAsDaemon from 1 to 0).
Use parse_line_from_str rather than parse_line_from_file.
svn:r2692
thought that a complicated adjunct structure would be necessary, but
it doesn't look that way anymore.
Of course, I might have forgotten something.
svn:r1396
fix a variety of seg faults
don't try to list OPs in running-routers
write cached-directory to disk when rebuilding the dir
on boot, dirservers load approved-routers file
on boot, dirservers load cached directory file
svn:r508
ERR is if something fatal just happened
WARNING is something bad happened, but we're still running. The bad thing
is either a bug in the code, an attack or buggy protocol/implementation
of the remote peer, etc. The operator should examine the bad thing and
try to correct it.
(No error or warning messages should be expected. I expect most people
to run on -l warning eventually.)
NOTICE is never ever used.
INFO means something happened (maybe bad, maybe ok), but there's nothing
you need to (or can) do about it.
DEBUG is for everything louder than INFO.
svn:r486
they used to be used for
* queueing relay cells at the edge of the network, when windows are empty
* queueing relay cells that arrive after an onion but before the onion
has been processed.
both of these uses are gone. so out they go.
svn:r315
circuits no longer queue more cells when the windows are empty --
they simply don't package it from the buffer if they're not going to want it.
we can restore this code later if we need to resume queueing.
svn:r294
on startup, it forks off a master dns handler, which forks off dns
slaves (like the apache model). slaves as spawned as load increases,
and then reused. excess slaves are not ever killed, currently.
implemented topics. each topic has a receive window in each direction
at each edge of the circuit, and sends sendme's at the data level, as
per before. each circuit also has receive windows in each direction at
each hop; an edge sends a circuit-level sendme as soon as enough data
cells have arrived (regardless of whether the data cells were flushed
to the exit conns). removed the 'connected' cell type, since it's now
a topic command within data cells.
at the edge of the circuit, there can be multiple connections associated
with a single circuit. you find them via the linked list conn->next_topic.
currently each new ap connection starts its own circuit, so we ought
to see comparable performance to what we had before. but that's only
because i haven't written the code to reattach to old circuits. please
try to break it as-is, and then i'll make it reuse the same circuit and
we'll try to break that.
svn:r152
we also queue data cells destined for a circuit that is
pending, and process them once the circuit opens
destroys reach into the queue and remove the pending onion,
along with its collected data cells
svn:r142
I modified new_route so we don't pick twins back-to-back in the path.
I also had to patch my previous uses of connection_twin_get_by_addr_port()
because they assumed that "addr" and "port" would be the same for a twin
as for the original router.
svn:r56
Servers are allowed to send 100 cells initially, and can't send more until
they receive a 'sendme' cell from that direction, indicating that they
can send 10 more cells. As it currently stands, the exit node quickly
runs out of window, and sends bursts of 10 whenever a sendme cell gets
to him. This is much much much faster (and more flexible) than the old
"give each circuit 1 kB/s and hope nothing overflows" approach.
Also divided out the connection_watch_events into stop_reading,
start_writing, etc. That way we can control them separately.
svn:r54
Each socket reads at most 'bandwidth' bytes per second sustained, but
can handle bursts of up to 10*bandwidth bytes.
Cells are now sent out at evenly-spaced intervals, with padding sent
out otherwise. Set Linkpadding=0 in the rc file to send cells as soon
as they're available (and to never send padding cells).
Added license/copyrights statements at the top of most files.
router->min and router->max have been merged into a single 'bandwidth'
value. We should make the routerinfo_t reflect this (want to do that,
Mat?)
As the bandwidth increases, and we want to stop sleeping more and more
frequently to send a single cell, cpu usage goes up. At 128kB/s we're
pretty much calling poll with a timeout of 1ms or even 0ms. The current
code takes a timeout of 0-9ms and makes it 10ms. prepare_for_poll()
handles everything that should have happened in the past, so as long as
our buffers don't get too full in that 10ms, we're ok.
Speaking of too full, if you run three servers at 100kB/s with -l debug,
it spends too much time printing debugging messages to be able to keep
up with the cells. The outbuf ultimately fills up and it kills that
connection. If you run with -l err, it works fine up through 500kB/s and
probably beyond. Down the road we'll want to teach it to recognize when
an outbuf is getting full, and back off.
svn:r50
basically, a twin is a router which is different except it shares
the same keypair. so in cases where we want to find a "next router"
and all we really care is that it can decrypt the next onion layer,
then a twin is just as good.
we still need to decide how to mark twins in the routerinfo_t and in
the routers config file.
svn:r30
The 'or' process can now be told (by the global_role variable) what
roles this server should play -- connect to all ORs, listen for ORs,
listen for OPs, listen for APs, or any combination.
* everything in /src/op/ is now obsolete.
* connection_ap.c now handles all interactions with application proxies
* "port" is now or_port, op_port, ap_port. But routers are still always
referenced (say, in conn_get_by_addr_port()) by addr / or_port. We
should make routers.c actually read these new ports (currently I've
kludged it so op_port = or_port+10, ap_port=or_port+20)
* circuits currently know if they're at the beginning of the path because
circ->cpath is set. They use this instead for crypts (both ways),
if it's set.
* I still obey the "send a 0 back to the AP when you're ready" protocol,
but I think we should phase it out. I can simply not read from the AP
socket until I'm ready.
I need to do a lot of cleanup work here, but the code appears to work, so
now's a good time for a checkin.
svn:r22