We used to use NULL subcredential which is a terrible terrible idea. Refactor
HS unittests to use subcredentials.
Also add some non-fatal asserts to make sure that we always use subcredentials
when decoding/encoding descs.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Add the entry point from the circuit subsystem of "circuit has opened" which
is for all type of hidden service circuits. For the introduction point, this
commit actually adds the support for handling those circuits when opened and
sending ESTABLISH_INTRO on a circuit.
Rendevzou point circuit aren't supported yet at this commit.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Add a function for both the client and service side that is building a blinded
key from a keypair (service) and from a public key (client). Those two
functions uses the current time period information to build the key.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Add a new and free function for hs_desc_intro_point_t so the service can use
them to setup those objects properly.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
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.
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.
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>
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.
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>
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>
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>
Add the hs_config.{c|h} files contains everything that the HS subsystem needs
to load and configure services. Ultimately, it should also contain client
functions such as client authorization.
This comes with a big refactoring of rend_config_services() which has now
changed to only configure a single service and it is stripped down of the
common directives which are now part of the generic handler.
This is ground work for prop224 of course but only touches version 2 services
and add XXX note for version 3.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
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.
Our mock network put all the guards on the same IPv4 address, which
doesn't fly when we start applying EnforceDistinctSubnets. So in
this commit, I disable EnforceDistinctSubnets when running the old
guard_restriction_t test.
This commit also adds a regression test for #22753.
The tests previously assumed that the link handshake code would be
calling get_my_certs() -- when I changed it to call get_own_cert()
instead for the (case 2) 22460 fix, the tests failed, since the tls
connection wasn't really there.
This change makes us start mocking out the tor_tls_get_own_cert()
function too.
It also corrects the behavior of the mock_get_peer_cert() function
-- it should have been returning a newly allocated copy.
Whenever we rotate our TLS context, we change our Ed25519
Signing->Link certificate. But if we've already started a TLS
connection, then we've already sent the old X509 link certificate,
so the new Ed25519 Signing->Link certificate won't match it.
To fix this, we now store a copy of the Signing->Link certificate
when we initialize the handshake state, and send that certificate
as part of our CERTS cell.
Fixes one case of bug22460; bugfix on 0.3.0.1-alpha.
Previously we could sometimes change our signing key, but not
regenerate the certificates (signing->link and signing->auth) that
were signed with it. Also, we would regularly replace our TLS x.509
link certificate (by rotating our TLS context) but not replace our
signing->link ed25519 certificate. In both cases, the resulting
inconsistency would make other relays reject our link handshakes.
Fixes two cases of bug 22460; bugfix on 0.3.0.1-alpha.
The encrypted_data_length_is_valid() function wasn't validating correctly the
length of the encrypted data of a v3 descriptor. The side effect of this is
that an HSDir was rejecting the descriptor and ultimately not storing it.
Fixes#22447
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This adds a couple of configure commands to control whether we're
requiring all dependencies to be available locally (default) or not
(--enable-cargo-online-mode). When building from a tarball, we require
the RUST_DEPENDENCIES variable to point to the local repository of
crates. This also adds src/ext/rust as a git submodule that contains
such a local repository for easy setup.
Passing --enable-cargo-online-mode during configure allows cargo to make
network requests while building Tor or running tests. If this flag is
not supplied, the dependencies need to be available in the form of a
local mirror.
This gives an indication in the log that Tor was built with Rust
support, as well as laying some groundwork for further string-returning
APIs to be converted to Rust
config_get_lines is now split into two functions:
- config_get_lines which is the same as before we had %include
- config_get_lines_include which actually processes %include
Cleanup logic in test_intro_point_registration() invoked tt_assert()
in a way that could cause it to jump backward into the cleanup code if
the assertion failed, causing Coverity to see a double free (CID
1397192). Move the tt_assert() calls into a helper function having
the well-defined task of testing hs_circuitmap_free_all().
Fixes#22231.
A descriptor only contains the curve25519 public key in the enc-key field so
the private key should not be in that data structure. The service data
structures will have access to the full keypair (#20657).
Furthermore, ticket #21871 has highlighted an issue in the proposal 224 about
the encryption key and legacy key being mutually exclusive. This is very wrong
and this commit fixes the code to follow the change to the proposal of that
ticket.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
A for-loop in test_channelpadding_timers() would never run because it
was trying to increment a counter up to CHANNELS_TO_TEST/3 after an
earlier block already incremented it to CHANNELS_TO_TEST/2.
Fixes#22221, CID 1405983.
Deprecated in 0.2.9.2-alpha, this commits changes it as OBSOLETE() and cleans
up the code associated with it.
Partially fixes#22060
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Deprecated in 0.2.9.2-alpha, this commits changes it as OBSOLETE() and cleans
up the code associated with it.
Partially fixes#22060
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Deprecated in 0.2.9.2-alpha, this commits changes it as OBSOLETE() and cleans
up the code associated with it.
Partially fixes#22060
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Deprecated in 0.2.9.2-alpha, this commits changes it as OBSOLETE() and cleans
up the code associated with it.
Partially fixes#22060
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
The descriptor fields can't be validated properly during encoding because they
are signed by a descriptor signing key that we don't have in the unit test.
Removing the test case for now but ultimately we need an independent
implementation that can encode descriptor and test our decoding functions with
that.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Create the hs_test_helpers.{c|h} files that contains helper functions to
create introduction point, descriptor and compare descriptor.
Used by both the hs cache and hs descriptor tests. Unify them to avoid code
duplication.
Also, this commit fixes the usage of the signing key that was wrongly used
when creating a cross signed certificate.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This change prevents a no-longer-supported behavior where we change
options that would later be written back to torrc with a SAVECONF.
Also, use the "Pointer to final pointer" trick to build the
normalized list, to avoid special-casing the first element.
asan was finding an alignment issue with a cast, so set the field in the
trunnel struct and then encode it instead. Also, enable log capture and
verification.
Checking all of these parameter lists for every single connection every second
seems like it could be an expensive waste.
Updating globally cached versions when there is a new consensus will still
allow us to apply consensus parameter updates to all existing connections
immediately.
IMO, these tests should be calling options_init() to properly set everything
to default values, but when that is done, about a dozen tests fail. Setting
the one default value that broke the tests for my branch. Sorry for being
lame.
This unifies CircuitIdleTimeout and PredictedCircsRelevanceTime into a single
option, and randomizes it.
It also gives us control over the default value as well as relay-to-relay
connection lifespan through the consensus.
Conflicts:
src/or/circuituse.c
src/or/config.c
src/or/main.c
src/test/testing_common.c
This defense will cause Cisco, Juniper, Fortinet, and other routers operating
in the default configuration to collapse netflow records that would normally
be split due to the 15 second flow idle timeout.
Collapsing these records should greatly reduce the utility of default netflow
data for correlation attacks, since all client-side records should become 30
minute chunks of total bytes sent/received, rather than creating multiple
separate records for every webpage load/ssh command interaction/XMPP chat/whatever
else happens to be inactive for more than 15 seconds.
The defense adds consensus parameters to govern the range of timeout values
for sending padding packets, as well as for keeping connections open.
The defense only sends padding when connections are otherwise inactive, and it
does not pad connections used solely for directory traffic at all. By default
it also doesn't pad inter-relay connections.
Statistics on the total padding in the last 24 hours are exported to the
extra-info descriptors.
We need to index diffs by the digest-as-signed of their source
consensus, so that we can find them even from consensuses whose
signatures are encoded differently.
In this patch I add support for "delete through end of file" in our
ed diff handler, and generate our diffs so that they remove
everything after in the consensus after the signatures begin.
test_options_validate_impl() incorrectly executed subsequent phases of
config parsing and validation after an expected error. This caused
msg to leak when those later phases (which would likely produce errors
as well) overwrote it.
This was introduced 90562fc23a adding a code
path where we pass a NULL pointer for the HSDir fingerprint to the control
event subsystem. The HS desc failed function wasn't handling properly that
pointer for a NULL value.
Two unit tests are also added in this commit to make sure we handle properly
the case of a NULL hsdir fingerprint and a NULL content as well.
Fixes#22138
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Code movement in the commit introducings tests for #22103 uncovered a
latent memory management bug.
Refactor the log message checking from test_options_checkmsgs() into a
helper test_options_checklog(). This avoids a memory leak (and
possible double-free) in a test failure condition.
Don't reuse variables (especially pointers to allocated memory!) for
multiple unrelated purposes.
Fixes CID 1405778.
Also factor out the error message comparisions from
test_options_validate_impl() into a separate function so it can check
for error messages in different phases of config parsing.
These required some special-casing, since some of the assumption
about real compression algorithms don't actually hold for the
identity transform. Specifically, we had assumed:
- compression functions typically change the lengths of their
inputs.
- decompression functions can detect truncated inputs
- compression functions have detectable headers
None of those is true for the identity transformation.
Introduce a way to optionally enable Rust integration for our builds. No
actual Rust code is added yet and specifying the flag has no effect
other than failing the build if rustc and cargo are unavailable.
There were two issues here: first, zstd didn't exhibit the right
behavior unless it got a very large input. That's fine.
The second issue was a genuine bug, fixed by 39cfaba9e2.
This patch refactors our compression tests such that deflate, gzip,
lzma, and zstd are all tested using the same code.
Additionally we use run-time checks to see if the given compression
method is supported instead of using HAVE_LZMA and HAVE_ZSTD.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/22085
Since we have a streaming API for each compression backend, we don't
need a non-streaming API for each: we can build a common
non-streaming API at the front-end.
This commit adds the src/trace directory containing the basics for our tracing
subsystem. It is not used in the code base. The "src/trace/debug.h" file
contains an example on how we can map our tor trace events to log_debug().
The tracing subsystem can only be enabled by tracing framework at compile
time. This commit introduces the "--enable-tracing-debug" option that will
make all "tor_trace()" function be maped to "log_debug()".
Closes#13802
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This patch adds support for checking if a given `compress_method_t` is
supported by the currently running Tor instance using
`tor_compress_supports_method()`.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21662
This patch adds support for enabling support for Zstandard to our configure
script. By default, the --enable-zstd option is set to "auto" which means if
libzstd is available we'll build Tor with Zstandard support.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21662
This patch adds support for enabling support for LZMA to our configure
script. By default, the --enable-lzma option is set to "auto" which
means if liblzma is available we'll build Tor with LZMA support.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/21662
The item referred to the cdm_ht_set_status() case where the item was
not already in the hashtable. But that already happens naturally
when we scan the directory on startup... and we already have a test
for that.
This commit adds some helper functions to look up the diff from one
consensus and to make sure that applying it leads to another. Then
we add them throughout the existing test cases. Doing this turned
up a reference-leaking bug in consensus_diff_worker_replyfn.
Initial tests. These just try adding a few consensuses, looking
them up, and making sure that consensus diffs are generated in a
more or less reasonable-looking way. It's enough for 87% coverage,
but it leaves out a lot of functionality.
This patch refactors our streaming compression code to allow us to
extend it with non-zlib/non-gzip based compression schemas.
See https://bugs.torproject.org/21663