The smartlist_core library now contains only the parts of smartlists
that are needed for the logging library. This resolves the
circularity between "container" and "log".
The "containers" library still uses the logging code, and has the
higher-level smartlist functions.
The locking code gets its own module, since it's more fundamental
than the higher-level locking code.
Extracting the logging code was the whole point here. :)
I am calling the crypto library "crypt_ops", since I want
higher-level crypto things to be separated from lower-level ones.
This library will hold only the low-level ones, once we have it
refactored.
We need this trick because some of our Rust tests depend on our C
code, which in turn depend on other native libraries, which thereby
pulls a whole mess of our build system into "cargo test".
To solve this, we add a build script (build.rs) to set most of the
options that we want based on the contents of config.rust. Some
options can't be set, and need to go to the linker directly: we use
a linker replacement (link_rust.sh) for these. Both config.rust and
link_rust.sh are generated by autoconf for us.
This patch on its own should enough to make the crypto test build,
but not necessarily enough to make it pass.
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.
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>
Turning on warnings in Automake makes it complain about not using the
AM_PROG_AR macro. The AM_PROG_AR macro is required when LIBRARIES or
LTLIBRARIES is used.
The macro looks for an archiver and wraps it in the ar-lib script which
is automatically generated so Git should ignore it.
It makes the custom check for 'ar' obsolete so it is removed.
The AM_PROG_AR macro was added in Automake 1.11.2 thus the minimum
Automake version is increased.
We know there are overflows in curve25519-donna-c32, so we'll have
to have that one be fwrapv.
Only apply the asan, ubsan, and trapv options to the code that does
not need to run in constant time. Those options introduce branches
to the code they instrument.
(These introduced branches should never actually be taken, so it
might _still_ be constant time after all, but branch predictors are
complicated enough that I'm not really confident here. Let's aim for
safety.)
Closes 17983.
"Tor has included a feature to fetch the initial consensus from nodes
other than the authorities for a while now. We just haven't shipped a
list of alternate locations for clients to go to yet.
Reasons why we might want to ship tor with a list of additional places
where clients can find the consensus is that it makes authority
reachability and BW less important.
We want them to have been around and using their current key, address,
and port for a while now (120 days), and have been running, a guard,
and a v2 directory mirror for most of that time."
Features:
* whitelist and blacklist for an opt-in/opt-out trial.
* excludes BadExits, tor versions that aren't recommended, and low
consensus weight directory mirrors.
* reduces the weighting of Exits to avoid overloading them.
* places limits on the weight of any one fallback.
* includes an IPv6 address and orport for each FallbackDir, as
implemented in #17327. (Tor won't bootstrap using IPv6 fallbacks
until #17840 is merged.)
* generated output includes timestamps & Onionoo URL for traceability.
* unit test ensures that we successfully load all included default
fallback directories.
Closes ticket #15775. Patch by "teor".
OnionOO script by "weasel", "teor", "gsathya", and "karsten".
Integrate ed25519-donna into the build process, and provide an
interface that matches the `ref10` code. Apart from the blinding and
Curve25519 key conversion, this functions as a drop-in replacement for
ref10 (verified by modifying crypto_ed25519.c).
Tests pass, and the benchmarks claim it is quite a bit faster, however
actually using the code requires additional integration work.
For this to work bt_test.py now returns an exit code indicating success or
failure. Additionally, check-local and its specific dependencies are now
obsolete so they are removed.
The zero length keys test now requires the path to the Tor binary as the first
parameter to ensure the correct Tor binary is used without hard coding a path.
The wrapper script calls the zero length keys test for each test separately to
ensure the correct shell is used (as configured by autoconf). Another solution
would have been to place the tests into separate functions so multiple tests
could be run internally. This would have made a diff of considerable size and
frankly it is outside the scope of this fix.
This reduces the likelihood that I have made any exploitable errors
in the encoding/decoding.
This commit also imports the trunnel runtime source into Tor.
torrc.minimal is now the one that should change as infrequently as
possible. To schedule an change to go into it eventually, make your
change to torrc.minimal.in-sample.
torrc.sample is now the volatile one: we can change it to our hearts'
content.
Closes ticket #11144
We don't have any more latex files in Tor, so there's no reason to
.gitignore all of the latex droppings. On the other hand, automake
likes to use .trs files and .log for test suite outputs.
In doc, restoring torify made us generate some .in files we didn't
before.
In contrib, we added tor.service.in, but didn't add tor.service to .gitignore
If you pass the --enable-coverage flag on the command line, we build
our testing binaries with appropriate options eo enable coverage
testing. We also build a "tor-cov" binary that has coverage enabled,
for integration tests.
On recent OSX versions, test coverage only works with clang, not gcc.
So we warn about that.
Also add a contrib/coverage script to actually run gcov with the
appropriate options to generate useful .gcov files. (Thanks to
automake, the .o files will not have the names that gcov expects to
find.)
Also, remove generated gcda and gcno files on clean.
This is mainly a matter of automake trickery: we build each static
library in two versions now: one with the TOR_UNIT_TESTS macro
defined, and one without. When TOR_UNIT_TESTS is defined, we can
enable mocking and expose more functions. When it's not defined, we
can lock the binary down more.
The alternatives would be to have alternate build modes: a "testing
configuration" for building the libraries with test support, and a
"production configuration" for building them without. I don't favor
that approach, since I think it would mean more people runnning
binaries build for testing, or more people not running unit tests.
We decided to no longer ship expert packages for OS X because they're a
lot of trouble to keep maintained and confuse users. For those who want
a tor on OS X without Vidalia, macports is a fine option. Alternatively,
building from source is easy, too.
The polipo stuff that is still required for the Vidalia bundle build can
now be found in the torbrowser repository,
git://git.torproject.org/torbrowser.git.
tor-fw-helper is a command-line tool to wrap and abstract various
firewall port-forwarding tools.
This commit matches the state of Jacob's tor-fw-helper branch as of
23 September 2010.
(commit msg by Nick)
This removes the Makefile.am from doc/design-paper and replaces it with
a static Makefile. We don't need to call it during the normal Tor build
process, as we don't need its targets normally. Keeping it around in
case we want to rebuild the pdf or ps files later.
This should be a very faithful conversion, preserving as much of the layout
of the old manpage as possible. This wasn't possible for the nt-service
and the DataDirectory/state parts. See a later commit for some small
cleanups.
Tiago Faria helped with the asciidoc conversion, big thanks!
If we have a debian/micro-revision.i, replace the one in src/or
with our copy so that this will be the revision that ends up in
the binary. This is an informational only version string, but
it'd be kinda nice if it was (more) accurate nonetheless.
Of course this won't help if people manually patch around but
it's still preferable to claiming we are exactly upstream's source.
If we are building directly out of a git tree, update
debian/micro-revision.i in the clean target.
This patch adds a new compat_libevent.[ch] set of files, and moves our
Libevent compatibility and utilitity functions there. We build them
into a separate .a so that nothing else in src/commmon depends on
Libevent (partially fixing bug 507).
Also, do not use our own built-in evdns copy when we have Libevent
2.0, whose evdns is finally good enough (thus fixing Bug 920).