This should avoid most intermittent test failures on developer and CI machines,
but there could (and probably should) be a more elegant solution.
Also, this test was testing that the IP was created and its expiration time was
set to a time greater than or equal to `now+INTRO_POINT_LIFETIME_MIN_SECONDS+5`:
/* Time to expire MUST also be in that range. We add 5 seconds because
* there could be a gap between setting now and the time taken in
* service_intro_point_new. On ARM, it can be surprisingly slow... */
tt_u64_op(ip->time_to_expire, OP_GE,
now + INTRO_POINT_LIFETIME_MIN_SECONDS + 5);
However, this appears to be a typo, since, according to the comment above it,
adding five seconds was done because the IP creation can be slow on some
systems. But the five seconds is added to the *minimum* time we're comparing
against, and so it actually functions to make this test *more* likely to fail on
slower systems. (It should either subtract five seconds, or instead add it to
time_to_expire.)
* FIXES#25450: https://bugs.torproject.org/25450
These were meant to demonstrate old behavior, or old rust behavior.
One of them _should_ work in Rust, but won't because of
implementation details. We'll fix that up later.
The C code and the rust code had different separate integer overflow
bugs here. That suggests that we're better off just forbidding this
pathological case.
Also, add tests for expected behavior on receiving a bad protocol
list in a consensus.
Fixes another part of 25249.
I've refactored these to be a separate function, to avoid tricky
merge conflicts.
Some of these are disabled with "XXXX" comments; they should get
fixed moving forward.
On slow system, 1 msec between one read and the other was too tight. For
instance, it failed on armel with a 4msec gap:
https://buildd.debian.org/status/package.php?p=tor&suite=experimental
Increase to 10 msec for now to address slow system. It is important that we
keep this OP_LE test in so we make sure the msec/usec/nsec read aren't
desynchronized by huge gaps. We'll adjust again if we ever encounter a system
that goes slower than 10 msec between calls.
Fixes#25113
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
If the cache is using 20% of our maximum allowed memory, clean 10% of it. Same
behavior as the HS descriptor cache.
Closes#25122
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
The current code flow makes it that we can release a channel in a PENDING
state but not in the pending list. This happens while the channel is being
processed in the scheduler loop.
Fixes#25125
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This tests many cases of the KIST scheduler with the pending list state by
calling entry point in the scheduler while channels are scheduled or not.
Also, it adds a test for the bug #24700.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
In 0.3.2.1-alpha, we've added notify_networkstatus_changed() in order to have
a way to notify other subsystems that the consensus just changed. The old and
new consensus are passed to it.
Before this patch, this was done _before_ the new consensus was set globally
(thus NOT accessible by getting the latest consensus). The scheduler
notification was assuming that it was set and select_scheduler() is looking at
the latest consensus to get the parameters it might needs. This was very wrong
because at that point it is still the old consensus set globally.
This commit changes the notify_networkstatus_changed() to be the "before"
function and adds an "after" notification from which the scheduler subsystem
is notified.
Fixes#24975
When we stopped looking at the "protocols" variable directly, we
broke the hs_service/build_update_descriptors test, since it didn't
actually update any of the flags.
The fix here is to call summarize_protover_flags() from that test,
and to expose summarize_protover_flags() as "STATIC" from
routerparse.c.