Previously we tolerated up to 1.5 connections for every relay we
were connected to, and didn't warn if we had fewer than 5
connections total.
Now we tolerate up to 1.5 connections per relay, and up to 4
connections per authority, and we don't warn at all when we have
fewer than 25 connections total.
Fixes bug 33880, which seems to have been provoked by our #17592
change in 0.3.5.
The need for casting negative syscall arguments depends on the
glibc version. This affects the rules for the openat syscall which
uses the constant AT_FDCWD that is defined as a negative number.
This commit adds logic to only apply the cast when necessary, on
glibc versions from 2.27 onwards.
Different versions of glibc use either open or openat for the
opendir function. This commit adds logic to use the correct rule
for each glibc version, namely:
- Until 2.14 open is used
- From 2.15 to to 2.21 openat is used
- From 2.22 to 2.26 open is used
- From 2.27 onwards openat is used
The need for casting negative syscall arguments depends on the
glibc version. This affects the rules for the openat syscall which
uses the constant AT_FDCWD that is defined as a negative number.
This commit adds logic to only apply the cast when necessary, on
glibc versions from 2.27 onwards.
Our old https://bugs.torproject.org/nnnn URLs only work for bugs
numbered before 40000. Newer gitlab bugs need to have specific
projects mentioned.
This patch assumes that bugs are in tpo/core/tor by default, but
allows us to refer to several other projects by saying
e.g. "chutney#40002" if we want.
check-cocci is still a good idea -- perhaps as a cron job? But
doing it as part of our regular tests has just been confusing,
especially to volunteers who shouldn't have to become coccinelle
experts in order to get their patches through our CI.
Closes#40030.
When receiving an introduction NACK, the client either decides to close or
re-extend the circuit to another intro point.
In order to do this, the service descriptor needs to exists but it is possible
that it gets removed from the cache between the establishement of the
introduction circuit and the reception of the (N)ACK.
For that reason, the BUG(desc == NULL) is removed because it is a possible
normal use case. Tor recovers gracefully already.
Fixes#34087
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
It now uses the 'goto err' pattern, instead of the fatal_unreached()
pattern. The latter pattern is usually used when there is a loop, but there is
no loop in this function so it can be simplified easily.
This commit modifies the behavior of `parse_extended_address` in such a way
that if it fails, it will always return a `BAD_HOSTNAME` value, which is then
used to return the 0xF6 extended error code. This way, in any case that is
not a valid v2 address, we return the 0xF6 error code, which is the expected
behavior.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This reverts commit bf2a399fc0.
Don't set by default the prefer IPv6 feature on client ports because it breaks
the torsocks use case. The SOCKS resolve command is lacking a mechanism to ask
for a specific address family (v4 or v6) thus prioritizing IPv6 when an IPv4
address is asked on the resolve SOCKS interface resulting in a failure.
Tor Browser explicitly set PreferIPv6 so this should not affect the majority
of our users.
Closes#33796
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>