that will handle each such port. (We can extend this to include addresses
if exit policies shift to require that.) Seed us with port 80 so web
browsers won't complain that Tor is "slow to start up".
This was necessary because our old circuit building strategy just involved
counting circuits, and as time went by we would build up a big pile of
circuits that had peculiar exit policies (e.g. only exit to 9001-9100)
which would take up space in the circuit pile but never get used.
Fix router_compare_addr_to_addr_policy: it was not treating a port of *
as always matching, so we were picking reject *:* nodes as exit nodes too.
If you haven't used a clean circuit in an hour, throw it away, just to
be on the safe side.
This means after 6 hours a totally unused Tor client will have no
circuits open.
svn:r3078
close, if we're planning to wait to flush it.
This is important because we were sending a socks reject back if we're
closing and hadn't already sent one, but it wasn't actually getting
written since the conn was already marked-for-close.
svn:r3074
Stop keeping track of num_retries for apconns, since they expire
after 60 seconds anyway.
When warning about retrying or giving up, print the address, so
the user knows which one it's talking about.
svn:r3073
waiting for its connected cell, we were calculating time from when the
ap_conn was created. So if it waited say 20 seconds before being attached,
then we would immediately decide that the circuit had timed out.
Also, make circuit_dump_by_conn() display actual circuit progress,
including circuits that haven't been attached to the conn yet but
hope to when it finishes connecting.
svn:r3072
Put the check-if-requested-exitrouter-will-reject-us code in the
circuit_attach loop, so it gets checked periodically and not just
once at the beginning. This is useful in case the routerlist changes,
but also in case the address gets resolved into something that we learn
we'll reject.
svn:r3039
decide what exit node to use; based on a patch by geoff goodell.
needs more work: e.g. it goes bananas building new circuits when the
chosen exit node's exit policy rejects the connection.
svn:r3015
The problem was that with high load, circuit package window was
reaching 0. Whenever we got a circuit-level sendme, we were
reading a lot on each socket, but only writing out a bit. So we
would eventually reach eof. This would be noticed and acted on
even when there are still bytes sitting in the inbuf.
svn:r2932
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