This patch changes HiddenServiceExportCircuitID so instead of being a
boolean it takes a string, which is the protocol. Currently only the
'haproxy' protocol is defined.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/4700
Without this patch we would encode the IPv6 address' last part as
::ffffffff instead of ::ffff:ffff when the GID is UINT32_MAX.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/4700
This commit tests that the descriptor building result, when the client
authorization is enabled, includes everything that is needed.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
The OpenSSL "RSA" object is currently 408 bytes compares to the ASN.1 encoding
which is 140 for a 1024 RSA key.
We save 268 bytes per descriptor (routerinfo_t) *and* microdescriptor
(microdesc_t). Scaling this to 6000 relays, and considering client usually
only have microdescriptors, we save 1.608 MB of RAM which is considerable for
mobile client.
This commit makes it that we keep the RSA onion public key (used for TAP
handshake) in ASN.1 format instead of an OpenSSL RSA object.
Changes is done in both routerinfo_t and microdesc_t.
Closes#27246
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Stop putting ed25519 link specifiers in v3 onion service descriptors,
when the intro point doesn't support ed25519 link authentication.
Fixes bug 26627; bugfix on 0.3.2.4-alpha.
Now that the rev counter depends on the local time, we need to be more careful
in the unittests. Some unittests were breaking because they were using
consensus values from 1985, but they were not updating the local time
appropriately. That was causing the OPE module to complain that it was trying
to encrypt insanely large values.
By doing so, it is renamed to voting_schedule_recalculate_timing(). This
required a lot of changes to include voting_schedule.h everywhere that this
function was used.
This effectively now makes voting_schedule.{c|h} not include dirauth/dirvote.h
for that symbol and thus no dependency on the dirauth module anymore.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This is a pretty big commit but it only moves these files to src/or/dirauth:
dircollate.c dirvote.c shared_random.c shared_random_state.c
dircollate.h dirvote.h shared_random.h shared_random_state.h
Then many files are modified to change the include line for those header files
that have moved into a new directory.
Without using --disable-module-dirauth, everything builds fine. When using the
flag to disable the module, tor doesn't build due to linking errors. This will
be addressed in the next commit(s).
No code behavior change.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
* ADD new /src/common/crypto_rand.[ch] module.
* ADD new /src/common/crypto_util.[ch] module (contains the memwipe()
function, since all crypto_* modules need this).
* FIXES part of #24658: https://bugs.torproject.org/24658
Additionally, this change extracts the functions that created and
freed these elements.
These structures had common "forward&reverse stream&digest"
elements, but they were initialized and freed through cpath objects,
and different parts of the code depended on them. Now all that code
is extacted, and kept in relay_crypto.c
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
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.
Using tt_assert in these helpers was implying to scan-build that our
'new' functions might be returning NULL, which in turn would make it
warn about null-pointer use.
Also demote a log message that can occur under natural causes
(if the circuit subsystem is missing descriptors/consensus etc.).
The HS subsystem will naturally retry to connect to intro points,
so no need to make that log user-facing.