If (GNU) Make 3.81 is running processes in parallel using -j2 (or more),
it waits until all descendent processes have exited before it returns to
the shell.
When a command like "make -j2 test-network" is run, this means that
test-network.sh apparently hangs until it either make is forcibly
terminated, or all the chutney-launched tor processes have exited.
A workaround is to use make without -j, or make -j1 if there is an
existing alias to "make -jn" in the shell.
We resolve this bug in tor by using "chutney stop" after "chutney verify"
in test-network.sh.
Cases that now send errors:
* Malformed IP address (SOCKS5_GENERAL_ERROR)
* CONNECT/RESOLVE request with IP, when SafeSocks is set
(SOCKS5_NOT_ALLOWED)
* RESOLVE_PTR request with FQDN (SOCKS5_ADDRESS_TYPE_NOT_SUPPORTED)
* Malformed FQDN (SOCKS5_GENERAL_ERROR)
* Unknown address type (SOCKS5_ADDRESS_TYPE_NOT_SUPPORTED)
Fixes bug 13314.
Add a --delay option to test-network.sh, which configures the delay before
the chutney network tests for data transmission. The default remains at
18 seconds if the argument isn't specified.
Apparently we should be using bootstrap status for this (eventually).
Partially implements ticket 13161.
The default shell on OS X is bash, which has a builtin echo. When called
in "sh" mode, this echo does not accept "-n". This patch uses "/bin/echo -n"
instead.
Partially fixes issue 13161.
Add the TestingDirAuthVoteExit option, a list of nodes to vote Exit for,
regardless of their uptime, bandwidth, or exit policy.
TestingTorNetwork must be set for this option to have any effect.
Works around an issue where authorities would take up to 35 minutes to
give nodes the Exit flag in a test network, despite short consensus
intervals. Partially implements ticket 13161.
Fixes bug 13295; bugfix on 0.2.5.3-alpha.
The alternative here is to call crypto_global_init() from tor-resolve,
but let's avoid linking openssl into tor-resolve for as long as we
can.
When a spawned process forks, fails, then exits very quickly, (this
typically occurs when exec fails), there is a race condition between the
SIGCHLD handler updating the process_handle's fields, and checking the
process status in those fields. The update can occur before or after the
spawn tests check the process status.
We check whether the process is running or not running (rather than just
checking if it is running) to avoid this issue.
In circuit_build_times_calculate_timeout() in circuitstats.c, avoid dividing
by zero in the pareto calculations.
If either the alpha or p parameters are 0, we would divide by zero, yielding
an infinite result; which would be clamped to INT32_MAX anyway. So rather
than dividing by zero, we just skip the offending calculation(s), and
use INT32_MAX for the result.
Division by zero traps under clang -fsanitize=undefined-trap -fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error.
Avoid 4 null pointer errors under clang shallow analysis (the default when
building under Xcode) by using tor_assert() to prove that the pointers
aren't null. Resolves issue 13284 via minor code refactoring.
This helps us avoid undefined behavior. It's based on a patch from teor,
except that I wrote a perl script to regenerate the patch:
#!/usr/bin/perl -p -w -i
BEGIN { %vartypes = (); }
if (/^[{}]/) {
%vartypes = ();
}
if (/^ *crypto_int(\d+) +([a-zA-Z_][_a-zA-Z0-9]*)/) {
$vartypes{$2} = $1;
} elsif (/^ *(?:signed +)char +([a-zA-Z_][_a-zA-Z0-9]*)/) {
$vartypes{$1} = '8';
}
# This fixes at most one shift per line. But that's all the code does.
if (/([a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z_0-9]*) *<< *(\d+)/) {
$v = $1;
if (exists $vartypes{$v}) {
s/$v *<< *(\d+)/SHL$vartypes{$v}($v,$1)/;
}
}
# remove extra parenthesis
s/\(SHL64\((.*)\)\)/SHL64\($1\)/;
s/\(SHL32\((.*)\)\)/SHL32\($1\)/;
s/\(SHL8\((.*)\)\)/SHL8\($1\)/;
There are some loops of the form
for (i=1;i<1;++i) ...
And of course, if the loop index is initialized to 1, it will never
be less than 1, and the loop body will never be executed. This
upsets coverity.
Patch fixes CID 1221543 and 1221542
This bug shouldn't be reachable so long as secret_to_key_len and
secret_to_key_make_specifier stay in sync, but we might screw up
someday.
Found by coverity; this is CID 1241500
Bugfix on ed8f020e205267e6270494634346ab68d830e1d8; bug not in any
released version of Tor. Found by Coverity; this is CID 1239290.
[Yes, I used this commit message before, in 58e813d0fc.
Turns out, that fix wasn't right, since I didn't look up a
screen. :P ]
When size_t is the most memory you can have, make sure that things
referring to real parts of memory are size_t, not uint64_t or off_t.
But not on any released Tor.