Report errors if the notification fails; report success only if it
succeeds; and if we are not notifying systemd because we aren't
running with systemd, don't log at notice.
We already log whenever our state changes, e.g. whenever new directory
information arrives. This additional log_warn() will at best just add more
log messages, or worse, make the user wonder what she needs to fix.
(Changed after consultation with Yawning.)
Nothing ever uses the string when we're in "have minimum dir info"
state. The flow of the function is "check for problems, if you see a
problem write an explanation to dir_info_status and set res to 0". If
you get to the end of the function without any problems, then res =
1 and we're all ready to start making circuits.
(Changed after consultation with Yawning.)
Parse the file just before voting and apply its information to the
provided vote_routerstatus_t. This follows the same logic as when
dirauths parse bwauth files.
`dir_info_status` is used from main.c:directory_info_has_arrived() to
provide useful (INFO/NOTICE) level logging to users, and should always
be updated regardless of the rate limiting.
This adds the key "hs/client/desc/id/<ADDR>" to the GETINFO command used to
lookup the given onion address in the client hs descriptor cache.
If found, prints it formatted as specified in section 1.3 of rend-spec.txt.
Fixes#14845
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
The idea here is that a controller should be able to make Tor produce a
new relay descriptor on demand, without that descriptor actually being
uploaded to the dirauths (they would likely reject it anyway due to
freshness concerns).
Implements #14784.
Allow building a router descriptor without storing it to global state.
This is in preparation of a patch to export the created descriptors via
the control port.
The issue is that we use the cpuworker system with relays only, so if we
start up as a client and transition to being a relay later, we'll be
sad.
This fixes bug 14901; not in any released version of Tor.
__libc_message() tries to open /dev/tty with O_RDWR, but the sandbox
catches that and calls it a crash. Instead, I'm making the sandbox
setenv LIBC_FATAL_STDERR_, so that glibc uses stderr instead.
Fix for 14759, bugfix on 0.2.5.1-alpha
They have been off-by-default since 0.2.5 and nobody has complained. :)
Also remove the buf_shrink() function, which hasn't done anything
since we first stopped using contiguous memory to store buffers.
Closes ticket 14848.
This fixes a bug where we decide to free the circuit because it isn't on
any workqueue anymore, and then the job finishes and the circuit gets
freed again.
Fixes bug #14815, not in any released version of Tor.
like might happen for Tails or Whonix users who start with a very wrong
hardware clock, use Tor to discover a more accurate time, and then
fix their clock.
Resolves part of ticket 8766.
(There are still some timers in various places that aren't addressed yet.)
Before a couple weeks ago didn't know Tor had these tests, interesting! Stem
already has tests for spawning tor processes but lacked any with this targeted
focus on its arguments.
I've added our own counterpart for these tests. Many are direct copies but
there were others I improved a little...
https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/14109https://gitweb.torproject.org/stem.git/commit/?id=137d193a026638f066e817e3396cebbbb6ace012
Now that Tor uses Stem to supplement its tests no reason for these to live
separately. Tested by simply building tor and confirming test_cmdline_args.py
is no longer in the generated Makefile.
In #14803, Damian noticed that his Tor sometimes segfaults. Roger noted
that his valgrind gave an invalid write of size one here. Whenever we
use FLEXIBLE_ARRAY_MEMBER, we have to make sure to actually malloc a
thing that's large enough.
Fixes bug #14803, not in any released version of Tor.
Check if each smartlist is NULL before calling SMARTLIST_FOREACH on it.
Bug discovered by the clang static analyzer.
Apple clang 600.0.56 (LLVM 3.5svn) on x86_64-apple-darwin14.1.0.
If the guard unreachable_since variable was set, the status "up" was
reported which is wrong. This adds the "down" status followed by the
unreachable_since time value.
Fixes#14184
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
Shell exit values must fall into the range of [0-255], so let's honour
this. In practice, the "exit -1" from the old code set an exit value of
255 on most systems, so let's pick that.
Fixes part of bug #14478, patch idea suggested by an anonymous
contributor. Thanks!
David Goulet finds that when he runs a busy relay for a while with the
latest version of the git code, the number of onionskins handled
slowly dwindles to zero, with total_pending_tasks wedged at its
maximum value.
I conjecture this is because the total_pending_tasks variable isn't
decremented when we successfully cancel a job. Fixed that.
Fixes bug 14741; bugfix not on any released version of tor.
This both fixes the problem, and ensures that forgetting to update
domain_list in the future will trigger the bug codepath instead of
a NULL pointer deref.
Ordinarily, get_options() can never return NULL, but with
test_status.c mocking, it can. So test for that case.
The best fix here would be to pass the options value to a
bridge_server_mode() function.
After connectivity problems, only try connecting to bridges which
are currently configured; don't mark bridges which we previously
used but are no longer configured. Fixes 14216. Reported by
and fix provided by arma.
If the returned value of read/recv is 0 (meaning EOF), we'll end up in an
infinite loop (active wait) until something is written on the pipe which is
not really what we want here especially because those functions are called
from the main thread.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
It's now possible to use SocksPort or any other kind of port that can use a
Unix socket like so:
SocksPort unix:/foo/bar/unix.sock
Fixes#14451
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
Introduces two new circuit status name-value parameters: SOCKS_USERNAME
and SOCKS_PASSWORD. Values are enclosing in quotes and unusual characters
are escaped.
Example:
650 CIRC 5 EXTENDED [...] SOCKS_USERNAME="my_username" SOCKS_PASSWORD="my_password"
Here is why:
1) v0 descriptors are deprecated since 0.2.2.1 and not suppose to be alive
in the network anymore. This function should only serve v2 version for now
as the default.
2) It should return different error code depending on what's the actual
error is. Right now, there is no distinction between a cache entry not found
and an invalid query.
3) This function should NOT test if the intro points are usable or not. This
adds some load on a function that should be "O(1)" and do one job.
Furthermore, multiple callsites actually already test that doing twice the
job...
4) While adding control event, it would be useful to be able to lookup a
cache entry without having it checking the intro points. There are also
places in the code that do want to lookup the cache entry without doing
that.
Fixes#14391
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
This is to avoid that the pthread_cond_timedwait() is not affected by time
adjustment which could make the waiting period very long or very short which
is not what we want in any cases.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
Also, do a little light refactoring to move some variable declarations
around and make a few things const
Also fix an obnoxious bug on checking for the DONE stream end reason.
It's not a flag; it's a possible value or a variable that needs to be
masked.
Once a NACK is received on the intro circuit, tor tries an other usable one
by extending the current circuit to it. If no more intro points are usable,
now close the circuit. Also, it's reason is changed before closing it so we
don't report again an intro point failure and trigger an extra HS fetch.
Fixes#14224
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
Once a NACK is received on the intro circuit, tor tries an other usable one
by extending the current circuit to it. If no more intro points are usable,
now close the circuit.
Fixes#14224
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
This fixes a bug where we'd fetch different replicas of the same
descriptor for a down hidden service over and over, until we got lucky
and fetched the same replica twice in a row.
Fixes bug 14219; bugfix on 0.2.0.10-alpha.
(Patch from Roger; commit message and changes file by Nick.)
We've started to hit the limit here. We introduced the limit in
0.1.2.5-alpha. This fixes bug 14261, but we should have a smarter way
to not actually do the behavior this permits. See #14267 for a ticket
about fixing that.
This incidentally makes unix SocksSocket support all the same options
as SocksPort.
This patch breaks 'SocksSocket 0'; next will restore it.
Resolves 14254.
Previously I used one queue per worker; now I use one queue for
everyone. The "broadcast" code is gone, replaced with an idempotent
'update' operation.
The solution I took is to not free a circuit with a pending
uncancellable work item, but rather to set its magic number to a
sentinel value. When we get a work item, we check whether the circuit
has that magic sentinel, and if so, we free it rather than processing
the reply.
To avoid having diffs turn out too big, I had replaced some unneeded
ifs and fors with if (1), so that the indentation would still work out
right. Now I might as well clean those up.
This way we can use the linux eventfd extension where available.
Using EVFILT_USER on the BSDs will be a teeny bit trickier, and will
require libevent hacking.
Also, re-enable the #if'd out condition-variable code.
Work queues are going to make us hack on all of this stuff a bit more
closely, so it might not be a terrible idea to make it easier to hack.
The trick here is to apply mapaddress first, and only then apply
automapping. Otherwise, the automap checks don't get done.
Fix for bug 7555; bugfix on all versions of Tor supporting both
MapAddress and AutoMap.
When tor is configured with --enable-bufferevents, the build fails
because compat_libevent.h makes use of the macro MOCK_DECL() which
is defined in testsupport.h, but not included. We add the include.
There were following problems:
- configure.ac wrongly checked for defined HAVE_SYSTEMD; this
wasn't working, so the watchdog code was not compiled in.
Replace library search with explicit version check
- sd_notify() watchdog call was unsetting NOTIFY_SOCKET from env;
this means only first "watchdog ping" was delivered, each
subsequent one did not have socket to be sent to and systemd
was killing service
- after those fixes, enable Watchdog in systemd unit with one
minute intervals
If running under systemd, send back information when reloading
configuration and gracefully shutting down. This gives administator
more information about current Tor daemon state.
If running under systemd, notify the supervisor about current PID
of Tor daemon. This makes systemd unit simpler and more robust:
it will do the right thing regardless of RunAsDaemon settings.
Check for a missing option value in parse_virtual_addr_network
before asserting on the NULL in tor_addr_parse_mask_ports.
This avoids crashing on torrc lines like Vi[rtualAddrNetworkIPv[4|6]]
when no value follows the option.
Bugfix on 0.2.3 (de4cc126cb on 24 November 2012), fixes#14142.
apparantly, "pragma GCC diagnostic push/pop" don't exist with older versions.
Fixes bug in 740e592790f570c446cbb5e6d4a77f842f75; bug not in any
released Tor.
Drop the MIN_REND_INITIAL_POST_DELAY on a testing network to 5 seconds,
but keep the default at 30 seconds.
Reduces the hidden service bootstrap to 25 seconds from around 45 seconds.
Change the default src/test/test-network.sh delay to 25 seconds.
Closes ticket 13401.
TestingDirAuthVoteHSDir ensures that authorities vote the HSDir flag
for the listed relays regardless of uptime or ORPort connectivity.
Respects the value of VoteOnHidServDirectoriesV2.
Partial fix for bug 14067.
Check that tor generates new keys, and overwrites the empty key files.
Test that tor generates new keys when keys are missing (existing
behaviour).
Test that tor does not overwrite key files that already contain data
(existing behaviour).
Tests fixes to bug 13111.
Fixes bug 11454, where we would keep around a superseded descriptor
if the descriptor replacing it wasn't at least a week later. Bugfix
on 0.2.1.8-alpha.
Fixes bug 11457, where a certificate with a publication time in the
future could make us discard existing (and subsequent!) certificates
with correct publication times. Bugfix on 0.2.0.3-alpha.
When I made time parsing more strict, I broke the
EntryGuardDownSince line, which relied on two concatenated ISO times
being parsed as a single time.
Fixes bug 14136. Bugfix on 7984fc1531. Bug not in any released
version of Tor.
Also, avoid crashing when we attempt to double-remove an edge
connection from the DNS resolver: just log a bug warning instead.
Fixes bug 14129. Bugfix on 0d20fee2fb, which was in 0.0.7rc1.
jowr found the bug. cypherpunks wrote the fix. I added the log
message and removed the assert.
"Maybe this time should be reduced, since we are considering
guard-related changes as quite important? It would be a pity to
settle on a guard node, then close the Tor client fast and lose that
information."
Closes 12485.
If we decide not to use a new guard because we want to retry older
guards, only close the locally-originating circuits passing through
that guard. Previously we would close all the circuits.
Fixes bug 9819; bugfix on 0.2.1.1-alpha. Reported by "skruffy".
Have clients and authorities both have new behavior, since the
fix for bug 11243 has gone in. But make clients still accept
accept old bogus HSDir descriptors, to avoid fingerprinting trickery.
Fixes bug 9286.
If we're not a relay, we ignore it.
If it's set to 1, we obey ExitPolicy.
If it's set to 0, we force ExitPolicy to 'reject *:*'
And if it's set to auto, then we warn the user if they're running an
exit, and tell them how they can stop running an exit if they didn't
mean to do that.
Fixes ticket 10067
We had a check to block these, but the patch we merged as a1c1fc72
broke this check by making them absolute on demand every time we
opened them. That's not so great though. Instead, we should make them
absolute on startup, and not let them change after that.
Fixes bug 13397; bugfix on 0.2.3.11-alpha.
This happened because we changed AutomapHostsSuffixes to replace "."
with "", since a suffix of "" means "match everything." But our
option handling code for CSV options likes to remove empty entries
when it re-parses stuff.
Instead, let "." remain ".", and treat it specially when we're
checking for a match.
Fixes bug 12509; bugfix on 0.2.0.1-alpha.
This allows hidden services to disable the anti-scanning feature
introduced in 0.2.6.2-alpha. With this option not set, a connection
to an unlisted port closes the circuit. With this option set, only
a RELAY_DONE cell is sent.
Closes ticket #14084.
Supposedly there are a decent number of applications that "support"
IPv6 and SOCKS5 using the FQDN address type. While said applications
should be using the IPv6 address type, allow the connection if
SafeSocks is not set.
Bug not in any released version.
Stop assuming that private addresses are local when checking
reachability in a TestingTorNetwork. Instead, when testing, assume
all OR connections are remote. (This is necessary due to many test
scenarios running all nodes on localhost.)
This assists in bootstrapping a testing Tor network.
Fixes bugs 13718 & 13924.
If the consensus does not contain Exits, Tor will only build internal
circuits. In this case, relevant statuses will contain the word "internal"
as indicated in the Tor control-spec.txt. When bootstrap completes,
Tor will be ready to handle an application requesting an internal
circuit to hidden services at ".onion" addresses.
If a future consensus contains Exits, exit circuits may become available.
Tor already notifies the user at "notice" level if they have no exits in
the consensus, and can therefor only build internal paths.
Consequential change from #13718.
Tor can now build circuits from a consensus with no exits.
But if it tries to build exit circuits, they fail and flood the logs.
The circuit types in the Exit Circuits list below will only be
built if the current consensus has exits. If it doesn't,
only the Internal Circuits will be built. (This can change
with each new consensus.)
Fixes bug #13814, causes fewer path failures due to #13817.
Exit Circuits:
Predicted Exit Circuits
User Traffic Circuits
Most AP Streams
Circuits Marked Exit
Build Timeout Circuits (with exits)
Internal Circuits:
Hidden Service Server Circuits
Hidden Service Client Circuits
Hidden Service AP Streams
Hidden Service Intro Point Streams
Circuits Marked Internal
Build Timeout Circuits (with no exits)
Other Circuits?
If the consensus has no exits (typical of a bootstrapping
test network), allow tor to build circuits once enough
descriptors have been downloaded.
When there are no exits, we always have "enough"
exit descriptors. (We treat the proportion of available
exit descriptors as 100%.)
This assists in bootstrapping a testing Tor network.
Fixes bug 13718.
Makes bug 13161's TestingDirAuthVoteExit non-essential.
(But still useful for speeding up a bootstrap.)
Add router_have_consensus_path() which reports whether
the consensus has exit paths, internal paths, or whether it
just doesn't know.
Used by #13718 and #13814.
count_usable_descriptors now uses named exit_only values:
USABLE_DESCRIPTOR_ALL
USABLE_DESCRIPTOR_EXIT_ONLY
Add debug logging code for descriptor counts.
This (hopefully) resolves nickm's request in bug 13718 to improve
argument readability in nodelist.c.
choose_good_entry_server() now excludes current entry
guards and their families, unless we're in a test network,
and excluding guards would exclude all nodes.
This typically occurs in incredibly small tor networks,
and those using TestingAuthVoteGuard *
This is an incomplete fix, but is no worse than the previous
behaviour, and only applies to minimal, testing tor networks
(so it's no less secure).
Discovered as part of #13718.
Make hidden service port scanning harder by sending back REASON_DONE which
does not disclose that it was in fact an exit policy issue. After that, kill
the circuit immediately to avoid more bad requests on it.
This means that everytime an hidden service exit policy does match, the user
(malicious or not) needs to build a new circuit.
Fixes#13667.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
Otherwise we risk a subsequent memdup or memcpy copying
uninitialized RAM into some other place that might eventually expose
it. Let's make sure that doesn't happen.
Closes ticket 14041
When V3AuthVotingInterval is low, decrease the delay on the
If-Modified-Since header passed to directory servers.
This allows us to obtain consensuses promptly when the consensus
interval is very short.
This assists in bootstrapping a testing Tor network.
Fixes bugs 13718 & 13963.
Decrease minimum consensus interval to 10 seconds
when TestingTorNetwork is set. (Or 5 seconds for
the first consensus.)
Fix code that assumes larger interval values.
This assists in quickly bootstrapping a testing
Tor network.
Fixes bugs 13718 & 13823.
Stop requiring exits to have non-zero bandwithcapacity in a
TestingTorNetwork. Instead, when TestingMinExitFlagThreshold is 0,
ignore exit bandwidthcapacity.
This assists in bootstrapping a testing Tor network.
Fixes bugs 13718 & 13839.
Makes bug 13161's TestingDirAuthVoteExit non-essential.
Matthew's autoaddr code returned an undecorated address when trying to check
that the code didn't insert an undecorated one into the map.
This patch fixes this by actually storing the undecorated address in tmp
instead of buf as it was originally intended.
This patch is released under the same license as the original file as
long as the author iscredited.
Signed-off-by: Francisco Blas Izquierdo Riera (klondike) <klondike@gentoo.org>
Document why we divide it by two.
Check for > 0 instead of nonzero for success, since that's what the
manpage says.
Allow watchdog timers greater than 1 second.
It work by notifying systemd on a regular basis. If
there is no notification, the daemon is restarted.
This requires a version newer than the 209 version
of systemd, as it is not supported before.
When receiving a trasnsparently proxied request with tor using iptables tor
dies because the appropriate getsockopt calls aren't enabled on the sandbox.
This patch fixes this by adding the two getsockopt calls used when doing
transparent proxying with tor to the sandbox for the getsockopt policy.
This patch is released under the same license as the original file as
long as the author is credited.
Signed-off-by: Francisco Blas Izquierdo Riera (klondike) <klondike@gentoo.org>
The original call to getsockopt to know the original address on transparently
proxyed sockets using REDIRECT in iptables failed with IPv6 addresses because
it assumed all sockets used IPv4.
This patch fixes this by using the appropriate options and adding the headers
containing the needed definitions for these.
This patch is released under the same license as the original file as
long as the author iscredited.
Signed-off-by: Francisco Blas Izquierdo Riera (klondike) <klondike@gentoo.org>
This is a good idea in case the caller stupidly doesn't check the
return value from baseX_decode(), and as a workaround for the
current inconsistent API of base16_decode.
Prevents any fallout from bug 14013.
The address of an array in the middle of a structure will
always be non-NULL. clang recognises this and complains.
Disable the tautologous and redundant check to silence
this warning.
Fixes bug 14001.
The address of an array in the middle of a structure will
always be non-NULL. clang recognises this and complains.
Disable the tautologous and redundant check to silence
this warning.
A comment about an IPv6 address string incorrectly refers
to an IPv4 address format.
A log buffer is sized 10024 rather than 10240.
Fixes bug 14001.
The two statistics are:
1. number of RELAY cells observed on successfully established
rendezvous circuits; and
2. number of .onion addresses observed as hidden-service
directory.
Both statistics are accumulated over 24 hours, obfuscated by rounding
up to the next multiple of a given number and adding random noise,
and written to local file stats/hidserv-stats.
Notably, no statistics will be gathered on clients or services, but
only on relays.
In circuit_get_open_circ_or_launch(), for a rendezvous circuit,
rend_client_rendcirc_has_opened() but circuit_has_opened() is preferred here
since it will call the right function for a specific circuit purpose.
Furthermore, a controller event is triggered where the former did not.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
1) Set them to the values that (according to Rob) avoided performance
regressions. This means that the scheduler won't get much exercise
until we implement KIST or something like it.
2) Rename the options to end with a __, since I think they might be
going away, and nobody should mess with them.
3) Use the correct types for the option variables. MEMUNIT needs to be a
uint64_t; UINT needs to be (I know, I know!) an int.
4) Validate the values in options_validate(); do the switch in
options_act(). This way, setting the option to an invalid value on
a running Tor will get backed out.
We add a compression level argument to tor_zlib_new, and use it to
determine how much memory to allocate for the zlib object. We use the
existing level by default, but shift to smaller levels for small
requests when we have been over 3/4 of our memory usage in the past
half-hour.
Closes ticket 11791.
When closing parallel introduction points, the given reason (timeout)
was actually changed to "no reason" thus when the circuit purpose was
CIRCUIT_PURPOSE_C_INTRODUCE_ACK_WAIT, we were reporting an introduction
point failure and flagging it "unreachable". After three times, that
intro point gets removed from the rend cache object.
In the case of CIRCUIT_PURPOSE_C_INTRODUCING, the intro point was
flagged has "timed out" and thus not used until the connection to the HS
is closed where that flag gets reset.
This commit adds an internal circuit reason called
END_CIRC_REASON_IP_NOW_REDUNDANT which tells the closing circuit
mechanism to not report any intro point failure.
This has been observed while opening hundreds of connections to an HS on
different circuit for each connection. This fix makes this use case to
work like a charm.
Fixes#13698.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
Instead, generate new keys, and overwrite the empty key files.
Adds FN_EMPTY to file_status_t and file_status.
Fixes bug 13111.
Related changes due to review of FN_FILE usage:
Stop generating a fresh .old RSA key file when the .old file is missing.
Avoid overwriting .old key files with empty key files.
Skip loading zero-length extra info store, router store, stats, state,
and key files.
Stop crashing when a NULL filename is passed to file_status(),
instead, return FN_ERROR.
Also return FN_ERROR when a zero-length filename is passed to file_status().
Fixed as part of bug 13111.
This is meant to prevent memory corruption bugs from doing
unspeakable infinite-loop-like things to the hashtables. Addresses
ticket 11737. We should disable these if they turn out to be
expensive.
We were only using it when smartlist_choose_node_by_bandwidth_weights
failed. But that function could only fail in the presence of
buggy/ancient authorities or in the absence of a consensus. Either
way, it's better to use sensible defaults and a nicer algorithm.
Now, if a router ever changes its microdescriptor, but the new
microdescriptor SHA256 hash has the same 160-bit prefix as the old
one, we treat it as a new microdescriptor when deciding whether to
copy status information.
(This function also is used to compare SHA1 digests of router
descriptors, but don't worry: the descriptor_digest field either holds
a SHA256 hash, or a SHA1 hash padded with 0 bytes.)
Silence clang warnings under --enable-expensive-hardening, including:
+ implicit truncation of 64 bit values to 32 bit;
+ const char assignment to self;
+ tautological compare; and
+ additional parentheses around equality tests. (gcc uses these to
silence assignment, so clang warns when they're present in an
equality test. But we need to use extra parentheses in macros to
isolate them from other code).
By now, support in the network is widespread and it's time to require
more modern crypto on all Tor instances, whether they're clients or
servers. By doing this early in 0.2.6, we can be sure that at some point
all clients will have reasonable support.
Ensure we securely wipe keys from memory after
crypto_digest_get_digest and init_curve25519_keypair_from_file
have finished using them.
Fixes bug 13477.
Add unit tests for tor_timegm signed overflow,
tor_timegm and parse_rfc1123_time validity checks,
and correct_tm year clamping.
Unit tests (visible) fixes in bug 13476.
Check all date/time values passed to tor_timegm
and parse_rfc1123_time for validity, taking leap
years into account.
Improves HTTP header validation.
Avoid unlikely signed integer overflow in tor_timegm
on systems with 32-bit time_t.
Fixes bug 13476.
Also, refactor the way we handle failed handshakes so that this
warning doesn't propagate itself to "onion_skin_client_handshake
failed" and "circuit_finish_handshake failed" and
"connection_edge_process_relay_cell (at origin) failed."
Resolves warning from 9635.
1. The test that adds things to the cache needs to set the clock back so
that the descriptors it adds are valid.
2. We split ROUTER_NOT_NEW into ROUTER_TOO_OLD, so that we can
distinguish "already had it" from "rejected because of old published
date".
3. We make extrainfo_insert() return a was_router_added_t, and we
make its caller use it correctly. This is probably redundant with
the extrainfo_is_bogus flag.
We didn't really have test coverage for these parsing functions, so
I went and made some. These tests also verify that the parsing
functions set the list of invalid digests correctly.
One pain point in evolving the Tor design and implementing has been
adding code that makes clients reject directory documents that they
previously would have accepted, if those descriptors actually exist.
When this happened, the clients would get the document, reject it,
and then decide to try downloading it again, ad infinitum. This
problem becomes particularly obnoxious with authorities, since if
some authorities accept a descriptor that others don't, the ones
that don't accept it would go crazy trying to re-fetch it over and
over. (See for example ticket #9286.)
This patch tries to solve this problem by tracking, if a descriptor
isn't parseable, what its digest was, and whether it is invalid
because of some flaw that applies to the portion containing the
digest. (This excludes RSA signature problems: RSA signatures
aren't included in the digest. This means that a directory
authority can still put another directory authority into a loop by
mentioning a descriptor, and then serving that descriptor with an
invalid RSA signatures. But that would also make the misbehaving
directory authority get DoSed by the server it's attacking, so it's
not much of an issue.)
We already have a mechanism to mark something undownloadable with
downloadstatus_mark_impossible(); we use that here for
microdescriptors, extrainfos, and router descriptors.
Unit tests to follow in another patch.
Closes ticket #11243.
Fix an instance of integer overflow in format_time_interval() when
taking the absolute value of the supplied signed interval value.
Fixes bug 13393.
Create unit tests for format_time_interval().
Bitwise check for the BRIDGE_DIRINFO flag, rather than checking for
equality.
Fixes a (potential) bug where directories offering BRIDGE_DIRINFO,
and some other flag (i.e. microdescriptors or extrainfo),
would be ignored when looking for bridge directories.
Final fix in series for bug 13163.
Document usage of the NO_DIRINFO and ALL_DIRINFO flags clearly in functions
which take them as arguments. Replace 0 with NO_DIRINFO in a function call
for clarity.
Seeks to prevent future issues like 13163.
Stop using the default authorities in networks which provide both
AlternateDirAuthority and AlternateBridgeAuthority.
This bug occurred due to an ambiguity around the use of NO_DIRINFO.
(Does it mean "any" or "none"?)
Partially fixes bug 13163.
Preserve previous semantics of src/test/test-network.sh by exiting with
the exit status of chutney verify, even though the latest version ends
with chutney stop.
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.
Otherwise, when we authority try to do a self-test because of
init-keys, if that self-test can't be launched for whatever reason and
so we close the channel immediately, we crash.
Yes, this a silly way for initialization to work.
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.
Also, use it to generate test vectors, and add those test vectors
to test_crypto.c
This is based on ed25519.py from the ed25519 webpage; the kludgy hacks
are my own.
This implementation allows somebody to add a blinding factor to a
secret key, and a corresponding blinding factor to the public key.
Robert Ransom came up with this idea, I believe. Nick Hopper proved a
scheme like this secure. The bugs are my own.
For proposal 228, we need to cross-certify our identity with our
curve25519 key, so that we can prove at descriptor-generation time
that we own that key. But how can we sign something with a key that
is only for doing Diffie-Hellman? By converting it to the
corresponding ed25519 point.
See the ALL-CAPS warning in the documentation. According to djb
(IIUC), it is safe to use these keys in the ways that ntor and prop228
are using them, but it might not be safe if we start providing crazy
oracle access.
(Unit tests included. What kind of a monster do you take me for?)
This is another case where DJB likes sticking the whole signature
prepended to the message, and I don't think that's the hottest idea.
The unit tests still pass.
This reduces the likelihood that I have made any exploitable errors
in the encoding/decoding.
This commit also imports the trunnel runtime source into Tor.
Uses libscrypt when found; otherwise, we don't have scrypt and we
only support openpgp rfc2440 s2k hashing, or pbkdf2.
Includes documentation and unit tests; coverage around 95%. Remaining
uncovered code is sanity-checks that shouldn't be reachable fwict.
Since address.c is the first file to get compiled, let's have it use
a little judicious c99 in order to catch broken compilers that
somehow make it past our autoconf tests.
When DisableNetwork is set, do not launch pluggable transport plugins,
and if any are running already, terminate the existing instances.
Resolves ticket 13213.
Allow clients to use optimistic data when connecting to a hidden service,
which should cut out the initial round-trip for client-side programs
including Tor Browser.
(Now that Tor 0.2.2.x is obsolete, all hidden services should support
server-side optimistic data.)
See proposal 181 for details. Implements ticket 13211.
Clients are now willing to send optimistic circuit data (before they
receive a 'connected' cell) to relays of any version. We used to
only do it for relays running 0.2.3.1-alpha or later, but now all
relays are new enough.
Resolves ticket 13153.
Return an error when the second or later arguments of the
"setevents" controller command are invalid events. Previously we
would return success while silently skipping invalid events.
Fixes bug 13205; bugfix on 0.2.3.2-alpha. Reported by "fpxnns".
Stop modifying the value of our DirReqStatistics torrc option just
because we're not a bridge or relay. This bug was causing Tor
Browser users to write "DirReqStatistics 0" in their torrc files
as if they had chosen to change the config.
Fixes bug 4244; bugfix on 0.2.3.1-alpha.
Clients now send the correct address for their chosen rendezvous point
when trying to access a hidden service. They used to send the wrong
address, which would still work some of the time because they also
sent the identity digest of the rendezvous point, and if the hidden
service happened to try connecting to the rendezvous point from a relay
that already had a connection open to it, the relay would reuse that
connection. Now connections to hidden services should be more robust
and faster. Also, this bug meant that clients were leaking to the hidden
service whether they were on a little-endian (common) or big-endian (rare)
system, which for some users might have reduced their anonymity.
Fixes bug 13151; bugfix on 0.2.1.5-alpha.
These wrappers went into place when the default type for our unit
test functions changed from "void fn(void)" to "void fn(void *arg)".
To generate this patch, I did the same hokey-pokey as before with
replacing all operators used as macro arguments, then I ran a
coccinelle script, then I ran perl script to fix up everything that
used legacy_test_helper, then I manually removed the
legacy_test_helper functions, then I ran a final perl script to put
the operators back how they were.
==============================
#!/usr/bin/perl -w -i -p
s/==,/_X_EQ_,/g;
s/!=,/_X_NE_,/g;
s/<,/_X_LT_,/g;
s/>,/_X_GT_,/g;
s/>=,/_X_GEQ_,/g;
s/<=,/_X_LEQ_,/g;
--------------------
@@
identifier func =~ "test_.*$";
statement S, S2;
@@
static void func (
-void
+void *arg
)
{
... when != S2
+(void) arg;
S
...
}
--------------------
#!/usr/bin/perl -w -i -p
s/, *legacy_test_helper, *([^,]+), *\&legacy_setup, *([^\}]+) *}/, $2, $1, NULL, NULL }/g;
--------------------
#!/usr/bin/perl -w -i -p
s/_X_NEQ_/!=/g;
s/_X_NE_/!=/g;
s/_X_EQ_/==/g;
s/_X_GT_/>/g;
s/_X_LT_/</g;
s/_X_GEQ_/>=/g;
s/_X_LEQ_/<=/g;
--------------------
"At this point in the code, msg has been set to a string
constant. But the tor code checks that msg is not NULL, and the
redundant NULL check confuses the analyser[...] To avoid this
spurious warning, the patch initialises msg to NULL."
Patch from teor. another part of 13157.
"The NULL pointer warnings on the return value of
tor_addr_to_in6_addr32() are incorrect. But clang can't work this
out itself due to limited analysis depth. To teach the analyser that
the return value is safe to dereference, I applied tor_assert to the
return value."
Patch from teor. Part of 13157.
Tor Browser includes several ClientTransportPlugin lines in its
torrc-defaults file, leading every Tor Browser user who looks at her
logs to see these notices and wonder if they're dangerous.
Resolves bug 13124; bugfix on 0.2.5.3-alpha.
Technically, we're not allowed to take the address of a member can't
exist relative to the null pointer. That makes me wonder how any sane
compliant system implements the offsetof macro, but let's let sleeping
balrogs lie.
Fixes 13096; patch on 0.1.1.9-alpha; patch from "teor", who was using
clang -fsanitize=undefined-trap -fsanitize-undefined-trap-on-error -ftrapv
(And replay them once we know our first real logs.)
This is an implementation for issue 6938. It solves the problem of
early log mesages not getting sent to log files, but not the issue of
early log messages not getting sent to controllers.
This fixes bug 13102 (not on any released Tor) where using the
standard SSIZE_MAX name broke mingw64, and we didn't realize.
I did this with
perl -i -pe 's/SIZE_T_MAX/SIZE_MAX/' src/*/*.[ch] src/*/*/*.[ch]
This implements the meat of #12899. This commit should simply remove the
parts of Tor dirauths used to check whether a relay was supposed to be
named or not, it doesn't yet convert to a new mechanism for
reject/invalid/baddir/badexiting relays.
Back in 078d6bcd, we added an event number 0x20, but we didn't make
the event_mask field big enough to compensate.
Patch by "teor". Fixes 13085; bugfix on 0.2.5.1-alpha.
This function never returns non-null, but its usage doesn't reflect
that. Let's make it explicit. This will be mostly overridden by later
commits, so no changes file here.
This is in preparation for a big patch series removing the entire Naming
system from Tor. In its wake, the approved-routers file is being
deprecated, and a replacement option to allow only pre-approved routers
is not being implemented.
Otherwise, when we're out of input *and* finalizing, we might report
TOR_ZLIB_OK erroneously and not finalize the buffer.
(I don't believe this can happen in practice, with our code today:
write_to_buf_zlib ensures that we are never trying to write into a
completely empty buffer, and zlib says "Z_OK" if you give it even
one byte to write into.)
Fixes bug 11824; bugfix on 0.1.1.23 (06e09cdd47).
torrc.minimal is now the one that should change as infrequently as
possible. To schedule an change to go into it eventually, make your
change to torrc.minimal.in-sample.
torrc.sample is now the volatile one: we can change it to our hearts'
content.
Closes ticket #11144
This implements a feature from bug 13000. Instead of starting a bwauth
run with this wrong idea about their bw, relays should do the self-test
and then get measured.
When a tor relay starts up and has no historical information about its
bandwidth capability, it uploads a descriptor with a bw estimate of 0.
It then starts its bw selftest, but has to wait 20 minutes to upload the
next descriptor due to the MAX_BANDWIDTH_CHANGE_FREQ delay. This change
should mean that on average, relays start seeing meaningful traffic a
little quicker, since they will have a higher chance to appear in the
consensus with a nonzero bw.
Patch by Roger, changes file and comment by Sebastian.
We're calling mallocfn() and reallocfn() in the HT_GENERATE macro
with the result of a product. But that makes any sane analyzer
worry about overflow.
This patch keeps HT_GENERATE having its old semantics, since we
aren't the only project using ht.h. Instead, define a HT_GENERATE2
that takes a reallocarrayfn.
Most of these are in somewhat non-obvious code where it is probably
a good idea to initialize variables and add extra assertions anyway.
Closes 13036. Patches from "teor".
This commit attempts to satisfy nickm's comment on check_private_dir() permissions:
https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/11291#comment:12
"""check_private_dir() ensures that the directory has bits 0700 if CPD_CHECK_MODE_ONLY is not set. Shouldn't it also ensure that the directory has bits 0050 if CPD_CHECK_MODE_ONLY is not set, and CPD_GROUP_READ is set?"""
It's now a protocol-warn, since there's nothing relay operators can
do about a client that sends them a malformed create cell.
Resolves bug 12996; bugfix on 0.0.6rc1.
Any error when acquiring the CryptoAPI context should get treated as
bad. Also, this one can't happen for the arguments we're giving.
Fixes bug 10816; bugfix on 0.0.2pre26.
Previously, we had done this only in the connection_free() case, but
when we called connection_free_() directly from
connections_free_all(), we didn't free the connections.
The fix for bug 4647 accidentally removed our hack from bug 586 that
rewrote HashedControlPassword to __HashedControlSessionPassword when
it appears on the commandline (which allowed the user to set her own
HashedControlPassword in the torrc file while the controller generates
a fresh session password for each run).
Fixes bug 12948; bugfix on 0.2.5.1-alpha.
This way, we don't get locking failures when we hit an assertion in
the unit tests. Also, we might find out about unit test bugs from
folks who can't do gdb.
We might use libsodium or ed25519-donna later on, but for now, let's
see whether this is fast enough. We should use it in all cases when
performance doesn't matter.
This modifies the format of the bridge networkstatus documents produced
by the BridgeAuth. The new format adds a `published` line to the header
of the file, before the `flag-thresholds` line. This is done once per
networkstatus file that is written. The timestamp in the `published`
line is the standard ISO 8601 format (with a space as the separator)
used throughout the rest of tor.
* FIXES#12951https://bugs.torproject.org/12951
Using the *_array() functions here confused coverity, and was actually
a bit longer than we needed. Now we just use macros for the repeated
bits, so that we can mention a file and a suffix-appended version in
one line.
We had some code to fix up the 'status' return value to -1 on error
if it wasn't set, but it was unreachable because our code was
correct. Tweak this by initializing status to -1, and then only
setting it to 0 on success. Also add a goto which was missing: its
absence was harmless.
[CID 718614, 718616]
(We allowed it previously, but produced an LD_BUG message when it
happened, which is not consistent
Also, remove inconsistent NULL checks before calling
rend_service_intro_free.
(Removing the check is for CID 718613)
Coverity doesn't like doing NULL checks on things that can't be
NULL; I like checking things where the logic for their not being
NULL is nontrivial. Let's compromise, and make it obvious that this
field can't be NULL.
[Coverity CID 202004]
Coverity thinks that when we do "double x = int1/int2;", we probably
meant "double x = ((double)int1) / int2;". In these cases, we
didn't.
[Coverity CID 1232089 and 1232090]
Previously, we had documented it to return -1 or 0, when in fact
lseek returns -1 or the new position in the file.
This is harmless, since we were only checking for negative values
when we used tor_fd_seekend.
Two bugs here:
1) We didn't add EXTEND2/EXTENDED2 to relay_command_to_string().
2) relay_command_to_string() didn't log the value of unrecognized
commands.
Both fixed here.
This will fix the warning
"/src/or/config.c:6854:48: error: unused parameter 'group_readable'"
that I introduced while fixing 12864.
Bug not in any released version of Tor.
Implements proposal 215; closes ticket 10163.
Why? From proposal 215:
Consensus method 1 is no longer viable for the Tor network. It
doesn't result in a microdescriptor consensus, and omits other
fields that clients need in order to work well. Consensus methods
under 12 have security issues, since they let a single authority
set a consensus parameter.
...
For example, while Tor 0.2.4.x is under development, authorities
should really not be running anything before Tor 0.2.3.x. Tor
0.2.3.x has supported consensus method 13 since 0.2.3.21-rc, so
it's okay for 0.2.4.x to require 13 as the minimum method. We even
might go back to method 12, since the worst outcome of not using 13
would be some warnings in client logs. Consensus method 12 was a
security improvement, so we don't want to roll back before that.
When we merged the cookieauthfile creation logic in 33c3e60a37, we
accidentally took out this feature. Fixes bug 12864, bugfix on
0.2.5.1-alpha.
Also adds an ExtORPortCookieAuthFileGroupReadable, since there's no
reason not to.
I looked for other places where we set circ->n_chan early, and found
one in circuit_handle_first_hop() right before it calls
circuit_send_next_onion_skin(). If onion_skin_create() fails there,
then n_chan will still be set when circuit_send_next_onion_skin()
returns. We should probably fix that too.
When Tor starts with DisabledNetwork set, it would correctly
conclude that it shouldn't try making circuits, but it would
mistakenly cache this conclusion and continue believing it even
when DisableNetwork is set to 0. Fixes the bug introduced by the
fix for bug 11200; bugfix on 0.2.5.4-alpha.
Those used to be normal to receive on hidden service circuits due to bug
1038, but the buggy Tor versions are long gone from the network so we
can afford to resume watching for them. Resolves the rest of bug 1038;
bugfix on 0.2.1.19.
Roger spotted this on tor-dev in his comments on proposal 221.
(Actually, detect DESTROY vs everything else, since arma likes
network timeout indicating failure but not overload indicating failure.)
This function is supposed to construct a list of all the ciphers in
the "v2 link protocol cipher list" that are supported by Tor's
openssl. It does this by invoking ssl23_get_cipher_by_char on each
two-byte ciphersuite ID to see which ones give a match. But when
ssl23_get_cipher_by_char cannot find a match for a two-byte SSL3/TLS
ciphersuite ID, it checks to see whether it has a match for a
three-byte SSL2 ciphersuite ID. This was causing a read off the end
of the 'cipherid' array.
This was probably harmless in practice, but we shouldn't be having
any uninitialized reads.
(Using ssl23_get_cipher_by_char in this way is a kludge, but then
again the entire existence of the v2 link protocol is kind of a
kludge. Once Tor 0.2.2 clients are all gone, we can drop this code
entirely.)
Found by starlight. Fix on 0.2.4.8-alpha. Fixes bug 12227.
Authorities now assign the Guard flag to the fastest 25% of the
network (it used to be the fastest 50%). Also raise the consensus
weight that guarantees the Guard flag from 250 to 2000. For the
current network, this results in about 1100 guards, down from 2500.
This step paves the way for moving the number of entry guards
down to 1 (proposal 236) while still providing reasonable expected
performance for most users.
Implements ticket 12690.
Found because LibreSSL has OPENSSL_NO_COMP always-on, but this
conflicts with the way that _we_ turn off compression. Patch from
dhill, who attributes it to "OpenBSD". Fixes bug 12602; bugfix on
0.2.1.1-alpha, which introduced this turn-compression-off code.
The extra \ is harmless, but mildly unpleasant.
Fixes 12392; bugfix on 0.2.2.25-alpha where we started using
GetTempDir(). Based on a patch by Gisle Vanem.
Otherwise, it always seems as though our Exclude* options have
changed, since we're comparing modified to unmodified values.
Patch from qwerty1. Fixes bug 9801. Bugfix on 0.2.4.10-alpha, where
GeoIPExcludeUnknown was introduced.
Currently tor fails to build its test when enabled with bufferevents
because an #ifndef USE_BUFFEREVENTS hides bucket_millis_empty() and
friends. This is fine if we don't run tests, but if we do, we need
these functions in src/or/libtor-testing.a when linking src/test/test.
This patch moves the functions outside the #ifndef and exposes them.
See downstream bug:
https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=510124
When we run into bug 8387 (if we run into it again), report when we
last called circuit_expire_old_circuits_clientside(). This will let
us know -- if my fix for 8387 doesn't work -- whether my diagnosis
was at least correct.
Suggested by Andrea.
On a non-blocking pipe fgets sets EAGAIN when it encounters partial lines. No
error is set on full lines or EOF. EOF is reached when the writing end of the
pipe is closed. Partial lines and full lines are both returned by fgets, EOF
results in NULL.
Mention of this behaviour can be found in #1903 and #2045.
We should only assign a relay the HSDir flag if it is currently
considered valid. We can accomplish this by only considering active
relays, and as a consequence of this we also exclude relays that are
currently hibernating. Fixes#12573
Long ago we supported systems where there was no support for
threads, or where the threading library was broken. We shouldn't
have do that any more: on every OS that matters, threads exist, and
the OS supports running threads across multiple CPUs.
This resolves tickets 9495 and 12439. It's a prerequisite to making
our workqueue code work better, since sensible workqueue
implementations don't split across multiple processes.
The variable was useless since it was only toggled off in disabled code.
If the 'exit_family' smartlist is empty, we don't consider exit family
anyway.
The fix for bug 8746 added a hashtable instance that never actually
invoked HT_FIND. This caused a warning, since we didn't mark HT_FIND
as okay-not-to-use.
Try killing a running process; try noticing that a process has
exited without checking its output; verify that waitpid_cb (when
present) is set to NULL when you would expect it to be.
When we create a process yourself with CreateProcess, we get a
handle to the process in the PROCESS_INFO output structure. But
instead of using that handle, we were manually looking up a _new_
handle based on the process ID, which is a poor idea, since the
process ID might refer to a new process later on, but the handle
can't.
This lets us avoid sending SIGTERM to something that has already
died, since we realize it has already died, and is a fix for the
unix version of #8746.
Check for consistency between the queued destroy cells and the marked
circuit IDs. Check for consistency in the count of queued destroy
cells in several ways. Check to see whether any of the marked circuit
IDs have somehow been marked longer than the channel has existed.
And add a comment about why conditions that would cause us to drop a
cell should get checked before actions that would cause us to send a
destroy cell.
Spotted by 'cypherpunks'.
And note that these issues have been present since 0.0.8pre1 (commit
0da256ef), where we added a "shutting down" state, and started
responding to all create cells with DESTROY when shutting down.
Conflicts:
src/or/channel.c
src/or/circuitlist.c
src/or/connection.c
Conflicts involved removal of next_circ_id and addition of
unusable-circid tracking.
The point of the "idle timeout" for connections is to kill the
connection a while after it has no more circuits. But using "last
added a non-padding cell" as a proxy for that is wrong, since if the
last circuit is closed from the other side of the connection, we
will not have sent anything on that connection since well before the
last circuit closed.
This is part of fixing 6799.
When applied to 0.2.5, it is also a fix for 12023.
Instead of killing an or_connection_t that has had no circuits for
the last 3 minutes, give every or_connection_t a randomized timeout,
so that an observer can't so easily infer from the connection close
time the time at which its last circuit closed.
Also, increase the base timeout for canonical connections from 3
minutes to 15 minutes.
Fix for ticket 6799.
When we find a stranded one-hop circuit, log whether it is dirty,
log information about any streams on it, and log information about
connections they might be linked to.
This function is supposed to construct a list of all the ciphers in
the "v2 link protocol cipher list" that are supported by Tor's
openssl. It does this by invoking ssl23_get_cipher_by_char on each
two-byte ciphersuite ID to see which ones give a match. But when
ssl23_get_cipher_by_char cannot find a match for a two-byte SSL3/TLS
ciphersuite ID, it checks to see whether it has a match for a
three-byte SSL2 ciphersuite ID. This was causing a read off the end
of the 'cipherid' array.
This was probably harmless in practice, but we shouldn't be having
any uninitialized reads.
(Using ssl23_get_cipher_by_char in this way is a kludge, but then
again the entire existence of the v2 link protocol is kind of a
kludge. Once Tor 0.2.2 clients are all gone, we can drop this code
entirely.)
Found by starlight. Fix on 0.2.4.8-alpha. Fixes bug 12227.
This code mis-handled the case where a circuit got the same circuit
ID in both directions. I found three instances of it in the
codebase, by grepping for [pn]_circ_id.
Because of the issue in command_process_relay_cell(), this would
have made roughly one circuit in a million completely nonfunctional.
Fixes bug 12195.
On some profiles of Andrea's from #11332, I found that a great deal
of time can still be attributed to functions called from
update_router_have_minimum_dir_info(). This is making our
digestmap, tor_memeq, and siphash functions take a much bigger
portion of runtime than they really should.
If we're calling update_router_have_minimum_dir_info() too often,
that's because we're calling router_dir_info_changed() too often.
And it looks like most of the callers of router_dir_info_changed()
are coming as tail-calls from router_set_status() as invoked by
channel_do_open_actions().
But we don't need to call router_dir_info_changed() so much! (I'm
not quite sure we need to call it from here at all, but...) Surely
we don't need to call it from router_set_status when the router's
status has not actually changed.
This patch makes us call router_dir_info_changed() from
router_set_status only when we are changing the router's status.
Fix for bug 12170. This is leftover from our fix back in 273ee3e81
in 0.1.2.1-alpha, where we started caching the value of
update_router_have_minimum_dir_info().
tor_memeq has started to show up on profiles, and this is one of the
most frequent callers of that function, appearing as it does on every
cell handled for entry or exit.
59f9097d5c introduced tor_memneq here;
it went into Tor 0.2.1.31. Fixes part of 12169.
Without this fix, when running with bridges, we would try fetching
directory info far too early, and have up to a 60 second delay if we
started with bridge descriptors available.
Fixes bug 11965. Fix on 0.2.3.6-alpha, arma thinks.
The old cache had problems:
* It needed to be manually preloaded. (It didn't remember any
address you didn't tell it to remember)
* It was AF_INET only.
* It looked at its cache even if the sandbox wasn't turned on.
* It couldn't remember errors.
* It had some memory management problems. (You can't use memcpy
to copy an addrinfo safely; it has pointers in.)
This patch fixes those issues, and moves to a hash table.
Fixes bug 11970; bugfix on 0.2.5.1-alpha.
The code was not disambiguating ClientTransportPlugin configured and
not used, and ClientTransportPlugin configured, but in a failed state.
The right thing to do is to undo moving the get_transport_by_addrport()
call back into get_proxy_addrport(), and remove and explicit check for
using a Bridge since by the time the check is made, if a Bridge is
being used, it is PT/proxy-less.
This change allows using Socks4Proxy, Socks5Proxy and HTTPSProxy with
ClientTransportPlugins via the TOR_PT_PROXY extension to the
pluggable transport specification.
This fixes bug #8402.
These are needed under some circumstances if we are running with
expensive-hardening and sandbox at the same time.
fixes 11477, bugfix on 0.2.5.4-alpha (where we introduced
expensive-hardening)
None of the things we might exec() can possibly run under the
sanbox, so rather than crash later, we have to refuse to accept the
configuration nice and early.
The longer-term solution is to have an exec() helper, but wow is
that risky.
fixes 12043; bugfix on 0.2.5.1-alpha
When we converted the horrible set of options that previously
controlled "use ORPort or DirPort? Anonymously or Non-anonymouly?" to
a single 'indirection' argument, we missed
directory_post_to_dirservers.
The problematic code was introduced in 5cbeb6080, which went into
0.2.4.3-alpha. This is a fix for bug 11469.
If somebody has configured a client to use a bridge without setting
an identity digest (not recommended), learn the identity digest from
whatever bridge descriptor we have downloaded or have in our cache.
When running with User set, we frequently try to look up our
information in the user database (e.g., /etc/passwd). The seccomp2
sandbox setup doesn't let us open /etc/passwd, and probably
shouldn't.
To fix this, we have a pair of wrappers for getpwnam and getpwuid.
When a real call to getpwnam or getpwuid fails, they fall back to a
cached value, if the uid/gid matches.
(Granting access to /etc/passwd isn't possible with the way we
handle opening files through the sandbox. It's not desirable either.)
On OpenBSD 5.4, time_t is a 32-bit integer. These instances contain
implicit treatment of long and time_t as comparable types, so explicitly
cast to time_t.
These are actually tests for #311. It appears to me that we didn't
fix#311 properly when we thought we did in 475eb5d6; instead, the
real fix was 05eff35ac6, a few minutes earlier.
Clients should always believe that v3 directory authorities serve
extra-info documents, regardless of whether their server descriptor
contains a "caches-extra-info" line or not.
Fixes part of #11683.
on #9686, gmorehose reports that the 500 MB lower limit is too high
for raspberry pi users.
This is a backport of 647248729f to 0.2.4.
Note that in 0.2.4, the option is called MaxMemInCellQueues.
This was previously satisfied by using a temporary variable, but there
are three other instances in circuitlist.c that gcc is now bothered by,
so now introduce a CONST_TO_ORIGIN_CIRCUIT that takes a const
circuit_t instead.
When clearing a list of tokens, it's important to do token_clear()
on them first, or else any keys they contain will leak. This didn't
leak memory on any of the successful microdescriptor parsing paths,
but it does leak on some failing paths when the failure happens
during tokenization.
Fixes bug 11618; bugfix on 0.2.2.6-alpha.
The python scripts invoked by 'make check' didn't work on python3
before. That was a problem on systems where 'python' is python3.
Fixes bug 11608; bugfix on 0.2.5.2-alpha.
If we can't detect the physical memory, the new default is 8 GB on
64-bit architectures, and 1 GB on 32-bit architectures.
If we *can* detect the physical memory, the new default is
CLAMP(256 MB, phys_mem * 0.75, MAX_DFLT)
where MAX_DFLT is 8 GB on 64-bit architectures and 2 GB on 32-bit
architectures.
You can still override the default by hand. The logic here is simply
trying to choose a lower default value on systems with less than 12 GB
of physical RAM.
Use a per-channel ratelim_t to control the rate at which we report
failures for each channel.
Explain why I picked N=32.
Never return a zero circID.
Thanks to Andrea and to cypherpunks.
The memarea_strndup() function would have hit undefined behavior by
creating an 'end' pointer off the end of a string if it had ever been
given an 'n' argument bigger than the length of the memory ares that
it's scanning. Fortunately, we never did that except in the unit
tests. But it's not a safe behavior to leave lying around.
If we had an address of the form "1.2.3.4" and we tried to pass it to
tor_inet_pton with AF_INET6, it was possible for our 'eow' pointer to
briefly move backwards to the point before the start of the string,
before we moved it right back to the start of the string. C doesn't
allow that, and though we haven't yet hit a compiler that decided to
nuke us in response, it's best to fix.
So, be more explicit about requiring there to be a : before any IPv4
address part of the IPv6 address. We would have rejected addresses
without a : for not being IPv6 later on anyway.
Instead of taking the length of a buffer, we were taking the length of
a pointer, so that our debugging log would cover only the first
sizeof(void*) bytes of the client nonce.
scan-build recognizes that in theory there could be a numeric overflow
here.
This can't numeric overflow can't trigger IRL, since in order to fill a
hash table with more than P=402653189 buckets with a reasonable load
factor of 0.5, we'd first have P/2 malloced objects to put in it--- and
each of those would have to take take at least sizeof(void*) worth of
malloc overhead plus sizeof(void*) content, which would run you out of
address space anyway on a 32-bit system.
If 'intro' is NULL in these functions, I'm pretty sure that the
error message must be set before we hit the end. But scan-build
doesn't notice that, and is worried that we'll do a null-pointer
dereference in the last-chance errormsg generation.
As it stands, it relies on the fact that onion_queue_entry_remove
will magically remove each onionskin from the right list. This
patch changes the logic to be more resilient to possible bugs in
onion_queue_entry_remove, and less confusing to static analysis tools.
scan-build doesn't realize that a request can't be timed at the end
unless it's timed at the start, and so it's not possible for us to
be subtracting start from end without start being set.
Nevertheless, let's not confuse it.
When get_proxy_addrport returned PROXY_NONE, it would leave
addr/port unset. This is inconsistent, and could (if we used the
function in a stupid way) lead to undefined behavior. Bugfix on
5b050a9b0, though I don't think it affects tor-as-it-is.
Throughout circuituse, when we log about a circuit, we log its
desired path length from build_state. scan-build is irrationally
concerned that build_state might be NULL.
In circuitmux_detach_all_circuits, we check whether an HT iterator
gives us NULL. That should be impossible for an HT iterator. But
our checking it has confused scan-build (justly) into thinking that
our later use of HT_NEXT_RMV might not be kosher. I'm taking the
coward's route here and strengthening the check. Bugfix on
fd31dd44. (Not a real bug though)
If we fail in circuit_get_by_rend_token_and_purpose because the
circuit has no rend_info, don't try to reference fiends from its
rend_info when logging an error. Bugfix on 8b9a2cb68, which is
going into Tor 0.2.5.4-alpha.
Previously we said "Sandbox is not implemented on this platform" on
Linux boxes without libseccomp. Now we say that you need to build
Tor built with libseccomp. Fixes bug 11543; bugfix on 0.2.5.1-alpha.
Fixes a possible root cause of 11553 by only making 64 attempts at
most to pick a circuitID. Previously, we would test every possible
circuit ID until we found one or ran out.
This algorithm succeeds probabilistically. As the comment says:
This potentially causes us to give up early if our circuit ID
space is nearly full. If we have N circuit IDs in use, then we
will reject a new circuit with probability (N / max_range) ^
MAX_CIRCID_ATTEMPTS. This means that in practice, a few percent
of our circuit ID capacity will go unused.
The alternative here, though, is to do a linear search over the
whole circuit ID space every time we extend a circuit, which is
not so great either.
This makes new vs old clients distinguishable, so we should try to
batch it with other patches that do that, like 11438.
The server cipher list is (thanks to #11513) chosen systematically to
put the best choices for Tor first. The client cipher list is chosen
to resemble a browser. So let's set SSL_OP_CIPHER_SERVER_PREFERENCE
to have the servers pick according to their own preference order.
This means that tor can run without needing to communicate with ioctls
to the firewall, and therefore doesn't need to run with privileges to
open the /dev/pf device node.
A new TransProxyType is added for this purpose, "pf-divert"; if the user
specifies this TransProxyType in their torrc, then the pf device node is
never opened and the connection destination is determined with getsockname
(as per pf(4)). The default behaviour (ie., when TransProxyType is "default"
when using the pf firewall) is still to assume that pf is configured with
rdr-to rules.
This isn't on by default; to get it, you need to set "TransProxyType
ipfw". (The original patch had automatic detection for whether
/dev/pf is present and openable, but that seems marginally fragile.)
Older versions of Libevent are happy to open SOCK_DGRAM sockets
non-cloexec and non-nonblocking, and then set those flags
afterwards. It's nice to be able to allow a flag to be on or off in
the sandbox without having to enumerate all its values.
Also, permit PF_INET6 sockets. (D'oh!)
Libevent uses an arc4random implementation (I know, I know) to
generate DNS transaction IDs and capitalization. But it liked to
initialize it either with opening /dev/urandom (which won't work
under the sandbox if it doesn't use the right pointer), or with
sysctl({CTL_KERN,KERN_RANDOM,RANDOM_UUIC}). To make _that_ work, we
were permitting sysctl unconditionally. That's not such a great
idea.
Instead, we try to initialize the libevent PRNG _before_ installing
the sandbox, and make sysctl always fail with EPERM under the
sandbox.
The compiler doesn't warn about this code:
rc = seccomp_rule_add(ctx, SCMP_ACT_ALLOW, SCMP_SYS(openat), 1,
SCMP_CMP(0, SCMP_CMP_EQ, AT_FDCWD),
SCMP_CMP(1, SCMP_CMP_EQ, param->value),
SCMP_CMP(2, SCMP_CMP_EQ, O_RDONLY|...));
but note that the arg_cnt argument above is only 1. This means that
only the first filter (argument 0 == AT_FDCWD) is actually checked!
This patch also fixes the above error in the openat() filter.
Earlier I fixed corresponding errors in filters for rename() and
mprotect().
Appearently, the majority of the filenames we pass to
sandbox_cfg_allow() functions are "freeable right after". So, consider
_all_ of them safe-to-steal, and add a tor_strdup() in the few cases
that aren't.
(Maybe buggy; revise when I can test.)
(If we don't restrict rename, there's not much point in restricting
open, since an attacker could always use rename to make us open
whatever they want.)
A new set of unit test cases are provided, as well as introducing
an alternative paradigm and macros to support it. Primarily, each test
case is given its own namespace, in order to isolate tests from each
other. We do this by in the usual fashion, by appending module and
submodule names to our symbols. New macros assist by reducing friction
for this and other tasks, like overriding a function in the global
namespace with one in the current namespace, or declaring integer
variables to assist tracking how many times a mock has been called.
A set of tests for a small-scale module has been included in this
commit, in order to highlight how the paradigm can be used. This
suite gives 100% coverage to status.c in test execution.
Back in 175b2678, we allowed servers to recognize clients who are
telling them the truth about their ciphersuites, and select the best
cipher from on that list. This implemented the server side of proposal
198.
In bugs 11492, 11498, and 11499, cypherpunks found a bunch of mistakes
and omissions and typos in the UNRESTRICTED_SERVER_CIPHER_LIST we had.
In #11513, I found a couple more.
Rather than try to hand-edit this list, I wrote a short python script
to generate our ciphersuite preferences from the openssl headers.
The new rules are:
* Require forward secrecy.
* Require RSA (since our servers only configure RSA keys)
* Require AES or 3DES. (This means, reject RC4, DES, SEED, CAMELLIA,
and NULL.)
* No export ciphersuites.
Then:
* Prefer AES to 3DES.
* If both suites have the same cipher, prefer ECDHE to DHE.
* If both suites have the same DHE group type, prefer GCM to CBC.
* If both suites have the same cipher mode, prefer SHA384 to SHA256
to SHA1.
* If both suites have the same digest, prefer AES256 to AES128.
This involves some duplicate code between backtrace.c and sandbox.c,
but I don't see a way around it: calling more functions would mean
adding more steps to our call stack, and running clean_backtrace()
against the wrong point on the stack.
My first implementation was broken, since it returned "whether there
is one bridge" rather than "how many bridges."
Also, the implementation for the n_options_out feature in
choose_random_entry_impl was completely broken due to a missing *.
When we successfully create a usable circuit after it previously
timed out for a certain amount of time, we should make sure that
our public IP address hasn't changed and update our descriptor.
The major changes are to re-order some ciphers, to drop the ECDH suites
(note: *not* ECDHE: ECDHE is still there), to kill off some made-up
stuff (like the SSL_RSA_FIPS_WITH_3DES_EDE_CBC_SHA suite), to drop
some of the DSS suites... *and* to enable the ECDHE+GCM ciphersuites.
This change is autogenerated by get_mozilla_ciphers.py from
Firefox 28 and OpenSSL 1.0.1g.
Resolves ticket 11438.
In C, it's a bad idea to do this:
char *cp = array;
char *end = array + array_len;
/* .... */
if (cp + 3 >= end) { /* out of bounds */ }
because cp+3 might be more than one off the end of the array, and
you are only allowed to construct pointers to the array elements,
and to an element one past the end. Instead you have to say
if (cp - array + 3 >= array_len) { /* ... */ }
or something like that.
This patch fixes two of these: one in process_versions_cell
introduced in 0.2.0.10-alpha, and one in process_certs_cell
introduced in 0.2.3.6-alpha. These are both tracked under bug
10363. "bobnomnom" found and reported both. See also 10313.
In our code, this is likely to be a problem as we used it only if we
get a nasty allocator that makes allocations end close to (void*)-1.
But it's best not to have to worry about such things at all, so
let's just fix all of these we can find.
According to reports, most programs degrade somewhat gracefully on
getting no answer for an MX or a CERT for www.example.com, but many
flip out completely on a NOTIMPL error.
Also, treat a QTYPE_ALL query as just asking for an A record.
The real fix here is to implement proposal 219 or something like it.
Fixes bug 10268; bugfix on 0.2.0.1-alpha.
Based on a patch from "epoch".
Found by testing with chutney. The old behavior was "fail an
assertion", which obviously isn't optimal.
Bugfix on 8b9a2cb68b290e550695124d7ef0511225b451d5; bug not in any
released version.
Also, stop accepting the old kind of RESOLVED cells with no TTL
fields; they haven't been sent since 0.1.1.6-alpha.
This patch won't work without the fix to #10468 -- it will break
DNSPorts unless they set the proper ipv4/6 flags on entry_connection_t.
Otherwise, it could mung the thing that came over the net on windows,
which would defeat the purpose of recording the unparseable thing.
Fixes bug 11342; bugfix on 0.2.2.1-alpha.
This is a fix for 9963. I say this is a feature, but if it's a
bugfix, it's a bugfix on 0.2.4.18-rc.
Old behavior:
Mar 27 11:02:19.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 50%: Loading relay descriptors.
Mar 27 11:02:20.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 51%: Loading relay descriptors.
Mar 27 11:02:20.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 52%: Loading relay descriptors.
... [Many lines omitted] ...
Mar 27 11:02:29.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 78%: Loading relay descriptors.
Mar 27 11:02:33.000 [notice] We now have enough directory information to build circuits.
New behavior:
Mar 27 11:16:17.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 50%: Loading relay descriptors
Mar 27 11:16:19.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 55%: Loading relay descriptors
Mar 27 11:16:21.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 60%: Loading relay descriptors
Mar 27 11:16:21.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 65%: Loading relay descriptors
Mar 27 11:16:21.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 70%: Loading relay descriptors
Mar 27 11:16:21.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 75%: Loading relay descriptors
Mar 27 11:16:21.000 [notice] We now have enough directory information to build circuits.
Most of these are simple. The only nontrivial part is that our
pattern for using ENUM_BF was confusing doxygen by making declarations
that didn't look like declarations.
In circuitlist_free_all, we free all the circuits, removing them from
the map as we go, but we weren't actually freeing the placeholder
entries that we use to indicate pending DESTROY cells.
Fix for bug 11278; bugfix on the 7912 code that was merged in
0.2.5.1-alpha
There are still quite a few 0.2.3.2x relays running for x<5, and while I
agree they should upgrade, I don't think cutting them out of the network
is a net win on either side.
ubsan doesn't like us to do (1u<<32) when 32 is wider than
unsigned. Fortunately, we already special-case
addr_mask_get_bits(0), so we can just change the loop bounds.
In digestmap_set/get benchmarks, doing unaligned access on x86
doesn't save more than a percent or so in the fast case. In the
slow case (where we cross a cache line), it could be pretty
expensive. It also makes ubsan unhappy.
This make clang's memory sanitizer happier that we aren't reading
off the end of a char[1]. We hadn't replaced the char[1] with a
char[FLEXIBLE_ARRAY_MEMBER] before because we were doing a union
trick to force alignment. Now we use __attribute__(aligned) where
available, and we do the union trick elsewhere.
Most of this patch is just replacing accesses to (x)->u.mem with
(x)->U_MEM, where U_MEM is defined as "u.mem" or "mem" depending on
our implementation.
This contains the obvious implementation using the circuitmux data
structure. It also runs the old (slow) algorithm and compares
the results of the two to make sure that they're the same.
Needs review and testing.
This change prevents LD_BUG warnings and bootstrap failure messages
when we try to do directory fetches when starting with
DisableNetwork == 1, a consensus present, but no descriptors (or
insufficient descriptors) yet.
Fixes bug 11200 and bug 10405. It's a bugfix on 0.2.3.9-alpha.
Thanks to mcs for walking me through the repro instructions!
This is meant to be a better bug 9229 fix -- or at least, one more
in tune with the intent of the original code, which calls
router_retry_directory_downloads() only on the first bridge descriptor.
This prevents long stalls when we're starting with a state file but
with no bridge descriptors. Fixes bug 9229. I believe this bug has
been present since 0.2.0.3-alpha.
By default, after you've made a connection to port XYZ, we assume
you might still want to have an exit ready to connect to XYZ for one
hour. This patch lets you lower that interval.
Implements ticket 91
This should fixes some "hey, that function could have
__attribute__((noreturn))" warnings introduced by f96400d9.
Bug not in any released version of Tor.
We have ignored any ports listed here since 80365b989 (0.0.7rc1),
but we didn't warn the user that we were ignoring them. This patch
adds a warning if you put explicit ports in any of the options
{Socks,Dir}Policy or AuthDir{Reject,Invalid,BadDir,BadExit}. It
also adjusts the manpage to say that ports are ignored.
Fixes ticket 11108.
There was one "missing prototype" warning because the test function
wasn't static, and one "unused parameter" warning about the "data"
parameter.
Also, I added a couple of tests to make sure that the "make_null"
addresses really were the addresses we expected, by formatting them
as strings.
In a couple of places, to implement the OOM-circuit-killer defense
against sniper attacks, we have counters to remember the age of
cells or data chunks. These timers were based on wall clock time,
which can move backwards, thus giving roll-over results for our age
calculation. This commit creates a low-budget monotonic time, based
on ratcheting gettimeofday(), so that even in the event of a time
rollback, we don't do anything _really_ stupid.
A future version of Tor should update this function to do something
even less stupid here, like employ clock_gettime() or its kin.
See 1d2179bc90 in master for details.
"""
Fall back to registered country if necessary.
When extracting geoip and geoip6 files from MaxMind's GeoLite2 Country
database, we only look at country->iso_code which is the two-character ISO
3166-1 country code of the country where MaxMind believes the end user is
located.
But if MaxMind thinks a range belongs to anonymous proxies, they don't put
anything there. Hence, we omit those ranges and resolve them all to '??'.
That's not what we want.
What we should do is first try country->iso_code, and if there's no such
key, try registered_country->iso_code which is the country in which the
ISP has registered the IP address.
In short: let's fill all A1 entries with what ARIN et. al think.
"""
When extracting geoip and geoip6 files from MaxMind's GeoLite2 Country
database, we only look at country->iso_code which is the two-character ISO
3166-1 country code of the country where MaxMind believes the end user is
located.
But if MaxMind thinks a range belongs to anonymous proxies, they don't put
anything there. Hence, we omit those ranges and resolve them all to '??'.
That's not what we want.
What we should do is first try country->iso_code, and if there's no such
key, try registered_country->iso_code which is the country in which the
ISP has registered the IP address.
In short: let's fill all A1 entries with what ARIN et. al think.
If the cert turns out to be invalid or if wget is otherwise unable to
verify it, it's going to return an error and not download the file for us.
Spotted by nickm.
It's possible for two threads to hit assertion failures at the same
time. If that happens, let's keep them from stomping on the same
cb_buf field.
Fixes bug 11048; bugfix on 0.2.5.2-alpha. Reported by "cypherpunks".
Back in 5e762e6a5c, non-exit servers
stopped launching DNS requests for users. So there's no need for them
to see if their DNS answers are hijacked.
Patch from Matt Pagan. I think this is a 965 fix.
For a client using a SocksPort connection and IPv6, the connect reply
from tor daemon did not handle AF_INET6 thus sending back the wrong
payload to the client.
A changes file is provided and this fixes#10987
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
Since the first stat call is made for it to deliberately fail, and we
reference st.st_mode without st having valid data, st.st_mode can contain
garbage and cause chmod to fail with EINVAL. We rerun stat and ensure it
succeeded.
Also make use of tt_abort_perror, to properly convey failure reasons to
the user.
clang 3.4 introduced a new by-default warning about unused static
functions, which we triggered heavily for the hashtable and map function
generating macros. We can use __attribute__ ((unused)) (thanks nickm for
the suggestion :-) ) to silence these warnings.
When we have more than two return values, we should really be using
an enum rather than "-2 means this, -1 means that, 0 means this, and
1 or more means a number."
On busy servers, this function takes up something like 3-7% in
different profiles, and gets invoked every time we need to participate
as the midpoint in a hidden service.
So maybe walking through a linked list of all the circuits here wasn't
a good idea.
The latest GeoLite2 database includes a pointer from 2001::/32 to the root
node of the IPv4 address space in the tree. We need to exclude this whole
address space from geoip6, similar to how we exclude IPv4-mapped IPv6
addresses and the 6to4 mapping subnet.
We log only one message, containing a complete list of what's
wrong. We log the complete list whenever any of the possible things
that could have gotten wrong gets worse.
Fix for #9870. Bugfix on 10480dff01, which we merged in
0.2.5.1-alpha.
If you had a resolv.conf file with a nameserver line containing no
nameserver IP, we would crash. That's not terrible, but it's not
desirable.
Fixes bug 8788; bugfix on 0.1.1.23. Libevent already has this fix.
This patch splits out some of the functions in OOM handling so that
it's easier to check them without involving the rest of Tor or
requiring that the circuits be "wired up".