(Also, refactor the code to create a hidden service directory into a
separate funcion, so we don't have to duplicate it.)
Fixes bug 20484; bugfix on 0.2.9.3-alpha.
* Check consistency between the two single onion torrc options
* Use the more relevant option each time we check for single onion mode
* Clarify log messages
* Clarify comments
* Otherwise, no behaviour change
Add experimental OnionServiceSingleHopMode and
OnionServiceNonAnonymousMode options. When both are set to 1, every
hidden service on a tor instance becomes a non-anonymous Single Onion
Service. Single Onions make one-hop (direct) connections to their
introduction and renzedvous points. One-hop circuits make Single Onion
servers easily locatable, but clients remain location-anonymous.
This is compatible with the existing hidden service implementation, and
works on the current tor network without any changes to older relays or
clients.
Implements proposal #260, completes ticket #17178. Patch by teor & asn.
squash! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! fixup! Implement Prop #260: Single Onion Services
Redesign single onion service poisoning.
When in OnionServiceSingleHopMode, each hidden service key is poisoned
(marked as non-anonymous) on creation by creating a poison file in the
hidden service directory.
Existing keys are considered non-anonymous if this file exists, and
anonymous if it does not.
Tor refuses to launch in OnionServiceSingleHopMode if any existing keys
are anonymous. Similarly, it refuses to launch in anonymous client mode
if any existing keys are non-anonymous.
Rewrite the unit tests to match and be more comprehensive.
Adds a bonus unit test for rend_service_load_all_keys().
When deleting an ephemeral HS, we were only iterating on circuit with an
OPEN state. However, it could be possible that an intro point circuit didn't
reached the open state yet.
This commit makes it that we close the circuit regardless of its state
except if it was already marked for close.
Fixes#18604
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Tor stores client authorization cookies in two slightly different forms.
The service's client_keys file has the standard base64-encoded cookie,
including two chars of padding. The hostname file and the client remove
the two padding chars, and store an auth type flag in the unused bits.
The distinction makes no sense. Refactor all decoding to use the same
function, which will accept either form, and use a helper function for
encoding the truncated format.
When an HS process an INTRODUCE2 cell, we didn't validate if the IP address
of the rendezvous point was a local address. If it's the case, we end up
wasting resources by trying to extend to a local address which fails since
we do not allow that in circuit_extend().
This commit now rejects a rendezvous point that has a local address once
seen at the hidden service side unless ExtendAllowPrivateAddresses is set.
Fixes#8976
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
The wrong list was used when looking up expired intro points in a rend
service object causing what we think could be reachability issues and
triggering a BUG log.
Fixes#16702
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
Removes a check to PublishHidServDescriptors in
rend_consider_services_upload(). This allows descriptors to be
generated and stored in the local cache when PublishHidServDescriptor = 0.
Keep the PublishHidServDescriptors option check in
rend_consider_descriptor_republication(). We will never need to republish
a descriptor if we are not publishing descriptors to the HSDirs.
Service descriptors are now generated regardless of the the
PublishHidServDescriptors option. The generated descriptors are stored
in the service descriptor cache.
The PublishHidServDescriptors = 1 option now prevents descriptor
publication to the HSDirs rather than descriptor generation.
Deindent a block of code inside the PublishHidServDescriptors option
check in upload_service_descriptor(). Stylistic commit to make the
subsequent reworking of this code cleaner.
When cleaning up extra circuits that we've opened for performance reason, we
need to count all the introduction circuit and not only the established ones
else we can end up with too many introduction points.
This also adds the check for expiring nodes when serving an INTRODUCE cell
since it's possible old clients are still using them before we have time to
close them.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>