This function tried to modify an array in place, but did it in a
pretty confusing and complicated way. I've revised it to follow a
much more straightforward approach.
Fixes bug #40065.
On an IPv6 reachability failure test, if the address was configured, don't
publish the descriptor and log warn. If the address was auto discovered, still
publish the descriptor.
Closes#33247.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Enum allows us to easily compare what is being returned but also better
semantic to the code.
Related #33247
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Now support IPv4 _and_ IPv6.
This also cleans up nicely the function that was moving IPv4 addresses from
uint32_t to tor_addr_t.
Fixes#40058
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Without this fix, if an PT forgets to send a USERADDR command, that
results in a connection getting treated as local for the purposes of
rate-limiting.
If the PT _does_ use USERADDR, we still believe it.
Closes ticket 33747.
In routerconf_find_ipv6_or_ap(), we check if the returned ORPort is internal
but not for listening. This means that IPv6 [::] is considered internal.
Thus, we can't use it, we have to look directly at the configured address and
port and if they are valid, we do consider that we have a valid IPv6 ORPort
and that we can thus extend in IPv6.
Related #33246
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Now that tor automatically binds to IPv4 _and_ IPv6, in order to avoid
breaking configurations, we sanitize the parsed lists for duplicate ORPorts.
It is possible to happen because we still allow this configuration;
ORPort 9888
ORPort [4242::1]:9888
Meaning that the first ORPort value will bind to 0.0.0.0:9888 _and_ [::]:9888
which would lead to an error when attempting to bind on [4242::1]:9888.
However, that configuration is accepted today and thus we must not break it.
To remedy, we now sanitize the parsed list and prioritize an ORPort that has
an explicit address over the global one.
A warning is emitted if such configuration pattern is found. This is only for
the ORPort.
Related to #33246
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This commit makes it that if the ORPort is set with a single port, it will
bind to both global listen IPv4 and IPv6 addresses.
To pin an "ORPort <PORT>" to be IPv4 or IPv6, the IPv4Only/IPv6Only flags are
honored thus this will _only_ bind on IPv6 for that port value:
ORPort 9050 IPv6Only
Results in: [::]:9050
ORPort 9051 IPv4Only
Results in: [0.0.0.0]:9051
Attempting to configure an explicit IPv4 address with IPv6Only flag is an
error and vice versa.
Closes#33246
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
These now (or_port and dir_port) now have "find" names, since they
look at the portcfg first, then at the actual ports from the
listeners.
This is an automated commit, generated by this command:
./scripts/maint/rename_c_identifier.py \
router_get_advertised_or_port routerconf_find_or_port \
router_get_advertised_ipv6_or_ap routerconf_find_ipv6_or_ap \
router_has_advertised_ipv6_orport routerconf_has_ipv6_orport \
router_get_advertised_dir_port routerconf_find_dir_port
Rationale: these don't actually give the first advertised
address/port, but instead give us the first such port that we are
_configured_ to advertise. Putting them in a portconf_ namespace
therefore makes sense.
Similarly, there are no other functions that get the first
configured advertised addr/port, so the "by_type_af()" part is needless.
This is an automated commit, generated by this command:
./scripts/maint/rename_c_identifier.py \
get_first_advertised_addr_by_type_af portconf_get_first_advertised_addr \
get_first_advertised_port_by_type_af portconf_get_first_advertised_port
This option controls if a tor relay will attempt address auto discovery and
thus ultimately publish an IPv6 ORPort in the descriptor.
Behavior is from proposal 312 section 3.2.6.
Closes#33245
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
The ORPort can be IPv4Only which means that even if we can auto discover an
IPv6 address, we should not publish it because it would have an ORPort of 0.
Fixes#40054
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Instead of a boolean saying "cache_only" add the concept of flags so we add
semantic through out the code and allow ourselves to have more options in the
future.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Tell the relay find address interface to only use the cache so we don't
trigger an address resolve everytime the "GETINFO address" is called.
Related #40025
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Previous development introduced the error of using 0/1 for a boolean
parameter. Fix that everywhere
Related #40025
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Remove use of router_pick_published_address() and use
relay_find_addr_to_publish instead.
Related to #40025
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
At the moment, this command only returns the IPv4. Do so by using the new
relay_find_addr_to_publish().
New commands to return IPv4 and IPv6 will be done with the work in tor#40039.
Related to #40025
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Use the new relay_has_address_set() interface when deciding if we need to
fetch directory information from an authority as a relay.
If no IPv4 address is found, we'll proceed with a fetch so we can learn our
address in the HTTP header or NETINFO cell that a trusted authority will send
us back.
Related to #40025
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Tor periodic events have moved to a role base model where relays have specific
events. One of those is to rebuild the descriptor and that is ran every
minute.
This removes the call to router_rebuild_descriptor() from
router_get_my_routerinfo_with_err() because that is the only code path that
can call for a rebuild every second.
Instead, when we mark the descriptor as dirty, immediately reschedule the
descriptor check periodic event so it can be rebuilt that way instead of
randomly when router_get_my_routerinfo_with_err() is called.
Related to #40025
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
When a relay builds a new descriptor, use the new relay_find_addr_to_publish()
interface to find the address to publish per family.
This commit also make the check for address consistency to also work for a
configured IPv6 for which before it was IPv4 only.
Related to #40025
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
In case the transport has no usable address configured (likely 0.0.0.0 or
[::]), attempt to find the IPv4 and on failure, fallback to the IPv6. If none
are found, a log error is emitted and the transport is skiped.
Related to #40025
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
In order for a relay to find which address to publish in its descriptor,
router_pick_published_address() is used. However, that function only supports
AF_INET and uses the directory server suggested address discovery mechanism.
This new function uses a new interface so that the caller can request an
address family and get the tor_addr_t object. Furthermore, it drops the use of
directory servers address discovery (tor#33244) and instead uses the new
suggested cache that is populated at the moment from data in the NETINFO cell
coming from the directory authorities.
At this commit, function is unused.
Related to #40025
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This is an automated commit made with a python script.
After running the automated script, I had to hand-revert the cases where it
made the conversion functions call themselves.
Additionally, I had to edit a variable declaration in control_bootstrap.c so
that the result of a const cast could be put in a const field.
Pass the IPv4 before the IPv6 like all our other interfaces.
Changes unreleased code related to #40043.
Closes#40045
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This changes a LOT of code but in the end, behavior is the same.
Unfortunately, many functions had to be changed to accomodate but in majority
of cases, to become simpler.
Functions are also removed specifically those that were there to convert an
IPv4 as a host format to a tor_addr_t. Those are not needed anymore.
The IPv4 address field has been standardized to "ipv4_addr", the ORPort to
"ipv4_orport" (currently IPv6 uses ipv6_orport) and DirPort to "ipv4_dirport".
This is related to Sponsor 55 work that adds IPv6 support for relays and this
work is needed in order to have a common interface between IPv4 and IPv6.
Closes#40043.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Fix on unreleased code.
The relay_new_address_suggestion() is called when a NETINFO cell is received
thus not only for relay or bridges.
Remove the BUG() that made sure only in server mode we could handle the
suggested address.
Fixes#40032
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
We've done a lot to improve our internal APIs since we wrote this
code, and it shows. We can just use a buf_t to build up the
bandwidth lines, and save a bunch of stack fiddling.
Additionally, we can use a function to format a single line, and
thereby get rid of the cheezy pattern that does
for (i=0;i<n;++i) {
switch (i) {
...
}
...
}
When receiving an introduction NACK, the client either decides to close or
re-extend the circuit to another intro point.
In order to do this, the service descriptor needs to exists but it is possible
that it gets removed from the cache between the establishement of the
introduction circuit and the reception of the (N)ACK.
For that reason, the BUG(desc == NULL) is removed because it is a possible
normal use case. Tor recovers gracefully already.
Fixes#34087
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
It now uses the 'goto err' pattern, instead of the fatal_unreached()
pattern. The latter pattern is usually used when there is a loop, but there is
no loop in this function so it can be simplified easily.
We do look at the address but with this we also look if the identity digest of
the relay suggesting us an address is a trusted source.
Related to #40022
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This behaves like router_new_address_suggestion() but differs in couple of
ways:
1. It takes a tor_addr_t instead of an address string and supports both
AF_INET and AF_INET6.
2. It does _not_ use the last_guessed_ip local cache and instead only relies
on the last resolved address cache in resolve_addr.c
It is not used at this commit. This function is made to process a suggested
address found in a NETINFO cell exactly like router_new_address_suggestion()
does with the address a directory suggests us.
Related to #40022
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
If at least one service is configured as a version 2, a log warning is emitted
once and only once.
Closes#40003
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
In practice, there will be at most one ipv4 address and ipv6 address
for now, but this code is designed to not care which address is
which until forced to do so.
This patch does not yet actually create extend_info_t objects with
multiple addresses.
Closes#34069.
Authorities currently add themselves to the trusted dir servers list,
but if they have an IPv6 ORPort, they leave it out.
This commit makes authorities add their own IPv6 ORPort to the trusted
dir servers list.
Closes ticket 32822.
This is in response to a question about why we don't always log
orport self-tests as reachability tests.
I'm not 100% convinced that bandwidth self-tests are still useful,
but that's an issue for another day. :)
New name reflects that the function is only used to compare router addresses
in order to learn if they are in the same network.
The network check is /16 and /32 respectively for IPv4 and IPv6.
Related to #40009
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This is not actually a bug! It can happen for a bunch of reasons,
which all boil down to "trying to add an extrainfo for which we no
longer have the corresponding routerinfo".
Fixes#16016; bugfix on 0.2.6.3-alpha.
Previously we had two chains of logic for reachability tests: one
for launching them, and one for telling the user that we had
launched them. Now, we simply have the launch code inform the user:
this way, we can't get out of sync.
Closes ticket 34137.
AssumeReachable should only be about whether a relay thinks that it
is reachable itself. But previously, we've had it also turn off
reachability checking of _other_ relays on authorities.
(Technically, reachability tests were still run, but we would ignore
the results.)
With this patch, there is a new AuthDirTestReachability option
(default 1) that controls whether authorities run reachability
tests.
Making this change allows us to have test networks where authorities
set AssumeReachable without disabling their reachability testing
entirely.
Closes ticket #34445.
These parameters do not suppress checks, but they tell relays that
it's okay to publish even when those checks fail.
I have chosen lowercase hyphenated names, since these seem to be
more common in networkstatus params.
Closes#33224 and part of #34064.
This was supposed to happen in #40012, but the command line was wrong.
This is an automated commit, generated by this command:
./scripts/maint/rename_c_identifier.py \
router_should_skip_orport_reachability_check router_all_orports_seem_reachable
Replace it by find_my_address() everywhere. This changes many parts of the
code that uses it to use a tor_addr_t instead of a plain uint32_t for IPv4.
Many changes to the unit test to also use the new interface.
Part #33233
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Series of changes:
1. Rename function to reflect the namespace of the file.
2. Use the new last resolved cache instead of the unused
last_resolved_addr_v4 (which is also removed in this commit).
3. Make the entire code base use the new resolved_addr_is_local() function.
You will notice that this function uses /24 to differentiate subnets where the
rest of tor uses /16 (including documentation of EnforceDistinctSubnets).
Ticket #40009 has been opened for that.
But that the moment, the function keeps looking at /24.
Part of #33233
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Series of things done in this commit:
1. Rename the functions to better reflect the namespace of the file.
2. Make both reset and get function to operate on the last_resolved_addrs
cache that is per family.
3. Make the get function to take a tor_addr_t.
4. Change all callsite to use the new convention.
Part of #33233
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
These identifiers are confusing and unreadable. I think these
replacements should be better. Closes ticket #40012.
This is an automated commit, generated by this command:
./scripts/maint/rename_c_identifier.py \
router_should_skip_orport_reachability_check_family router_orport_seems_reachable \
router_should_skip_dirport_reachability_check router_dirport_seems_reachable \
router_should_skip_dirport_reachability_check router_all_orports_seem_reachable
Since "skip orport check" is the "and" of v4_ok and v6_ok, we can
just compute v4_ok and v6_ok once, to clarify that we don't enter
this block of code if they're both true.
With prop312, we want to support IPv4 and IPv6 thus multiple Address statement
(up to 2) will be accepted.
For this, "Address" option becomes a LINELIST so we can properly process the
IPv4 or/and IPv6.
Part of #33233
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
I've managed to keep this change mainly contained to our
self-testing module. The changes here are:
* There are two different variables for tracking "is our orport
reachable".
* We have a new function that says whether we can skip a single
family's orport reachability test; the old function for this now
tells whether we can skip _all_ orport reachability testing.
(The name, router_should_skip_orport_reachability_test, is not
so good. I will rename it later if I can think of a good
replacement.)
* The function that launches orport reachability tests now only
launches the ones that haven't completed.
* The function that notes that we're reachable on an ORPort now
takes a family.
* Various log messages are cleaned up.
Since Tor 0.2.9 has been unsupported since January, 0.3.5 is the
oldest supported version, and its features constitute the oldest
recommended feature-set.
This patch updates these recommendations:
DirCache=2
Support for consensus diffs.
New in 0.3.1.1-alpha.
HSDir=2
Support for v3 onion service descriptors.
New in 0.3.0.4-alpha.
HSIntro=4
Support for Ed25519 intropoint authentication keys.
New in 0.3.0-4-alpha.
HSRend=2
Support for rendezvous cells longer than 20 bytes.
New in 0.2.9.4-alpha.
Link=5
Link padding and link padding negotiation.
New in 0.3.3.2-alpha.
LinkAuth=3
Ed25519 link authentication.
New in 0.3.0.1-alpha.
Resume being willing to use preemptively-built circuits when
UseEntryGuards is set to 0. We accidentally disabled this feature with
that config setting (in our fix for #24469), leading to slower load times.
Fixes bug 34303; bugfix on 0.3.3.2-alpha.
Add an inline helper function that indicates if the cached object contains a
decrypted descriptor or not.
The descriptor object is NULL if tor is unable to decrypt it (lacking client
authorization) and some actions need to be done only when we have a decrypted
object.
This improves code semantic.
Fixes#33458
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
The warning was:
11:23:10 ../tor/src/feature/hs/hs_service.c: In function 'log_cant_upload_desc':
11:23:10 ../tor/src/feature/hs/hs_service.c:3118:3: error: comparison of unsigned expression < 0 is always false [-Werror=type-limits]
See #34254 for more info.
I guess this means that gcc assigned an unsigned type to the
`log_desc_upload_reason_t` enum and it warned if we compared it against 0...
For now I think it's simpler to remove that check instead of turning the enum
to a signed type, or trying to hack it some other way.
From what it seems, enum is up to the compiler on whether it's signed/unsigned:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/159034/are-c-enums-signed-or-unsigned
Instead, call out to a helper function, repeating the call if needed.
Avoids duplicating exclusions for:
* the current relay's family, and
* any exclusions specified by the caller.
Part of 34200.
And delete a loop that is now empty. This change should improve tor's
performance, because we no longer iterate through the nodelist twice for
every node in every circuit path.
Part of 34200.
Rewrite inform_testing_reachability() to use separate buffers for IPv4
ORPort, IPv6 ORPort, and IPv4 DirPort. And use consistent APIs to fill
those buffers.
Part of 33222.
This is an automated commit, generated by this command:
./scripts/maint/rename_c_identifier.py \
client_or_conn_should_skip_reachable_address_check router_or_conn_should_skip_reachable_address_check \
client_dir_conn_should_skip_reachable_address_check router_dir_conn_should_skip_reachable_address_check
This is an automated commit, generated by this command:
./scripts/maint/rename_c_identifier.py \
router_skip_orport_reachability_check router_should_skip_orport_reachability_check \
router_skip_dirport_reachability_check router_should_skip_dirport_reachability_check \
router_connect_assume_or_reachable client_or_conn_should_skip_reachable_address_check \
router_connect_assume_dir_reachable client_dir_conn_should_skip_reachable_address_check
It was generated with --no-verify, so it probably breaks some commit hooks.
The commiter should be sure to fix them up in a subsequent commit.
GCC added an implicit-fallthrough warning a while back, where it
would complain if you had a nontrivial "case:" block that didn't end
with break, return, or something like that. Clang recently added
the same thing.
GCC, however, would let you annotate a fall-through as intended by
any of various magic "/* fall through */" comments. Clang, however,
only seems to like "__attribute__((fallthrough))". Fortunately, GCC
accepts that too.
A previous commit in this branch defined a FALLTHROUGH macro to do
the right thing if GNUC is defined; here we replace all of our "fall
through" comments with uses of that macro.
This is an automated commit, made with the following perl one-liner:
#!/usr/bin/perl -i -p
s#/\* *falls? ?thr.*?\*/#FALLTHROUGH;#i;
(In order to avoid conflicts, I'm applying this script separately to
each maint branch. This is the 0.4.3 version.)
GCC added an implicit-fallthrough warning a while back, where it
would complain if you had a nontrivial "case:" block that didn't end
with break, return, or something like that. Clang recently added
the same thing.
GCC, however, would let you annotate a fall-through as intended by
any of various magic "/* fall through */" comments. Clang, however,
only seems to like "__attribute__((fallthrough))". Fortunately, GCC
accepts that too.
A previous commit in this branch defined a FALLTHROUGH macro to do
the right thing if GNUC is defined; here we replace all of our "fall
through" comments with uses of that macro.
This is an automated commit, made with the following perl one-liner:
#!/usr/bin/perl -i -p
s#/\* *falls? ?thr.*?\*/#FALLTHROUGH;#i;
(In order to avoid conflicts, I'm applying this script separately to
each maint branch. This is the 0.4.2 version.)
GCC added an implicit-fallthrough warning a while back, where it
would complain if you had a nontrivial "case:" block that didn't end
with break, return, or something like that. Clang recently added
the same thing.
GCC, however, would let you annotate a fall-through as intended by
any of various magic "/* fall through */" comments. Clang, however,
only seems to like "__attribute__((fallthrough))". Fortunately, GCC
accepts that too.
A previous commit in this branch defined a FALLTHROUGH macro to do
the right thing if GNUC is defined; here we replace all of our "fall
through" comments with uses of that macro.
This is an automated commit, made with the following perl one-liner:
#!/usr/bin/perl -i -p
s#/\* *falls? ?thr.*?\*/#FALLTHROUGH;#i;
(In order to avoid conflicts, I'm applying this script separately to
each maint branch. This is the 0.4.1 version.)
GCC added an implicit-fallthrough warning a while back, where it
would complain if you had a nontrivial "case:" block that didn't end
with break, return, or something like that. Clang recently added
the same thing.
GCC, however, would let you annotate a fall-through as intended by
any of various magic "/* fall through */" comments. Clang, however,
only seems to like "__attribute__((fallthrough))". Fortunately, GCC
accepts that too.
A previous commit in this branch defined a FALLTHROUGH macro to do
the right thing if GNUC is defined; here we replace all of our "fall
through" comments with uses of that macro.
This is an automated commit, made with the following perl one-liner:
#!/usr/bin/perl -i -p
s#/\* *falls? ?thr.*?\*/#FALLTHROUGH;#i;
Move a series of function from config.c into that new file which is related to
address resolving.
Part of #33789
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This commit moves router_pick_published_address() and the related helper
functions into the new file.
The log_addr_has_changed() function has been made public in router.h so we can
use it in relay_resolve_addr.c.
This is a refactoring as part of Sponsor 55. Only code movement at this
commit.
Part of #33789
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Do not try to stuff "HS_DESC_DECODE_GENERIC_ERROR" (-1) into a
socks5_reply_status_t (enum). It doesn't actually make sense, and
isn't one of our documented extensions.
(This can only happen on a nonfatal assertion that we haven't seen,
so it probably isn't happening in practice.)
Fixes another case of bug 34077; bugfix on 0.4.3.1-alpha.
When a relay starts testing reachability, log its IPv6 ORPort.
The existing code logs the IPv4 ORPort and DirPort.
The IPv4 ORPort is required. The other ports are only logged if they
are present.
Part of 33222.
This is an automated commit, generated by this command:
./scripts/maint/rename_c_identifier.py \
check_whether_orport_reachable router_skip_orport_reachability_check \
check_whether_dirport_reachable router_skip_dirport_reachability_check
It was generated with --no-verify, so it probably breaks some commit hooks.
The commiter should be sure to fix them up in a subsequent commit.
Part of 33222.
Change some function names to distinguish between:
* client first hop reachability (ReachableAddresses)
* relay port reachability self-tests
This is an automated commit, generated by this command:
./scripts/maint/rename_c_identifier.py \
router_skip_or_reachability router_connect_assume_or_reachable \
router_skip_dir_reachability router_connect_assume_dir_reachable
It was generated with --no-verify, so it probably breaks some commit hooks.
The commiter should be sure to fix them up in a subsequent commit.
Part of 33222.
Split "can extend over IPv6" and "has advertised IPv6 ORPort" into
separate functions. They currently have the same result, but this may
change in 33818 with ExtendAllowIPv6Addresses.
Part of 33817.
Refactor circuit_open_connection_for_extend(), splitting out the IP
address choice code into a new function.
Adds unit tests. No behaviour changes in tor.
Part of 33817.
Allow extend cells with IPv6-only link specifiers.
Warn and fail if both IPv4 and IPv6 are invalid.
Also warn if the IPv4 or IPv6 addresses are unexpectedly internal,
but continue with the valid address.
Part of 33817.
The client auth protocol allows attacker-controlled x25519 private keys being
passed around, which allows an attacker to potentially trigger the all-zeroes
assert for client_auth_sk in hs_descriptor.c:decrypt_descriptor_cookie().
We fixed that by making sure that an all-zeroes client auth key will not be
used.
There are no guidelines for validating x25519 private keys, and the assert was
there as a sanity check for code flow issues (we don't want to enter that
function with an unitialized key if client auth is being used). To avoid such
crashes in the future, we also changed the assert to a BUG-and-err.
circuit_extend() may be called when a client receives an extend cell,
even if the relay module is disabled.
Log a protocol warning when the relay module is disabled.
Part of 33633.
This is to allow a visual feedback in the logs for operators setting up Onion
Balance so they can confirm they properly configured the instances.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
The ob_subcreds array was not copied after SIGHUP, and that left the
post-SIGHUP service with a NULL ob_subcreds pointer (until the next descriptor
gets build where we regenerate ob_subcreds in hs_ob_refresh_keys()).
Fixes bug #33762; not in any released tor version.
This patch doesn't actually use the results of the parsed object to
create the service configuration: subsequent patches will do
that. This patch just introduces the necessary configuration tables
and starts using them to validate the configuration.
As of this writing, this patch breaks tests. I'll likely fix that
in a rebase later on: the current error messages for failures to
parse options are a regression, so I've opened #33640 for that.
Return early when there is no suitable IPv6 ORPort.
Show the address and port on error, using a convenience function.
Code simplification and refactoring.
Cleanup after 32588.
When IPv6 ORPorts are set to "auto", tor relays and bridges would
advertise an incorrect port in their descriptor.
This may be a low-severity memory safety issue, because the published
port number may be derived from uninitialised or out-of-bounds memory
reads.
Fixes bug 32588; bugfix on 0.2.3.9-alpha.
Previously we just ignored this option, which would leave it unset,
and cause an assertion failure later on when running with the User
option.
Fixes bug 33668; bugfix on 0.4.3.1-alpha.
Add an inline helper function that indicates if the cached object contains a
decrypted descriptor or not.
The descriptor object is NULL if tor is unable to decrypt it (lacking client
authorization) and some actions need to be done only when we have a decrypted
object.
This improves code semantic.
Fixes#33458
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Given that ed25519 public key validity checks are usually not needed
and (so far) they are only necessary for onion addesses in the Tor
protocol, we decided to fix this specific bug instance without
modifying the rest of the codebase (see below for other fix
approaches).
In our minimal fix we check that the pubkey in
hs_service_add_ephemeral() is valid and error out otherwise.
When a service can not upload its descriptor(s), we have no logs on why. This
adds logging for each possible reason for each descriptors.
That logging is emitted every second so it is rate limited for each reason and
per descriptor.
Closes#33400
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
In this case, when we're looking for the voting interval, we should
try looking at the _latest_ consensus if we have one. When we're
looking for the start of the current voting period, we can use our
existing fallback logic without complaint, since the voting interval
code will already have given us a reasonable voting interval, and we
want to have a round starting time based on the current time.
This is not as clean a patch as I would like: see the comment on
ASSUME_AUTHORITY_SCHEDULING. This issue here is that the unit tests
sometimes assume that we are going to be looking at the dirauth
options and behaving like a dirauth, but without setting the options
to turn is into one.
This isn't an issue for actually running Tor, as far as I can tell
with chutney.
Most of this function was about recreating a voting schedule on
demand if it didn't exist yet or was not up-to-date. I've made that
into its own function.
This is an automated commit, generated by this command:
./scripts/maint/rename_c_identifier.py \
voting_schedule_recalculate_timing dirauth_sched_recalculate_timing \
voting_schedule_get_start_of_next_interval voting_sched_get_start_of_interval_after \
voting_schedule_get_next_valid_after_time dirauth_sched_get_next_valid_after_time
Apparently it is only used by the unit tests: tor doesn't want it at
all.
I've opened a new ticket (33383) to we if we should remove this
whole feature.
This is an automated commit, generated by this command:
./scripts/maint/rename_c_identifier.py \
MIN_DNS_TTL_AT_EXIT MIN_DNS_TTL \
MAX_DNS_TTL_AT_EXIT MAX_DNS_TTL \
dns_clip_ttl clip_dns_ttl
If we receive via 'post' a vote from a dir auth after the
fetch_missing_votes cutoff, that means we didn't get it by the time we
begin the "fetching missing votes from everybody else" phase, which means
it is very likely to cause a consensus split if we count it. Instead,
we reject it.
But we still allow votes that we fetch ourselves after that cutoff.
This is a demo branch for making progress on #4631.
I've been running it on moria1 and it catches and handles real buggy
behavior from directory authorities, e.g.
Jan 28 15:59:50.804 [warn] Rejecting vote from 199.58.81.140 received at 2020-01-28 20:59:50; our cutoff for received votes is 2020-01-28 20:52:30
Jan 28 15:59:50.805 [warn] Rejected vote from 199.58.81.140 ("Vote received too late, would be dangerous to count it").
Jan 29 01:52:52.667 [warn] Rejecting vote from 204.13.164.118 received at 2020-01-29 06:52:52; our cutoff for received votes is 2020-01-29 06:52:30
Jan 29 01:52:52.669 [warn] Rejected vote from 204.13.164.118 ("Vote received too late, would be dangerous to count it").
Jan 29 04:53:26.323 [warn] Rejecting vote from 204.13.164.118 received at 2020-01-29 09:53:26; our cutoff for received votes is 2020-01-29 09:52:30
Jan 29 04:53:26.326 [warn] Rejected vote from 204.13.164.118 ("Vote received too late, would be dangerous to count it").
Add doxygen comments to the new recommended and required subprotocol
version strings.
Add a warning to the required protocol documentation, because requiring
the wrong protocols can break the tor network. Also reference
proposal 303: When and how to remove support for protocol versions.
Part of 33285.
Move the recommended and required protocol version lists into the
private section of the dirvote header, and turn them into macros.
Preparation for 33285.