Previously, we'd get a new descriptor for free when
public_server_mode() changed, since it would count as
affects_workers, which would call init_keys(), which would make us
regenerate a new descriptor. But now that we fixed bug 3263,
init_keys() is no longer necessarily a new descriptor, and so we
need to make sure that public_server_mode() counts as a descriptor
transition.
We used to regenerate our descriptor whenever we'd get a sighup. This
was caused by a bug in options_transition_affects_workers() that would
return true even if the options were exactly the same. Down the call
path we'd call init_keys(), which made us make a new descriptor which
the authorities would reject, and the node would subsequently fall out
of the consensus.
This patch fixes only the first part of this bug:
options_transition_affects_workers() behaves correctly now. The second
part still wants a fix.
When we configure a new bridge via the controller, don't wait up to ten
seconds before trying to fetch its descriptor. This wasn't so bad when
you listed your bridges in torrc, but it's dreadful if you configure
your bridges via vidalia.
Bumped the char maximum to 512 for HTTPProxyAuthenticator &
HTTPSProxyAuthenticator. Now stripping all '\n' after base64
encoding in alloc_http_authenticator.
Rename crypto_pk_check_key_public_exponent to crypto_pk_public_exponent_ok:
it's nice to name predicates s.t. you can tell how to interpret true
and false.
Fixed a trivial conflict where this and the ControlSocketGroupWritable
code both added different functions to the same part of connection.c.
Conflicts:
src/or/connection.c
This was harmless, since we only used this for checking for lists of
port values, but it's the principle of the thing.
Fixes 3175; bugfix on 0.1.0.1-rc
We'll need this for checking permissions on the directories that hold
control sockets: if somebody says "ControlSocket ~/foo", it would be
pretty rude to do a chmod 700 on their homedir.
When running a system-wide instance of Tor on Unix-like systems, having
a ControlSocket is a quite handy mechanism to access Tor control
channel. But it would be easier if access to the Unix domain socket can
be granted by making control users members of the group running the Tor
process.
This change introduces a UnixSocketsGroupWritable option, which will
create Unix domain sockets (and thus ControlSocket) 'g+rw'. This allows
ControlSocket to offer same access control measures than
ControlPort+CookieAuthFileGroupReadable.
See <http://bugs.debian.org/552556> for more details.
This code changes it so that we don't remove bridges immediately when
we start re-parsing our configuration. Instead, we mark them all, and
remove all the marked ones after re-parsing our bridge lines. As we
add a bridge, we see if it's already in the list. If so, we just
unmark it.
This new behavior will lose the property we used to have that bridges
were in bridge_list in the same order in which they appeared in the
torrc. I took a quick look through the code, and I'm pretty sure we
didn't actually depend on that anywhere.
This is for bug 3019; it's a fix on 0.2.0.3-alpha.
rransom notes correctly that now that we aren't checking our HSDir
flag, we have no actual reason to check whether we are listed in the
consensus at all when determining if we should act like a hidden
service directory.