It _should_ work, and I don't see a reason that it wouldn't, but
just in case, add a 10 second timer to make tor die with an
assertion failure if it's supposed to exit but it doesn't.
This function was never about 'finishing' the event loop, but rather
about making sure that the code outside the event loop would be run
at least once.
Sometimes when we call exit(), it's because the process is
completely hopeless: openssl has a broken AES-CTR implementation, or
the clock is in the 1960s, or something like that.
But sometimes, we should return cleanly from tor_main() instead, so
that embedders can keep embedding us and start another Tor process.
I've gone through all the exit() and _exit() calls to annotate them
with "exit ok" or "XXXX bad exit" -- the next step will be to fix
the bad exit()s.
First step towards 23848.
When we added HTTPTunnelPort, the answer that we give when you try
to use your SOCKSPort as an HTTP proxy became wrong. Now we explain
that Tor sorta _is_ an HTTP proxy, but a SOCKSPort isn't.
I have left the status line the same, in case anything is depending
on it. I have removed the extra padding for Internet Explorer,
since the message is well over 512 bytes without it.
Fixes bug 23678; bugfix on 0.3.2.1-alpha.
Because our monotonic time interface doesn't play well with value set to 0,
always initialize to now() the scheduler_last_run at init() of the KIST
scheduler.
Fixes#23696
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
When a channel is scheduled and flush cells returns 0 that is no cells to
flush, we flag it back in waiting for cells so it doesn't get stuck in a
possible infinite loop.
It has been observed on moria1 where a closed channel end up in the scheduler
where the flush process returned 0 cells but it was ultimately kept in the
scheduling loop forever. We suspect that this is due to a more deeper problem
in tor where the channel_more_to_flush() is actually looking at the wrong
queue and was returning 1 for an empty channel thus putting the channel in the
"Case 4" of the scheduler which is to go back in pending state thus
re-considered at the next iteration.
This is a fix that allows the KIST scheduler to recover properly from a not
entirelly diagnosed problem in tor.
Fixes#23676
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
When we added single_conn_free_bytes(), we cleared the outbuf on a
connection without setting outbuf_flushlen() to 0. This could cause
an assertion failure later on in flush_buf().
Fixes bug 23690; bugfix on 0.2.6.1-alpha.
This caused a BUG log when we noticed that the circuit had no
channel. The likeliest culprit for exposing that behavior is
d769cab3e5, where we made circuit_mark_for_close() NULL out
the n_chan and p_chan fields of the circuit.
Fixes bug 8185; bugfix on 0.2.5.4-alpha, I think.
My current theory is that this is just a marked circuit that hasn't
closed yet, but let's gather more information in case that theory is
wrong.
Diagnostic for 8185.
If 6 SOCKS requests are opened at once, it would have triggered 6 fetches
which ultimately poke all 6 HSDir. We don't want that, if we have multiple
SOCKS requests for the same service, do one fetch only.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
When purging last HSDir requests, we used time(NULL) for computing the
service blinded key but in all other places in our codebase we actually
use the consensus times. That can cause wrong behavior if the consensus
is in a different time period than time(NULL).
This commit is required for proper purging of HSDir requests.
The confparse field has type UINT, which corresponds to an int
type. We had uint32_t.
This shouldn't cause trouble in practice, since int happens to
4-bytes wide on every platform where an authority is running. It's
still wrong, though.
These should have been int, but we had listed them as unsigned.
That's an easy mistake to make, since "int" corresponds with either
INT or UINT in the configuration file.
This bug cannot have actually caused a problem in practice, since we
check those fields' values on load, and ensure that they are in
range 0..INT32_MAX.
New approach, suggested by Taylor: During testing builds, we
initialize a union member of an appropriate pointer type with the
address of the member field we're trying to test, so we can make
sure that the compiler doesn't warn.
My earlier approach invoked undefined behavior.
Also demote a log message that can occur under natural causes
(if the circuit subsystem is missing descriptors/consensus etc.).
The HS subsystem will naturally retry to connect to intro points,
so no need to make that log user-facing.
So we can track them more easily in the logs and match any open/close/free
with those identifiers.
Part of #23645
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This removes the "nickname" of the cannibalized circuit last hop as it is
useless. It now logs the n_circ_id and global identifier so we can match it
with other logging statement.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Prior to the log statement, the circuit n_circ_id value is zeroed so keep a
copy so we can log it at the end.
Part of #23645
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>