Cleanup some bugs discovered during 23576:
* stop copying the first 20 characters of a 40-character hex string
to a binary fingerprint
* stop putting IPv6 addresses in a variable called "ipv4"
* explain why we do a duplicate tt_int_op() to deliberately fail and
print a value
Fixes bug 29243; bugfix on 0.3.2.1-alpha.
The previous commits for 23576 confused hs_desc_link_specifier_t
and link_specifier_t. Removing hs_desc_link_specifier_t fixes this
confusion.
Fixes bug 22781; bugfix on 0.3.2.1-alpha.
Refactor the shared random state's memory management so that it actually
takes ownership of the shared random value pointers.
Fixes bug 29706; bugfix on 0.2.9.1-alpha.
Stop leaking parts of the shared random state in the shared-random unit
tests. The previous fix in 29599 was incomplete.
Fixes bug 29706; bugfix on 0.2.9.1-alpha.
This commit also explicitly set the value of the PRT enum so we can match/pin
the C enum values to the Rust one in protover/ffi.rs.
Fixes#29631
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Prior to #23100, we were not counting HS circuit build times in our
calculation of the timeout. This could lead to a condition where our timeout
was set too low, based on non HS circuit build times, and then we would
abandon all HS circuits, storing no valid timeouts in the histogram.
This commit avoids the assert.
When "auto" was used for the port number for a listening socket, the
message logged after opening the socket would incorrectly say port 0
instead of the actual port used.
Fixes bug 29144; bugfix on 0.3.5.1-alpha
Signed-off-by: Kris Katterjohn <katterjohn@gmail.com>
Skip the Appveyor 32-bit Windows Server 2016 job, and 64-bit Windows
Server 2012 R2 job. The remaining 2 jobs still provide coverage of
64/32-bit, and Windows Server 2016/2012 R2.
Also set fast_finish, so failed jobs terminate the build immediately.
Fixes bug 29601; bugfix on 0.3.5.4-alpha.
This patch fixes a crash bug (assertion failure) in the PT subsystem
that could get triggered if the user cancels bootstrap via the UI in
TorBrowser. This would cause Tor to call `managed_proxy_destroy()` which
called `process_free()` after it had called `process_terminate()`. This
leads to a crash when the various process callbacks returns with data
after the `process_t` have been freed using `process_free()`.
We solve this issue by ensuring that everywhere we call
`process_terminate()` we make sure to detach the `managed_proxy_t` from
the `process_t` (by calling `process_set_data(process, NULL)`) and avoid
calling `process_free()` at all in the transports code. Instead we just
call `process_terminate()` and let the process exit callback in
`managed_proxy_exit_callback()` handle the `process_free()` call by
returning true to the process subsystem.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/29562
When IPv4Only (IPv6Only) was used but the address could not be
interpreted as a IPv4 (IPv6) address, the error message referred
to the wrong IP version.
This also fixes up the error-checking logic so it's more precise
about what's being checked.
Fixes bug 13221; bugfix on 0.2.3.9-alpha
Signed-off-by: Kris Katterjohn <katterjohn@gmail.com>
KIST works by computing how much should be allowed to write to the kernel for
a given socket, and then it writes that amount to the outbuf.
The problem is that it could be possible that the outbuf already has lots of
data in it from a previous scheduling round (because the kernel is full/busy
and Tor was not able to flush the outbuf yet). KIST ignores that the outbuf
has been filling (is above its "highwater") and writes more anyway. The end
result is that the outbuf length would exceed INT_MAX, hence causing an
assertion error and a corresponding "Bug()" message to get printed to the
logs.
This commit makes it for KIST to take into account the outbuf length when
computing the available space.
Bug found and patch by Rob Jansen.
Closes#29168. TROVE-2019-001.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>