basically, a twin is a router which is different except it shares
the same keypair. so in cases where we want to find a "next router"
and all we really care is that it can decrypt the next onion layer,
then a twin is just as good.
we still need to decide how to mark twins in the routerinfo_t and in
the routers config file.
svn:r30
The 'or' process can now be told (by the global_role variable) what
roles this server should play -- connect to all ORs, listen for ORs,
listen for OPs, listen for APs, or any combination.
* everything in /src/op/ is now obsolete.
* connection_ap.c now handles all interactions with application proxies
* "port" is now or_port, op_port, ap_port. But routers are still always
referenced (say, in conn_get_by_addr_port()) by addr / or_port. We
should make routers.c actually read these new ports (currently I've
kludged it so op_port = or_port+10, ap_port=or_port+20)
* circuits currently know if they're at the beginning of the path because
circ->cpath is set. They use this instead for crypts (both ways),
if it's set.
* I still obey the "send a 0 back to the AP when you're ready" protocol,
but I think we should phase it out. I can simply not read from the AP
socket until I'm ready.
I need to do a lot of cleanup work here, but the code appears to work, so
now's a good time for a checkin.
svn:r22
The summary here is that I'm requiring all developers to have
auto* (aclocal, autoconf, automake) installed on their machine.
Since different versions of auto* generate vastly different output,
I'm going to leave its output out of the repository. This means that
whenever you check out a repository, you need to run auto* to generate
a configure file, then run ./configure to get a Makefile, then build.
If you don't have auto* and can't get it, let me know (and I'll try to
convince you to develop on moria).
The benefit here is that while developers have a bit more work to keep
things straight, we can build snapshots that will install just about
anywhere (once we make configure.in work, that is ;)
svn:r12