For various reasons, this was a nontrivial movement. There are
several places in the code where we do something like "update the
flags on this routerstatus or node if we're an authority", and at
least one where we pretended to be an authority when we weren't.
Split the core reply formatting code out of control_fmt.c into
control_proto.c. The remaining code in control_format.c deals with
specific subsystems and will eventually move to join those subsystems.
We need a little refactoring for this to work, since the
initialization code for the periodic events assumes that libevent is
already initialized, which it can't be until it's configured.
This change, combined with the previous ones, lets other subsystems
declare their own periodic events, without mainloop.c having to know
about them. Implements ticket 30293.
Take apart the SENDME cell specific code and put it in sendme.{c|h}. This is
part of prop289 that implements authenticated SENDMEs.
Creating those new files allow for the already huge relay.c to not grow in LOC
and makes it easier to handle and test the SENDME cells in an isolated way.
This commit only moves code. No behavior change.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
There _is_ an underlying logic to these commands, but it isn't
wholly uniform, given years of tweaks and changes. Fortunately I
think there is a superset that will work.
This commit adds a parser for some of the most basic cases -- the
ones currently handled by getargs_helper() and some of the
object-taking ones. Soon will come initial tests; then I'll start using
the parser.
After that, I'll expand the parser to handle the other cases that come
up in the controller protocol.
This is necessary to get the number of includes in main.c back under
control. (In the future, we could just use the subsystem manager for
this kind of stuff.)
This implements all of the event handling, state machines, and padding
decisions for circuit padding.
I recommend reviewing this after you look at the call-in points into it from
the rest of Tor.
Co-authored-by: George Kadianakis <desnacked@riseup.net>
Replace a few invocations of control_event_bootstrap() with calls from
the bootstrap tracker subsystem. This mostly leaves behavior
unchanged. The actual behavior changes come in the next commit.
Part of ticket 27167.
Add a tracker for bootstrap progress, tracking events related to
origin circuit and ORCONN states. This uses the ocirc_event and
orconn_event publish-subscribe subsystems.
Part of ticket 27167.
Add a publish-subscribe subsystem to publish messages about changes to
origin circuits.
Functions in circuitbuild.c and circuitlist.c publish messages to this
subsystem.
Move circuit event constants out of control.h so that subscribers
don't have to include all of control.h to take actions based on
messages they receive.
Part of ticket 27167.
Add a publish-subscribe subsystem to publish messages about changes to
OR connections.
connection_or_change_state() in connection_or.c and
control_event_or_conn_event() in control.c publish messages to this
subsystem via helper functions.
Move state constants from connection_or.h to orconn_state.h so that
subscribers don't have to include all of connection_or.h to take
actions based on changes in OR connection state. Move event constants
from control.h for similar reasons.
Part of ticket 27167.
This representation is meant to save memory in microdescriptors --
we can't use it in routerinfo_t yet, since those families need to be
encoded losslessly for directory voting to work.
This representation saves memory in three ways:
1. It uses only one allocation per family. (The old way used a
smartlist (2 allocs) plus one strdup per entry.)
2. It stores identity digests in binary, not hex.
3. It keeps families in a canonical format, memoizes, and
reference-counts them.
Part of #27359.
It differs from the rest of the rephist code in that it's actually
necessary for Tor to operate, so it should probably go somewhere
else. I'm not sure where yet, so I'll leave it in the same
directory, but give it its own file.