Commit 488e2b00bf introduced an issue, most
likely introduced by a bad copy paste, that made us stop reading on the
connection if our write bandwidth limit was reached.
The problem is that because "read_blocked_on_bw" was never set, the connection
was never reenabled for reading.
This is most likely the cause of #27813 where bytes were accumulating in the
kernel TCP bufers because tor was not doing reads. Only relays with
RelayBandwidthRate would suffer from this but affecting all relays connecting
to them. And using that tor option is recommended and best practice so many
many relays have it enabled.
Fixes#28089.
It turns out that if _only_ the ControlPort is set and nothing else, tor would
simply not bootstrap and thus not start properly. Commit 67a41b6306
removed that requirement for tor to be considered a "client".
Unfortunately, this made the mainloop enable basically nothing if only the
ControlPort is set in the torrc.
This commit now makes it that we also consider the ControlPort when deciding
if we are a Client or not. It does not revert 67a41b6306 meaning
options_any_client_port_set() stays the same, not looking at the control port.
Fixes#27849.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
Various places in our code try to activate these events or check
their status, so we should make sure they're initialized as early as
possible. Fixes bug 27861; bugfix on 0.3.5.1-alpha.
When freeing a configuration object from confparse.c in
dump_config(), we need to call the appropriate higher-level free
function (like or_options_free()) and not just config_free().
This only happens with options (since they're the one where
options_validate allocates extra stuff) and only when running
--dump-config with something other than minimal (since
OPTIONS_DUMP_MINIMAL doesn't hit this code).
Fixes bug 27893; bugfix on 0.3.2.1-alpha.