One is fixed by disabling the -Wredundant-decls warnings around
openssl headers here, because of the old double-declaration of
SSL_get_selected_srtp_profile().
One is fixed by including compat.h before or.h so that we get the
winsock2.h include before the windows.h include.
In our code to write public keys to a string, for some unfathomable
reason since 253f0f160e, we would allocate a memory BIO, then
set the NOCLOSE flag on it, extract its memory buffer, and free it.
Then a little while later we'd free the memory buffer with
BUF_MEM_free().
As of openssl 1.1 this doesn't work any more, since there is now a
BIO_BUF_MEM structure that wraps the BUF_MEM structure. This
BIO_BUF_MEM doesn't get freed in our code.
So, we had a memory leak!
Is this an openssl bug? Maybe. But our code was already pretty
silly. Why mess around with the NOCLOSE flag here when we can just
keep the BIO object around until we don't need the buffer any more?
Fixes bug 20553; bugfix on 0.0.2pre8
This function is allowed to return NULL if the certified key isn't
RSA. But in a couple of places we were treating this as a bug or
internal error, and in one other place we weren't checking for it at
all!
Caught by Isis during code review for #15055. The serious bug was
only on the 15055 branch, thank goodness.
All supported Tors (0.2.4+) require versions of openssl that can
handle this.
Now that our link certificates are RSA2048, this might actually help
vs fingerprinting a little.
This was a stopgap method, designed on the theory that some routers
might support it before they could support Ed25519. But it looks
like everybody who supports RFC5705 will also have an Ed25519 key,
so there's not a lot of reason to have this even supported.
This patch moves the pregenerated RSA key logic into a new
testing_rsakeys.c.
Also, it adds support for RSA2048, since the link handshake tests
want that.
Also, it includes pregenerated keys, rather than trying to actually
generate the keys at startup, since generating even a small handful
of RSA2048 keys makes for an annoying delay.
This code stores the ed certs as appropriate, and tries to check
them. The Ed25519 result is not yet used, and (because of its
behavior) this will break RSA authenticate cells. That will get
fixed as we go, however.
This should implement 19157, but it needs tests, and it needs
to get wired in.
In particular, these functions are the ones that set the identity of
a given connection or channel, and/or confirm that we have learned
said IDs.
There's a lot of stub code here: we don't actually need to use the
new keys till we start looking up connections/channels by Ed25519
IDs. Still, we want to start passing the Ed25519 IDs in now, so it
makes sense to add these stubs as part of 15055.
The impact here isn't too bad. First, the only affected certs that
expire after 32-bit signed time overflows in Y2038. Second, it could
only make it seem that a non-expired cert is expired: it could never
make it seem that an expired cert was still live.
Fixes bug 20027; bugfix on 0.2.7.2-alpha.
Also, adjust signing approach to more closely match the signing
scheme in the proposal.
(The format doesn't quite match the format in the proposal, since
RSA signatures aren't fixed-length.)
Closes 19020.
See proposal 244. This feature lets us stop looking at the internals
of SSL objects, *and* should let us port better to more SSL libraries,
if they have RFC5705 support.
Preparatory for #19156
We no longer generate certs cells by pasting the certs together one
by one. Instead we use trunnel to generate them.
Preliminary work for 19155 (send CERTS cell with ed certs)
passthrough_test_setup doesn't pass through arguments if the argument
is equal to 0 or TT_SKIP. Instead, it fails or skips the test.
Assert on this, so we don't accidentally fail or skip tests.
Fixes bug 19969; bugfix on b1d56fc58. We can fix this some more in
later Tors, but for now, this is probably the simplest fix possible.
This is a belt-and-suspenders fix, where the earlier fix ("Ask
event_base_loop to finish when we add a pending stream") aims to respond
to new streams as soon as they arrive, and this one aims to make sure
that we definitely respond to all of the streams.
ome policies are default-reject, some default-accept. But
policy_is_reject_star() assumed they were all default_reject. Fix
that!
Also, document that policy_is_reject_star() treats a NULL policy as
empty. This allows us to simplify the checks in
parse_reachable_addresses() by quite a bit.
Fxes bug 20306; bugfix on 0.2.8.2-alpha.
(Also, refactor the code to create a hidden service directory into a
separate funcion, so we don't have to duplicate it.)
Fixes bug 20484; bugfix on 0.2.9.3-alpha.
This simplifies the function: if we have an ntor key, use ntor/EXTEND2,
otherwise, use TAP/EXTEND.
Bugfix on commit 10aa913 from 19163 in 0.2.9.3-alpha.
I had replaced a comment implying that a set of ifs was meant to be
exhaustive with an actual check for exhaustiveness. It turns out,
they were exhaustive, but not in the way I had assumed. :(
Bug introduced in f3e158edf7, not in any released Tor.
Use the following coccinelle script to change uses of
smartlist_add(sl, tor_strdup(str)) to
smartlist_add_strdup(sl, string) (coccinelle script from nickm
via bug 20048):
@@
expression a;
expression b;
@@
- smartlist_add
+ smartlist_add_strdup
(a,
- tor_strdup(
b
- )
)
The tor_fragile_assert() bug has existed here since c8a5e2d588
in tor-0.2.1.7-alpha forever, but tor_fragile_assert() was mostly a
no-op until 0.2.9.1-alpha.
Fixes bug 19869.
When we refactored purpose_needs_anonymity(), we made it so _all_
bridge requests required anonymity. But that missed the case
that we are allowed to ask a bridge for its own descriptor.
With this patch, we consider the resource, and allow "authority.z"
("your own descriptor, compressed") for a bridge's server descriptor
to be non-anonymous.
Fix for bug 20410; bug not in any released Tor.
I believe that this should never trigger, but if it does, it
suggests that there was a gap between is_sensitive_dir_purpose and
purpose_needs_anonymity that we need to fill. Related to 20077.
This helps protect against bugs where any part of a buf_t's memory
is passed to a function that expects a NUL-terminated input.
It also closes TROVE-2016-10-001 (aka bug 20384).
This commit adds or improves the module-level documenation for:
buffers.c circuitstats.c command.c connection_edge.c control.c
cpuworker.c crypto_curve25519.c crypto_curve25519.h
crypto_ed25519.c crypto_format.c dircollate.c dirserv.c dns.c
dns_structs.h fp_pair.c geoip.c hibernate.c keypin.c ntmain.c
onion.c onion_fast.c onion_ntor.c onion_tap.c periodic.c
protover.c protover.h reasons.c rephist.c replaycache.c
routerlist.c routerparse.c routerset.c statefile.c status.c
tor_main.c workqueue.c
In particular, I've tried to explain (for each documented module)
what each module does, what's in it, what the big idea is, why it
belongs in Tor, and who calls it. In a few cases, I've added TODO
notes about refactoring opportunities.
I've also renamed an argument, and fixed a few DOCDOC comments.
(I've done this instead of changing the semantics of
router_compare_to_my_exit_policy, because dns.c uses
router_compare_to_my_exit_policy too, in a slightly weird way.)
Some compilers apparently noticed that p2len was allowed to be equal
to msg, and so maybe we would be doing memset(prompt2, ' ', 0), and
decided that we probably meant to do memset(prompt2, 0, 0x20);
instead.
Stupid compilers, doing optimization before this kind of warning!
My fix is to just fill the entire prompt2 buffer with spaces,
because it's harmless.
Bugfix on e59f0d4cb9, not in any released Tor.
(Specifically, carriage return after a quoted value in a config
line. Fixes bug 19167; bugfix on 0.2.0.16-alpha when we introduced
support for quoted values. Unit tests, changes file, and this
parenthetical by nickm.)
This is a kludge to deal with the fact that `tor_addr_t` doesn't contain
`sun_path`. This currently ONLY happens when circuit isolation is being
checked, for an isolation mode that is force disabled anyway, so the
kludge is "ugly but adequate", but realistically, making `tor_addr_t`
and the AF_UNIX SocksPort code do the right thing is probably the better
option.
Closes ticket 20303.
The LIBRESSL_VERSION_NUMBER check is needed because if our openssl
is really libressl, it will have an openssl version number we can't
really believe.
Previously, we would reject even rendezvous connections to IPv6
addresses when IPv6Exit was false. But that doesn't make sense; we
don't count that as "exit"ing. I've corrected the logic and tried
to make it a lottle more clear.
Fixes bug 18357; this code has been wrong since 9016d9e829 in
0.2.4.7-alpha.
When deleting unsuitable addresses in get_interface_address6_list(), to
avoid reordering IPv6 interface addresses and keep the order returned by
the OS, use SMARTLIST_DEL_CURRENT_KEEPORDER() instead of
SMARTLIST_DEL_CURRENT().
This issue was reported by René Mayrhofer.
[Closes ticket 20163; changes file written by teor. This paragraph
added by nickm]
We removed that feature in 0.2.4.2-alpha, but some comments seem to
have lingered.
I didn't add a changes/ file since this is just internal code cleanup.
(like clients do) rather than old-style router descriptors. Now bridges
will blend in with clients in terms of the circuits they build.
Fixes bug 6769; bugfix on 0.2.3.2-alpha.
Clients that use bridges were ignoring their cached microdesc-flavor
consensus files, because they only thought they should use the microdesc
flavor once they had a known-working bridge that could offer microdescs,
and at first boot no bridges are known-working.
This bug caused bridge-using clients to download a new microdesc consensus
on each startup.
Fixes bug 20269; bugfix on 0.2.3.12-alpha.
The client addr is essentially meaningless in this context (yes, it is
possible to explicitly `bind()` AF_LOCAL client side sockets to a path,
but no one does it, and there are better ways to grant that sort of
feature if people want it like using `SO_PASSCRED`).
As before, we check server protocols whenever server_mode(options)
is true and we check client protocols whenever server_mode(options)
is false.
Additionally, we now _also_ check client protocols whenever any
client port is set.
(Technically, we could just remove extend2 cell checking entirely,
since all Tor versions on our network are required to have it, but
let's keep this around as an example of How To Do It.)
(Despite the increased size of the consensus, this should have
approximately zero effect on the compressed consensus size, since
the "proto" line should be completely implied by the "v" line.)
[This is a brute-force method that potentially uses way too much
RAM. Need to rethink this a little. Right now you can DOS an
authority by saying "Foo=1-4294967295".]
Sierra provides clock_gettime(), but not pthread_condattr_setclock.
So we had better lot try to use CLOCK_MONOTONIC as our source for
time when waiting, since we ccan never actually tell the condition
that we mean CLOCK_MONOTONIC.
This isn't a tor bug yet, since we never actually pass a timeout to
tor_cond_wait() outside of the unit tests.
Not telling the cmux would sometimes cause an assertion failure in
relay.c when we tried to get an active circuit and found an "active"
circuit with no cells.
Additionally, replace that assert with a test and a log message.
Fix for bug 20203. This is actually probably a bugfix on
0.2.8.1-alpha, specifically my code in 8b4e5b7ee9 where I
made circuit_mark_for_close_() do less in order to simplify our call
graph. Thanks to "cypherpunks" for help diagnosing.
Our use of the (mockable) tor_close_socket() in the util/socket_..
tests confused coverity, which could no longer tell that we were
actually closing the sockets.
It's a macro that calls down to a function whose behavior has been
getting progresively more complicated.... but we named it as if it
were a variable. That's not so smart. So, replace it with a
function call to a function that was just doing "return
current_consensus".
Fixes bug 20176.
Commit 41cc1f612b introduced a "dns_request"
configuration value which wasn't set to 1 for an entry connection on the
DNSPort leading to a refusal to resolve the given hostname.
This commit set the dns_request flag by default for every entry connection
made to the DNSPort.
Fixes#20109
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
For a brief moment in networkstatus_set_current_consensus(), the old
consensus has been freed, but the node_t objects still have dead
pointers to the routerstatus_t objects within it. During that
interval, we absolutely must not do anything that would cause Tor to
look at those dangling pointers.
Unfortunately, calling the (badly labeled!) current_consensus macro
or anything else that calls into we_use_microdescriptors_for_circuits(),
can make us look at the nodelist.
The fix is to make sure we identify the main consensus flavor
_outside_ the danger zone, and to make the danger zone much much
smaller.
Fixes bug 20103. This bug has been implicitly present for AGES; we
just got lucky for a very long time. It became a crash bug in
0.2.8.2-alpha when we merged 35bbf2e4a4 to make
find_dl_schedule start looking at the consensus, and 4460feaf28
which made node_get_all_orports less (accidentally) tolerant of
nodes with a valid ri pointer but dangling rs pointer.
Previously, the IV and key were stored in the structure, even though
they mostly weren't needed. The only purpose they had was to
support a seldom-used API where you could pass NULL when creating
a cipher in order to get a random key/IV, and then pull that key/IV
back out.
This saves 32 bytes per AES instance, and makes it easier to support
different key lengths.