Filename: 125-bridges.txt Title: Behavior for bridge users, bridge relays, and bridge authorities Version: $Revision$ Last-Modified: $Date$ Author: Roger Dingledine Created: 11-Nov-2007 Status: Closed Implemented-In: 0.2.0.x 0. Preface This document describes the design decisions around support for bridge users, bridge relays, and bridge authorities. It acts as an overview of the bridge design and deployment for developers, and it also tries to point out limitations in the current design and implementation. For more details on what all of these mean, look at blocking.tex in /doc/design-paper/ 1. Bridge relays Bridge relays are just like normal Tor relays except they don't publish their server descriptors to the main directory authorities. 1.1. PublishServerDescriptor To configure your relay to be a bridge relay, just add BridgeRelay 1 PublishServerDescriptor bridge to your torrc. This will cause your relay to publish its descriptor to the bridge authorities rather than to the default authorities. Alternatively, you can say BridgeRelay 1 PublishServerDescriptor 0 which will cause your relay to not publish anywhere. This could be useful for private bridges. 1.2. Exit policy Bridge relays should use an exit policy of "reject *:*". This is because they only need to relay traffic between the bridge users and the rest of the Tor network, so there's no need to let people exit directly from them. 1.3. RelayBandwidthRate / RelayBandwidthBurst We invented the RelayBandwidth* options for this situation: Tor clients who want to allow relaying too. See proposal 111 for details. Relay operators should feel free to rate-limit their relayed traffic. 1.4. Helping the user with port forwarding, NAT, etc. Just as for operating normal relays, our documentation and hints for how to make your ORPort reachable are inadequate for normal users. We need to work harder on this step, perhaps in 0.2.2.x. 1.5. Vidalia integration Vidalia has turned its "Relay" settings page into a tri-state "Don't relay" / "Relay for the Tor network" / "Help censored users". If you click the third choice, it forces your exit policy to reject *:*. If all the bridges end up on port 9001, that's not so good. On the other hand, putting the bridges on a low-numbered port in the Unix world requires jumping through extra hoops. The current compromise is that Vidalia makes the ORPort default to 443 on Windows, and 9001 on other platforms. At the bottom of the relay config settings window, Vidalia displays the bridge identifier to the operator (see Section 3.1) so he can pass it on to bridge users. 1.6. What if the default ORPort is already used? If the user already has a webserver or some other application bound to port 443, then Tor will fail to bind it and complain to the user, probably in a cryptic way. Rather than just working on a better error message (though we should do this), we should consider an "ORPort auto" option that tells Tor to try to find something that's bindable and reachable. This would also help us tolerate ISPs that filter incoming connections on port 80 and port 443. But this should be a different proposal, and can wait until 0.2.2.x. 2. Bridge authorities. Bridge authorities are like normal directory authorities, except they don't create their own network-status documents or votes. So if you ask an authority for a network-status document or consensus, they behave like a directory mirror: they give you one from one of the main authorities. But if you ask the bridge authority for the descriptor corresponding to a particular identity fingerprint, it will happily give you the latest descriptor for that fingerprint. To become a bridge authority, add these lines to your torrc: AuthoritativeDirectory 1 BridgeAuthoritativeDir 1 Right now there's one bridge authority, running on the Tonga relay. 2.1. Exporting bridge-purpose descriptors We've added a new purpose for server descriptors: the "bridge" purpose. With the new router-descriptors file format that includes annotations, it's easy to look through it and find the bridge-purpose descriptors. Currently we export the bridge descriptors from Tonga to the BridgeDB server, so it can give them out according to the policies in blocking.pdf. 2.2. Reachability/uptime testing Right now the bridge authorities do active reachability testing of bridges, so we know which ones to recommend for users. But in the design document, we suggested that bridges should publish anonymously (i.e. via Tor) to the bridge authority, so somebody watching the bridge authority can't just enumerate all the bridges. But if we're doing active measurement, the game is up. Perhaps we should back off on this goal, or perhaps we should do our active measurement anonymously? Answering this issue is scheduled for 0.2.1.x. 2.3. Migrating to multiple bridge authorities Having only one bridge authority is both a trust bottleneck (if you break into one place you learn about every single bridge we've got) and a robustness bottleneck (when it's down, bridge users become sad). Right now if we put up a second bridge authority, all the bridges would publish to it, and (assuming the code works) bridge users would query a random bridge authority. This resolves the robustness bottleneck, but makes the trust bottleneck even worse. In 0.2.2.x and later we should think about better ways to have multiple bridge authorities. 3. Bridge users. Bridge users are like ordinary Tor users except they use encrypted directory connections by default, and they use bridge relays as both entry guards (their first hop) and directory guards (the source of all their directory information). To become a bridge user, add the following line to your torrc: UseBridges 1 and then add at least one "Bridge" line to your torrc based on the format below. 3.1. Format of the bridge identifier. The canonical format for a bridge identifier contains an IP address, an ORPort, and an identity fingerprint: bridge 128.31.0.34:9009 4C17 FB53 2E20 B2A8 AC19 9441 ECD2 B017 7B39 E4B1 However, the identity fingerprint can be left out, in which case the bridge user will connect to that relay and use it as a bridge regardless of what identity key it presents: bridge 128.31.0.34:9009 This might be useful for cases where only short bridge identifiers can be communicated to bridge users. In a future version we may also support bridge identifiers that are only a key fingerprint: bridge 4C17 FB53 2E20 B2A8 AC19 9441 ECD2 B017 7B39 E4B1 and the bridge user can fetch the latest descriptor from the bridge authority (see Section 3.4). 3.2. Bridges as entry guards For now, bridge users add their bridge relays to their list of "entry guards" (see path-spec.txt for background on entry guards). They are managed by the entry guard algorithms exactly as if they were a normal entry guard -- their keys and timing get cached in the "state" file, etc. This means that when the Tor user starts up with "UseBridges" disabled, he will skip past the bridge entries since they won't be listed as up and usable in his networkstatus consensus. But to be clear, the "entry_guards" list doesn't currently distinguish guards by purpose. Internally, each bridge user keeps a smartlist of "bridge_info_t" that reflects the "bridge" lines from his torrc along with a download schedule (see Section 3.5 below). When he starts Tor, he attempts to fetch a descriptor for each configured bridge (see Section 3.4 below). When he succeeds at getting a descriptor for one of the bridges in his list, he adds it directly to the entry guard list using the normal add_an_entry_guard() interface. Once a bridge descriptor has been added, should_delay_dir_fetches() will stop delaying further directory fetches, and the user begins to bootstrap his directory information from that bridge (see Section 3.3). Currently bridge users cache their bridge descriptors to the "cached-descriptors" file (annotated with purpose "bridge"), but they don't make any attempt to reuse descriptors they find in this file. The theory is that either the bridge is available now, in which case you can get a fresh descriptor, or it's not, in which case an old descriptor won't do you much good. We could disable writing out the bridge lines to the state file, if we think this is a problem. As an exception, if we get an application request when we have one or more bridge descriptors but we believe none of them are running, we mark them all as running again. This is similar to the exception already in place to help long-idle Tor clients realize they should fetch fresh directory information rather than just refuse requests. 3.3. Bridges as directory guards In addition to using bridges as the first hop in their circuits, bridge users also use them to fetch directory updates. Other than initial bootstrapping to find a working bridge descriptor (see Section 3.4 below), all further non-anonymized directory fetches will be redirected to the bridge. This means that bridge relays need to have cached answers for all questions the bridge user might ask. This makes the upgrade path tricky --- for example, if we migrate to a v4 directory design, the bridge user would need to keep using v3 so long as his bridge relays only knew how to answer v3 queries. In a future design, for cases where the user has enough information to build circuits yet the chosen bridge doesn't know how to answer a given query, we might teach bridge users to make an anonymized request to a more suitable directory server. 3.4. How bridge users get their bridge descriptor Bridge users can fetch bridge descriptors in two ways: by going directly to the bridge and asking for "/tor/server/authority", or by going to the bridge authority and asking for "/tor/server/fp/ID". By default, they will only try the direct queries. If the user sets UpdateBridgesFromAuthority 1 in his config file, then he will try querying the bridge authority first for bridges where he knows a digest (if he only knows an IP address and ORPort, then his only option is a direct query). If the user has at least one working bridge, then he will do further queries to the bridge authority through a full three-hop Tor circuit. But when bootstrapping, he will make a direct begin_dir-style connection to the bridge authority. As of Tor 0.2.0.10-alpha, if the user attempts to fetch a descriptor from the bridge authority and it returns a 404 not found, the user will automatically fall back to trying a direct query. Therefore it is recommended that bridge users always set UpdateBridgesFromAuthority, since at worst it will delay their fetches a little bit and notify the bridge authority of the identity fingerprint (but not location) of their intended bridges. 3.5. Bridge descriptor retry schedule Bridge users try to fetch a descriptor for each bridge (using the steps in Section 3.4 above) on startup. Whenever they receive a bridge descriptor, they reschedule a new descriptor download for 1 hour from then. If on the other hand it fails, they try again after 15 minutes for the first attempt, after 15 minutes for the second attempt, and after 60 minutes for subsequent attempts. In 0.2.2.x we should come up with some smarter retry schedules. 3.6. Vidalia integration Vidalia 0.0.16 has a checkbox in its Network config window called "My ISP blocks connections to the Tor network." Users who click that box change their configuration to: UseBridges 1 UpdateBridgesFromAuthority 1 and should specify at least one Bridge identifier. 3.7. Do we need a second layer of entry guards? If the bridge user uses the bridge as its entry guard, then the triangulation attacks from Lasse and Paul's Oakland paper work to locate the user's bridge(s). Worse, this is another way to enumerate bridges: if the bridge users keep rotating through second hops, then if you run a few fast servers (and avoid getting considered an Exit or a Guard) you'll quickly get a list of the bridges in active use. That's probably the strongest reason why bridge users will need to pick second-layer guards. Would this mean bridge users should switch to four-hop circuits? We should figure this out in the 0.2.1.x timeframe.