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9d317e9bb4
(Leaving a gap for the proposal Jake blessed as 171.)
139 lines
6.4 KiB
Plaintext
139 lines
6.4 KiB
Plaintext
Filename: 172-circ-getinfo-option.txt
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Title: GETINFO controller option for circuit information
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Author: Damian Johnson
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Created: 03-June-2010
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Status: Accepted
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Overview:
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This details an additional GETINFO option that would provide information
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concerning a relay's current circuits.
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Motivation:
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The original proposal was for connection related information, but Jake make
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the excellent point that any information retrieved from the control port
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is...
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1. completely ineffectual for auditing purposes since either (a) these
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results can be fetched from netstat already or (b) the information would
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only be provided via tor and can't be validated.
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2. The more useful uses for connection information can be achieved with
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much less (and safer) information.
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Hence the proposal is now for circuit based rather than connection based
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information. This would strip the most controversial and sensitive data
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entirely (ip addresses, ports, and connection based bandwidth breakdowns)
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while still being useful for the following purposes:
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- Basic Relay Usage Questions
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How is the bandwidth I'm contributing broken down? Is it being evenly
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distributed or is someone hogging most of it? Do these circuits belong to
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the hidden service I'm running or something else? Now that I'm using exit
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policy X am I desirable as an exit, or are most people just using me as a
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relay?
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- Debugging
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Say a relay has a restrictive firewall policy for outbound connections,
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with the ORPort whitelisted but doesn't realize that tor needs random high
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ports. Tor would report success ("your orport is reachable - excellent")
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yet the relay would be nonfunctional. This proposed information would
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reveal numerous RELAY -> YOU -> UNESTABLISHED circuits, giving a good
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indicator of what's wrong.
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- Visualization
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A nice benefit of visualizing tor's behavior is that it becomes a helpful
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tool in puzzling out how tor works. For instance, tor spawns numerous
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client connections at startup (even if unused as a client). As a newcomer
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to tor these asymmetric (outbound only) connections mystified me for quite
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a while until until Roger explained their use to me. The proposed
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TYPE_FLAGS would let controllers clearly label them as being client
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related, making their purpose a bit clearer.
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At the moment connection data can only be retrieved via commands like
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netstat, ss, and lsof. However, providing an alternative via the control
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port provides several advantages:
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- scrubbing for private data
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Raw connection data has no notion of what's sensitive and what is
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not. The relay's flags and cached consensus can be used to take
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educated guesses concerning which connections could possibly belong
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to client or exit traffic, but this is both difficult and inaccurate.
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Anything provided via the control port can scrubbed to make sure we
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aren't providing anything we think relay operators should not see.
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- additional information
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All connection querying commands strictly provide the ip address and
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port of connections, and nothing else. However, for the uses listed
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above the far more interesting attributes are the circuit's type,
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bandwidth usage and uptime.
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- improved performance
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Querying connection data is an expensive activity, especially for
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busy relays or low end processors (such as mobile devices). Tor
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already internally knows its circuits, allowing for vastly quicker
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lookups.
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- cross platform capability
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The connection querying utilities mentioned above not only aren't
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available under Windows, but differ widely among different *nix
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platforms. FreeBSD in particular takes a very unique approach,
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dropping important options from netstat and assigning ss to a
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spreadsheet application instead. A controller interface, however,
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would provide a uniform means of retrieving this information.
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Security Implications:
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This is an open question. This proposal lacks the most controversial pieces
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of information (ip addresses and ports) and insight into potential threats
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this would pose would be very welcomed!
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Specification:
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The following addition would be made to the control-spec's GETINFO section:
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"rcirc/id/<Circuit identity>" -- Provides entry for the associated relay
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circuit, formatted as:
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CIRC_ID=<circuit ID> CREATED=<timestamp> UPDATED=<timestamp> TYPE=<flag>
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READ=<bytes> WRITE=<bytes>
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none of the parameters contain whitespace, and additional results must be
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ignored to allow for future expansion. Parameters are defined as follows:
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CIRC_ID - Unique numeric identifier for the circuit this belongs to.
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CREATED - Unix timestamp (as seconds since the Epoch) for when the
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circuit was created.
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UPDATED - Unix timestamp for when this information was last updated.
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TYPE - Single character flags indicating attributes in the circuit:
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(E)ntry : has a connection that doesn't belong to a known Tor server,
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indicating that this is either the first hop or bridged
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E(X)it : has been used for at least one exit stream
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(R)elay : has been extended
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Rende(Z)vous : is being used for a rendezvous point
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(I)ntroduction : is being used for a hidden service introduction
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(N)one of the above: none of the above have happened yet.
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READ - Total bytes transmitted toward the exit over the circuit.
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WRITE - Total bytes transmitted toward the client over the circuit.
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"rcirc/all" -- The 'rcirc/id/*' output for all current circuits, joined by
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newlines.
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The following would be included for circ info update events.
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4.1.X. Relay circuit status changed
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The syntax is:
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"650" SP "RCIRC" SP CircID SP Notice [SP Created SP Updated SP Type SP
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Read SP Write] CRLF
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Notice =
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"NEW" / ; first information being provided for this circuit
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"UPDATE" / ; update for a previously reported circuit
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"CLOSED" ; notice that the circuit no longer exists
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Notice indicating that queryable information on a relay related circuit has
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changed. If the Notice parameter is either "NEW" or "UPDATE" then this
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provides the same fields that would be given by calling "GETINFO rcirc/id/"
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with the CircID.
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