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112 lines
4.8 KiB
Plaintext
112 lines
4.8 KiB
Plaintext
Filename: 127-dirport-mirrors-downloads.txt
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Title: Relaying dirport requests to Tor download site
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Version: $Revision: 11988 $
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Last-Modified: $Date: 2007-10-16 12:59:42 -0400 (Tue, 16 Oct 2007) $
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Author: Roger Dingledine
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Created: 2007-12-02
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Status: Needs-Research
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1. Overview
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Some countries and networks block connections to the Tor website. As
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time goes by, this will remain a problem and it may even become worse.
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We have a big pile of mirrors (google for "Tor mirrors"), but few of
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our users think to try a search like that. Also, many of these mirrors
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might be automatically blocked since their pages contain words that
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might cause them to get blocked. And lastly, we can imagine a future
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where the blockers are aware of the mirror list too.
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Here we describe a new set of URLs for Tor's DirPort that will relay
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connections from users to the official Tor download site. Rather than
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trying to cache a bunch of new Tor packages (which is a hassle in terms
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of keeping them up to date, and a hassle in terms of drive space used),
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we instead just proxy the requests directly to Tor's /dist page.
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Specifically, we should support
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GET /tor/dist/$1
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and
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GET /tor/website/$1
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2. Linked connections
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Check out the connection_ap_make_link() function, as called from
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directory.c. Tor clients use this to create a "fake" socks connection
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back to themselves, and then they attach a directory request to it,
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so they can launch directory fetches via Tor. We could piggyback on
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this feature.
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3. One-hop circuits or three-hop circuits?
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We could relay the connections directly to the download site -- but
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this produces recognizable outgoing traffic on the bridge or cache's
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network, which will probably surprise our nice volunteers. (Is this
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a good enough reason to discard the direct connection idea?)
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But we still have a choice: should we do a one-hop begindir-style
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connection to the mirror site (make a one-hop circuit to it, then send a
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'begindir' cell down the circuit), or should we do a normal three-hop
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anonymized connection?
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If these mirrors are mainly bridges, doing a one-hop connection creates
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another way to enumerate bridges. That would argue for three-hop. On
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the other hand, downloading a 10+ megabyte installer through a normal
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Tor circuit can't be fun. But if you're already getting throttled a
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lot because you're in the "relayed traffic" bucket, you're going to
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have to accept a slow transfer anyway. So three-hop it is.
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Speaking of which, we would want to label this connection
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as "relay" traffic for the purposes of rate limiting; see
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connection_counts_as_relayed_traffic() and or_conn->client_used. This
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will be a bit tricky though, because it uses the bridge's guards.
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4. Scanning resistance
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One other goal we'd like to achieve, or at least not hinder, is making
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it hard to scan large swaths of the Internet to look for responses
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that indicate a bridge.
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In general this is a really hard problem, so it's not critical that
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we solve it here. But we can note that some bridges should open their
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DirPort (and offer this functionality), and others shouldn't. Then some
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bridges provide a download mirror while others are scanning-resistant.
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5. Integrity checking
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If we serve this stuff in plaintext from the bridge, anybody in between
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the user and the bridge can intercept and modify it. The bridge can too.
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If we do an anonymized three-hop connection, the exit node can also
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intercept and modify the exe it sends back.
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Are we setting ourselves up for rogue exit relays, or rogue bridges,
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that trojan our users?
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Answer #1: Users need to do pgp signature checking. Not a very good
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answer, a) because it's complex, and b) because they don't know the
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right signatures in the first place.
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Answer #2: The mirrors could exit from a specific Tor relay, using the
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'.exit' notation. This would make connections a bit more brittle, but
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would resolve the rogue exit relay issue. We could even round-robin
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among several, and the list could be dynamic -- for example, all the
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relays with an Authority flag that allow exits to the Tor website.
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Answer #3: We could suggest that users only use trusted bridges for
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fetching a copy of Tor. Hopefully they heard about the bridge from a
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trusted source rather than from the adversary.
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Answer #4: What if the adversary is trawling for Tor downloads by
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network signature -- either by looking for known bytes in the binary,
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or by looking for "GET /tor/dist/"? It would be nice to encrypt the
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connection from the bridge user to the bridge. And we can! The bridge
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already supports TLS. Rather than initiating a TLS renegotiation after
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connecting to the ORPort, the user should actually request a URL. Then
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the ORPort can either pass the connection off as a linked conn to the
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dirport, or renegotiate and become a Tor connection, depending on how
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the client behaves.
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