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199 lines
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199 lines
8.0 KiB
Plaintext
Filename: 158-microdescriptors.txt
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Title: Clients download consensus + microdescriptors
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Author: Roger Dingledine
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Created: 17-Jan-2009
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Status: Open
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0. History
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15 May 2009: Substantially revised based on discussions on or-dev
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from late January. Removed the notion of voting on how to choose
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microdescriptors; made it just a function of the consensus method.
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(This lets us avoid the possibility of "desynchronization.")
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Added suggestion to use a new consensus flavor. Specified use of
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SHA256 for new hashes. -nickm
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15 June 2009: Cleaned up based on comments from Roger. -nickm
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1. Overview
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This proposal replaces section 3.2 of proposal 141, which was
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called "Fetching descriptors on demand". Rather than modifying the
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circuit-building protocol to fetch a server descriptor inline at each
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circuit extend, we instead put all of the information that clients need
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either into the consensus itself, or into a new set of data about each
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relay called a microdescriptor.
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Descriptor elements that are small and frequently changing should go
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in the consensus itself, and descriptor elements that are small and
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relatively static should go in the microdescriptor. If we ever end up
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with descriptor elements that aren't small yet clients need to know
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them, we'll need to resume considering some design like the one in
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proposal 141.
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Note also that any descriptor element which clients need to use to
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decide which servers to fetch info about, or which servers to fetch
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info from, needs to stay in the consensus.
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2. Motivation
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See
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http://archives.seul.org/or/dev/Nov-2008/msg00000.html and
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http://archives.seul.org/or/dev/Nov-2008/msg00001.html and especially
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http://archives.seul.org/or/dev/Nov-2008/msg00007.html
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for a discussion of the options and why this is currently the best
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approach.
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3. Design
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There are three pieces to the proposal. First, authorities will list in
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their votes (and thus in the consensus) the expected hash of
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microdescriptor for each relay. Second, authorities will serve
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microdescriptors, directory mirrors will cache and serve
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them. Third, clients will ask for them and cache them.
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3.1. Consensus changes
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If the authorities choose a consensus method of a given version or
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later, a microdescriptor format is implicit in that version.
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A microdescriptor should in every case be a pure function of the
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router descriptor and the consensus method.
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In votes, we need to include the hash of each expected microdescriptor
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in the routerstatus section. I suggest a new "m" line for each stanza,
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with the base64 of the SHA256 hash of the router's microdescriptor.
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For every consensus method that an authority supports, it includes a
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separate "m" line in each router section of its vote, containing:
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"m" SP methods 1*(SP AlgorithmName "=" digest) NL
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where methods is a comma-separated list of the consensus methods
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that the authority believes will produce "digest".
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(As with base64 encoding of SHA1 hashes in consensuses, let's
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omit the trailing =s)
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The consensus microdescriptor-elements and "m" lines are then computed
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as described in Section 3.1.2 below.
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(This means we need a new consensus-method that knows
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how to compute the microdescriptor-elements and add "m" lines.)
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The microdescriptor consensus uses the directory-signature format from
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proposal 162, with the "sha256" algorithm.
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3.1.1. Descriptor elements to include for now
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In the first version, the microdescriptor should contain the
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onion-key element, and the family element from the router descriptor,
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and the exit policy summary as currently specified in dir-spec.txt.
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3.1.2. Computing consensus for microdescriptor-elements and "m" lines
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When we are generating a consensus, we use whichever m line
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unambiguously corresponds to the descriptor digest that will be
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included in the consensus.
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(If different votes have different microdescriptor digests for a
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single <descriptor-digest, consensus-method> pair, then at least one
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of the authorities is broken. If this happens, the consensus should
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contain whichever microdescriptor digest is most common. If there is
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no winner, we break ties in the favor of the lexically earliest.
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Either way, we should log a warning: there is definitely a bug.)
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The "m" lines in a consensus contain only the digest, not a list of
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consensus methods.
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3.1.3. A new flavor of consensus
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Rather than inserting "m" lines in the current consensus format,
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they should be included in a new consensus flavor (see proposal
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162).
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This flavor can safely omit descriptor digests.
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When we implement this voting method, we can remove the exit policy
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summary from the current "ns" flavor of consensus, since no current
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clients use them, and they take up about 5% of the compressed
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consensus.
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This new consensus flavor should be signed with the sha256 signature
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format as documented in proposal 162.
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3.2. Directory mirrors fetch, cache, and serve microdescriptors
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Directory mirrors should fetch, catch, and serve each microdescriptor
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from the authorities. (They need to continue to serve normal relay
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descriptors too, to handle old clients.)
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The microdescriptors with base64 hashes <D1>,<D2>,<D3> should be
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available at:
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http://<hostname>/tor/micro/d/<D1>-<D2>-<D3>.z
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(We use base64 for size and for consistency with the consensus
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format. We use -s instead of +s to separate these items, since
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the + character is used in base64 encoding.)
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All the microdescriptors from the current consensus should also be
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available at:
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http://<hostname>/tor/micro/all.z
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so a client that's bootstrapping doesn't need to send a 70KB URL just
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to name every microdescriptor it's looking for.
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Microdescriptors have no header or footer.
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The hash of the microdescriptor is simply the hash of the concatenated
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elements.
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Directory mirrors should check to make sure that the microdescriptors
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they're about to serve match the right hashes (either the hashes from
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the fetch URL or the hashes from the consensus, respectively).
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We will probably want to consider some sort of smart data structure to
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be able to quickly convert microdescriptor hashes into the appropriate
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microdescriptor. Clients will want this anyway when they load their
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microdescriptor cache and want to match it up with the consensus to
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see what's missing.
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3.3. Clients fetch them and cache them
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When a client gets a new consensus, it looks to see if there are any
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microdescriptors it needs to learn. If it needs to learn more than
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some threshold of the microdescriptors (half?), it requests 'all',
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else it requests only the missing ones. Clients MAY try to
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determine whether the upload bandwidth for listing the
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microdescriptors they want is more or less than the download
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bandwidth for the microdescriptors they do not want.
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Clients maintain a cache of microdescriptors along with metadata like
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when it was last referenced by a consensus, and which identity key
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it corresponds to. They keep a microdescriptor
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until it hasn't been mentioned in any consensus for a week. Future
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clients might cache them for longer or shorter times.
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3.3.1. Information leaks from clients
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If a client asks you for a set of microdescs, then you know she didn't
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have them cached before. How much does that leak? What about when
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we're all using our entry guards as directory guards, and we've seen
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that user make a bunch of circuits already?
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Fetching "all" when you need at least half is a good first order fix,
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but might not be all there is to it.
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Another future option would be to fetch some of the microdescriptors
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anonymously (via a Tor circuit).
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Another crazy option (Roger's phrasing) is to do decoy fetches as
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well.
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4. Transition and deployment
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Phase one, the directory authorities should start voting on
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microdescriptors, and putting them in the consensus.
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Phase two, directory mirrors should learn how to serve them, and learn
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how to read the consensus to find out what they should be serving.
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Phase three, clients should start fetching and caching them instead
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of normal descriptors.
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