This allows us to do a directory connection *through* tor just
as if we're doing it as an application.
Make ap_conns tolerate it when the application sends stuff before
The socks handshake is done (it just buffers it).
Tell directory_initiate_command the length of the payload (because
it might include nuls).
Add a directory_has_arrived function to, for example, start building
the rendezvous service descriptor.
svn:r1412
* read all the time (before we would ignore eof sometimes, oops)
* we can handle different urls now
* send back 404 for an un-handled url
* commands initiated by the client can handle payloads now
* introduce conn->purpose to avoid exponential state-space explosion
svn:r1400
thought that a complicated adjunct structure would be necessary, but
it doesn't look that way anymore.
Of course, I might have forgotten something.
svn:r1396
successful/failed connections, successful/failed extends, and
connection uptimes.
It's still not done: more tests are needed, and not everything calls
connection/circuit_mark_for_close properly. This skews the results.
Also, there needs to be a 'testing' mode for non-OP ORs, where they
periodically build circuits just to test whether extends work.
svn:r1313
Apparently, when a DNS failure was already cached, then when we tried
to mark the exit connection as closed, we'd try to remove it from the
pending queue anyway, and hit an assert. Now, we put failed-resolve
connections in a separate state so that mark_for_close does the right
thing.
svn:r1196
who wants to shut down a connection calls connection_mark_for_close instead
of setting marked_for_close to 1. This automatically removes the connection
from the DNS cache if needed, sends a RELAY END cell if appropriate, and can
be changed to do whatever else is needed.
Still to do:
- The same for circuits, maybe.
- Add some kind of hold_connection_open_until_flushed flag, maybe.
- Change stuff that closes connections with return -1 to use mark_for_close,
maybe.
svn:r1145
add some more data to be flushed but never turn POLLOUT on. not sure
how commonly this bug was hit, but it would be a doozy.
Also add some asserts to see if it happens elsewhere.
svn:r1142
We were telling a child to die by closing the parent's file descriptor
to him. But newer children were inheriting the open file descriptor from
the parent, and since they weren't closing them, the socket never closed,
so the child never read eof, so he never knew to exit.
As a side effect to this bug, we were probably failing to properly close
connections to remote hosts, ORs, and OPs, after a dns child was born.
I'm surprised Tor worked at all.
svn:r974