Tor has a feature to preserve unrecognized state file entries in
order to maintain forward compatibility. But this feature, along
with some unused code that we never actually removed, led to us
keeping items that were of no use to the user, other than at worst
to preserve ancient information about them.
This commit adds a feature to remove obsolete entries when we load
the file.
Closes ticket 40137.
[This is a squashed patch for ticket 7193, based on taking a "git
diff" for the original branch, then applying it with "git apply
-3". I earlier attempted to squash the branch with "git rebase",
but there were too many conflicts. --nickm]
We never used them very much, and although they had potential to
clarify some of our tests, they also made some of the logic harder
for people to follow. Clang-format can't make head or tail of them,
so the time has come to say goodbye to them.
Conflicts:
src/feature/dirparse/authcert_parse.c
src/feature/dirparse/ns_parse.c
src/feature/hs/hs_service.c
src/lib/conf/conftesting.h
src/lib/log/log.h
src/lib/thread/threads.h
src/test/test_options.c
These conflicts were mostly related to autostyle improvements, with
one or two due to doxygen fixes.
Currently test the only available function which is hs_dos_can_send_intro2()
within the HS anti-DoS subsystem.
Closes#15516
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
This "publish/subscribe" layer sits on top of lib/dispatch, and
tries to provide more type-safety and cross-checking for the
lower-level layer.
Even with this commit, we're still not done: more checking will come
in the next commit, and a set of usability/typesafety macros will
come after.
This module implements a way to send messages from one module to
another, with associated data types. It does not yet do anything to
ensure that messages are correct, that types match, or that other
forms of consistency are preserved.
This project introduces the prob_distr.c subsystem which implements all the
probability distributions that WTF-PAD needs. It also adds unittests for all of
them.
Code and tests courtesy of Riastradh.
Co-authored-by: Taylor R Campbell <campbell+tor@mumble.net>
Co-authored-by: Mike Perry <mikeperry-git@torproject.org>
This patch adds test cases for process_t which uses Tor's main loop.
This allows us to test that the callbacks are actually invoked by the
main loop when we expect them.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/28179
This patch adds a new Process subsystem for running external programs in
the background of Tor. The design is focused around a new type named
`process_t` which have an API that allows the developer to easily write
code that interacts with the given child process. These interactions
includes:
- Easy API for writing output to the child process's standard input
handle.
- Receive callbacks whenever the child has output on either its standard
output or standard error handles.
- Receive callback when the child process terminates.
We also support two different "protocols" for handling output from the
child process. The default protocol is the "line" protocol where the
process output callbacks will be invoked only when there is complete
lines (either "\r\n" or "\n" terminated). We also support the "raw"
protocol where the read callbacks will get whatever the operating system
delivered to us in a single read operation.
This patch does not include any operating system backends, but the Unix
and Windows backends will be included in separate commits.
See: https://bugs.torproject.org/28179
Additionally, use it to test that is_staledesc is set correctly.
Eventually we'll want to test all the other flags, but I'm aiming
for only adding coverage on the changed code here.
Also, add a stubbed-out nss version of the modules. The tests won't
pass with NSS yet since the NSS modules don't do anything.
This is a good patch to read with --color-moved.
This is meant for use when encrypting the current time within the
period in order to get a monotonically increasing revision counter
without actually revealing our view of the time.
This scheme is far from the most state-of-the-art: don't use it for
anything else without careful analysis by somebody much smarter than
I am.
See ticket #25552 for some rationale for this logic.