An earlier version of these tests was broken; now they're a nicer,
more robust, more black-box set of tests. The key is to have each
test check a handshake message that is wrong in _one_ way.
When there are annotations on a router descriptor, the
ed25519-identity element won't be at position 0 or 1; it will be at
router+1 or router-1.
This patch also adds a missing smartlist function to search a list for
an item with a particular pointer.
Routers now use TAP and ntor onion keys to sign their identity keys,
and put these signatures in their descriptors. That allows other
parties to be confident that the onion keys are indeed controlled by
the router that generated the descriptor.
For prop220, we have a new ed25519 certificate type. This patch
implements the code to create, parse, and validate those, along with
code for routers to maintain their own sets of certificates and
keys. (Some parts of master identity key encryption are done, but
the implementation of that isn't finished)
If the OpenSSL team accepts my patch to add an
SSL_get_client_ciphers function, this patch will make Tor use it
when available, thereby working better with openssl 1.1.
We previously used this function instead of SSL_set_cipher_list() to
set up a stack of client SSL_CIPHERs for these reasons:
A) In order to force a particular order of the results.
B) In order to be able to include dummy entries for ciphers that
this build of openssl did not support, so we could impersonate
Firefox harder.
But we no longer do B, since we merged proposal 198 and stopped
lying about what ciphers we know.
And A was actually pointless, since I had misread the implementation
of SSL_set_cipher_list(). It _does_ do some internal sorting, but
that is pre-sorting on the master list of ciphers, not sorting on
the user's preferred order.
As OpenSSL >= 1.0.0 is now required, ECDHE is now mandatory. The group
has to be validated at runtime, because of RedHat lawyers (P224 support
is entirely missing in the OpenSSL RPM, but P256 is present and is the
default).
Resolves ticket #16140.
The key here is to never touch ssl->cipher_list directly, but only
via SSL_get_ciphers(). But it's not so simple.
See, if there is no specialized cipher_list on the SSL object,
SSL_get_ciphers returns the cipher_list on the SSL_CTX. But we sure
don't want to modify that one! So we need to use
SSL_set_cipher_list first to make sure that we really have a cipher
list on the SSL object.
This field was only needed to work with the now-long-gone (I hope,
except for some horrible apples) openssl 0.9.8l; if your headers say
you have openssl 1.1, you won't even need it.
OpenSSL 1.1.0 must be built with "enable-deprecated", and compiled with
`OPENSSL_USE_DEPRECATED` for this to work, so instead, use the newer
routine as appropriate.
Use it in the sample_laplace_distribution function to make sure we return
the correct converted value after math operations are done on the input
values.
Thanks to Yawning for proposing a solution.
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>
- Rewrite changes file.
- Avoid float comparison with == and use <= instead.
- Add teor's tor_llround(trunc(...)) back to silence clang warnings.
- Replace tt_assert() with tt_i64_op() and friends.
- Fix whitespace and a comment.
Consistently check for overflow in round_*_to_next_multiple_of.
Check all round_*_to_next_multiple_of functions with expected values.
Check all round_*_to_next_multiple_of functions with maximal values.
Related to HS stats in #13192.
Avoid division by zero.
Avoid taking the log of zero.
Silence clang type conversion warnings using round and trunc.
The existing values returned by the laplace functions do not change.
Add tests for laplace edge cases.
These changes pass the existing unit tests without modification.
Related to HS stats in #13192.
These commands allow for the creation and management of ephemeral
Onion ("Hidden") services that are either bound to the lifetime of
the originating control connection, or optionally the lifetime of
the tor instance.
Implements #6411.
Incidently, this fixes a bug where the maximum value was never used when
only using crypto_rand_int(). For instance this example below in
rendservice.c never gets to INTRO_POINT_LIFETIME_MAX_SECONDS.
int intro_point_lifetime_seconds =
INTRO_POINT_LIFETIME_MIN_SECONDS +
crypto_rand_int(INTRO_POINT_LIFETIME_MAX_SECONDS -
INTRO_POINT_LIFETIME_MIN_SECONDS);
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@ev0ke.net>