Require C99 standards-conforming code in Travis CI, but allow GNU gcc
extensions. Also activates clang's -Wtypedef-redefinition warnings.
Builds some jobs with -std=gnu99, and some jobs without.
Closes ticket 32500.
Bionic has a recent coccinelle version, which passes our CI tests.
But Bionic (and Xenial) cause permissions errors for chutney.
We'll fix those in 32240.
Part of 31919.
Since Travis macOS has IPv6 support (and Travis Linux does not), chutney
will now run its IPv6 networks as part of Travis CI.
But since chutney is slow, don't wait for the macOS chutney to finish.
(Travis have fixed the duplicate notification bug in fast_finish. So we
can use fast_finish and allow_failure to finish early. Unfortunately,
allow_failure also means we ignore failures in macOS chutney.)
Also make sure that we have:
* a compile on each platform, with each compiler,
* a check on each platform, and
* a check on each compiler.
Finally, sort builds: allow fail last, macOS first, slowest first.
Closes ticket 30860.
Closes ticket 31859 for 0.2.9.
Frequently, when a patch fails, it has failures in several files.
Using the "-k" flag will let us learn all the compilation errors,
not just the first one that the compiler hits.
Based on a patch by rl1987.
This warning would previously be given every time we tried to open a
connection to a foo.exit address, which could potentially be used to
flood the logs. Now, we don't allow this warning to appear more
than once every 15 minutes.
Fixes bug 31466; bugfix on 0.2.2.1-alpha, when .exit was first
deprecated.
We previously used tor_fragile_assert() to declare that this case
could not happen: VERSIONS cells are always supposed to be
variable-sized, right?
This is incorrect, though. On a v1 link protocol connection, all
cells are fixed-sized. There aren't supposed to be any VERSIONS
cells with this version of the protocol, but apparently, somebody
was messing up. (The v1 link protocol is obsolete, so probably the
implementer responsible didn't mean to be using it.)
Fixes bug 31107. Bugfix on 0.2.4.4-alpha, when we introduced a
tor_fragile_assert() for this case.
New IP address from 194.109.206.212 to 45.66.33.45.
Signed request from Alex de Joode, operator of dizum:
https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/31406
Published descriptor by dizum on August 12th, 2019:
--
r dizum fqbq1v2DCDxTj0QDi7+gd1h911U GZmZtCLaPDQNxkhIFj8UcgTRAuA 2019-08-12 15:28:40 45.66.33.45 443 80
s Authority Fast Running Stable V2Dir Valid
v Tor 0.4.0.5
pr Cons=1-2 Desc=1-2 DirCache=1-2 HSDir=1-2 HSIntro=3-4 HSRend=1-2 Link=1-5 LinkAuth=1,3 Microdesc=1-2 Relay=1-2 Padding=1
w Bandwidth=20 Unmeasured=1
p reject 1-65535
--
Finally, confirmed by DNS:
$ dig +short tor.dizum.com
45.66.33.45
Closes#31406
Signed-off-by: David Goulet <dgoulet@torproject.org>
On some windows builds, time_t is 64 bits but long is not. This is
causing appveyor builds to fail.
Also, one of our uses of labs() on time_t was logically incorrect:
it was telling us to accept NETINFO cells up to three minutes
_before_ the message they were responding to, which doesn't make
sense.
This patch adds a time_abs() function that we should eventually move
to intmath.h or something. For now, though, it will make merges
easier to have it file-local in channeltls.c.
Fixes bug 31343; bugfix on 0.2.4.4-alpha.
Overflowing a signed integer in C is an undefined behaviour.
It is possible to trigger this undefined behaviour in tor_asprintf on
Windows or systems lacking vasprintf.
On these systems, eiter _vscprintf or vsnprintf is called to retrieve
the required amount of bytes to hold the string. These functions can
return INT_MAX. The easiest way to recreate this is the use of a
specially crafted configuration file, e.g. containing the line:
FirewallPorts AAAAA<in total 2147483610 As>
This line triggers the needed tor_asprintf call which eventually
leads to an INT_MAX return value from _vscprintf or vsnprintf.
The needed byte for \0 is added to the result, triggering the
overflow and therefore the undefined behaviour.
Casting the value to size_t before addition fixes the behaviour.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Stoeckmann <tobias@stoeckmann.org>
Replace the 157 fallbacks originally introduced in Tor 0.3.5.6-rc
in December 2018 (of which ~122 were still functional), with a
list of 148 fallbacks (70 new, 78 existing, 79 removed) generated
in June 2019.
Closes ticket 28795.
Note that we created extra lists from DE and US, but they didn't add
any more fallbacks when we tried to merge them.
Update the fallback directory mirrors by merging the current list with:
fallback_dirs_2019-06-28-08-58-39_AU_f0437a39ddbc8459.inc
Part of 28795, see that ticket for logs.
Update the fallback directory mirrors by replacing the old list with:
fallback_dirs_2019-06-25-11-49-10_AU_a37adb956fbb5cd2.inc
Part of 28795, see that ticket for logs.
Previously we had "make check" launched whenever DISTCHECK was
false. Now we'd like to turn it off in a few other circumstances,
like running chutney. Maybe stem too?