We used to use this when we had some controllers that would accept
long names and some that wouldn't. But it's been obsolete for a
while, and it's time to strip it out of the code.
Previously we'd put these strings right on the controllers'
outbufs. But this could cause some trouble, for these reasons:
1) Calling the network stack directly here would make a huge portion
of our networking code (from which so much of the rest of Tor is
reachable) reachable from everything that potentially generated
controller events.
2) Since _some_ events (EVENT_ERR for instance) would cause us to
call connection_flush(), every control_event_* function would
appear to be able to reach even _more_ of the network stack in
our cllgraph.
3) Every time we generated an event, we'd have to walk the whole
connection list, which isn't exactly fast.
This is an attempt to break down the "blob" described in
http://archives.seul.org/tor/dev/Mar-2015/msg00197.html -- the set of
functions from which nearly all the other functions in Tor are
reachable.
Closes ticket 16695.
URI syntax (and DNS syntax) allows for a single trailing `.` to
explicitly distinguish between a relative and absolute
(fully-qualified) domain name. While this is redundant in that RFC 1928
DOMAINNAME addresses are *always* fully-qualified, certain clients
blindly pass the trailing `.` along in the request.
Fixes bug 16674; bugfix on 0.2.6.2-alpha.
The only reason 16 byte alignment is required is for SSE2 load and
store operations, so only align datastructures to 16 byte boundaries
when building with SSE2 support.
This fixes builds with GCC SSP on platforms that don't have special
case code to do dynamic stack re-alignment (everything not x86/x86_64).
Fixes bug #16666.
The workqueue test help message has two issues. First, the message uses 4 space
indentation when 2 space indentation seems more common. Second, the help
message misses some options.
This commit fixes both issues.
1) We already require C99.
2) This allows us to support MSVC again (thanks to Gisle Vanem for
this part)
3) This change allows us to dump some rotten old compatibility code
from log.c
Make sure that signing certs are signed by the right identity key,
to prevent a recurrence of #16530. Also make sure that the master
identity key we find on disk matches the one we have in RAM, if we
have one.
This is for #16581.
When there is a signing key and the certificate lists a key, make
sure that the certificate lists the same signing key.
When there are public key and secret key stored in separate files,
make sure they match.
Use the right file name when we load an encrypted secret key and
then find a problem with it.
This is part of 16581.