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f04dec4908
svn:r19377
90 lines
3.8 KiB
Plaintext
90 lines
3.8 KiB
Plaintext
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0. Overview.
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This document contains various informal policies for how to operate
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a directory authority, how to choose new ones, etc.
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1. How to pick a new directory authority.
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Here's our current guidelines for how to pick new directory
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authorities.
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(These won't ever be formal criteria -- we need to keep this flexible
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so we can adapt to new situations.)
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o Stability:
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- Must be a low-downtime Tor server (computer as well as network).
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- Must have a static IP.
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- The operator must have been running a stable Tor server for at least
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3 months.
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- Must intend for this server to stick around for the next 12 months
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or more.
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- Must not hibernate.
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- Should not be an exit node (as this increases the risk both of
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downtime and of key compromise).
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o Performance:
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- Must have sufficient bandwidth: at least 300 kB/s symmetric,
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though in practice the inbound traffic can be considerably less.
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o Availability:
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- Must be available to upgrade within a few days in most cases.
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(While we're still developing Tor, we periodically find bugs that
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impact the whole network and require authority upgrades.)
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- Should have a well-known way to contact the administrator
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via PGP-encrypted message.
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o Integrity:
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- Must promise not to censor or attack the network and users.
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- Should be run by somebody that Tor (i.e. Roger) knows.
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- Should be widely regarded as fair/trustworthy, or at least
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known, by many people.
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- If somebody asks you to backdoor or change your server, legally or
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otherwise, you will fight it to the extent of your abilities. If
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you fail to fight it, you must shut down the Tor server and notify
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us that you have.
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o Diversity
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- We should avoid situations that make it likelier for multiple
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authority failures to happen at the same time. Therefore...
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- It's good when authorities are not all in the same country.
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- It's good when authorities are not all in the same jurisdictions.
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- It's good when authorities are not all running the same OS.
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- It's good when authorities are not all using the same ISP.
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- It's good when authorities are not all running the same
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version of Tor.
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- No two authorities should have the same operator.
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- Maximal diversity, however, is not always practical. Sometimes,
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for example, there is only one version of Tor that provides a
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given consensus generation algorithm.
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- A small group of authorities with the same country/jurisdiction/OS is
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not a problem, until that group's size approaches quorum (half the
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authorities).
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2. How to choose the recommended versions
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The policy, in a nutshell, is to not remove versions without a good
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reason. So this means we should recommend all versions except:
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- Versions that no longer conform to the spec. That is, if they wouldn't
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actually interact correctly with the current Tor network.
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- Versions that have known security problems.
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- Versions that have frequent crash or assert problems.
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- Versions that harm the performance or stability of the current Tor
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network or the anonymity of other users. For example, a version
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that load balances wrong, or a version that hammers the authorities
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too much.
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> some use the slight variant of requiring a *good* reason.
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> excellent reasons include "there's a security flaw"
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> good reasons include "that crashes every time you start it. you would think
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+tor is dumb if you tried to use that version and think of it as tor."
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> good reasons include "those old clients do their load balancing wrong, and
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+they're screwing up the whole network"
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> reasons include "the old one is really slow, clients should prefer the new
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+one"
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> i try to draw the line at 'good reasons and above'
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