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svn:r2203
154 lines
5.1 KiB
Plaintext
154 lines
5.1 KiB
Plaintext
$Id$
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TC: A Tor control protocol
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0. Scope
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(8 Aug 2004) This document describes an implementation-specific protocol to
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be implemented in a future version of Tor. It is not part of the Tor onion
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routing protocol.
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The protocol described in this document is used for other programs (such as
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frontend user-interfaces) to communicate with a locally running Tor protocol.
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We're trying to be pretty extensible here, but not infinitely
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forward-compatible.
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1. Protocol outline
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TC is a bidirectional message-based protocol. It assumes an underlying
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stream for communication between a controlling process (the "client") and
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a Tor process (the "server"). The stream may be implemented via TCP,
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TLS-over-TCP, a Unix pipe, or so on. For security, the stream should not be
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observable by untrusted parties.
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In TC, the client and server send typed variable-length messages to one
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another over the underlying stream. By default, all messages from the server
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are in response to messages from the client. Some client requests, however,
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will cause the server to send messages to the client indefinitely far into
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the future.
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Servers respond to messages in the order they're received.
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2. Message format
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The messages take the following format:
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Length [2 octets; big-endian]
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Type [2 octets; big-endian]
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Body [Length octets]
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Upon encountering a recognized Type, implementations behave as described in
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section 3 below. If the type is not recognized, servers respond with an
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"STAT" message (code UNRECOGNIZED; see 3.1 below), and clients simply ignore
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the message.
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3. Message types
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3.1. ERROR (Type 0x0000)
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Sent in response to a message that could not be processed as requested.
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The body of the message begins with a 2-byte error code. The following
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values are defined:
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0x0000 Unspecified error
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0x0001 Unrecognized message type
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0x0002 Unrecognized configuration key
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0x0003 Invalid configuration value
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0x0004 Unrecognized event code
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0x0005 Unauthorized user
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0x0006 Failed authentication attempt
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3.2. DONE (Type 0x0001)
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Sent from server to client in response to a request that was successfully
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completed, with no more information needed. The body is empty.
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3.3. SETCONF (Type 0x0002)
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Change the value of a configuration variable. The body contains
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two nul-terminated strings: a configuration key and a configuration value.
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The server behaves as though it had just read the key-value pair in its
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configuration file. The server responds with a DONE message on success,
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or an ERROR message on failure.
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3.4. GETCONF (Type 0x0003)
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Request the value of a configuration variable. The body contains a
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nul-terminated string for a configuration key. The server replies with a
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CONFVALUE message
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3.5. CONFVALUE (Type 0x0004)
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Sent in response to a GETCONF message; contains a nul-terminated key string
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and a nul-terminated value string.
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3.6. SETEVENTS (Type 0x0005)
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Request the server to inform the client about interesting events.
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The body contains a list of 2-byte event codes (see "event" below).
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Sending SETEVENTS with an empty body turns off all event reporting.
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The server responds with a DONE message on success, and an ERROR message
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if one of the event codes isn't recognized. (On error, the list of active
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event codes isn't changed.)
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3.7. EVENT (Type 0x0006)
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Sent from the server to the client when an event has occurred, and the
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client has requested that kind of event. The body contains a 2-byte
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event code, followed by additional event-dependent information. Event
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codes are:
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0x0001 -- Circuit status changed
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Status [1 octet]
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(Launched=0,Built=1,Extended=2,Failed=3,Closed=4)
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Circuit ID [4 octets]
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(Must be unique to Tor process/time)
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Path [NUL-terminated comma-separated string]
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(For extended/failed, is the portion of the path that is
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built)
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0x0002 -- Stream status changed
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Status [1 octet]
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(Sent connect=0,sent resolve=1,succeeded=2,failed=3,
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closed=4)
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Stream ID [4 octets]
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(Must be unique to Tor process/time)
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Target (NUL-terminated address-port string]
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0x0003 -- OR Connection status changed
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Status [1 octet]
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(Launched=0,connected=1,failed=2,closed=3)
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OR nickname/identity [NUL-terminated]
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0x0004 -- Bandwidth used in last N seconds. (N=1? 5?)
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Bytes read [4 octets]
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Bytes written [4 octets]
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0x0005 -- Warning/error occurred
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Message [NUL-terminated]
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3.8. AUTHENTICATE (Type 0x0007)
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Sent from the client to the server. Contains a 'magic cookie' to prove
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that client is really the admin for this Tor process. The server responds
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with DONE or ERROR.
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4. Implementation notes
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On Unix, we should use a named pipe on the fs and use filesystem privileges
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to authenticate. On Win32, a password/magic cookie may be in order.
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-----------
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(for emacs)
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Local Variables:
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mode:text
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indent-tabs-mode:nil
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fill-column:77
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End:
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