/* Copyright (c) 2001 Matej Pfajfar. * Copyright (c) 2001-2004, Roger Dingledine. * Copyright (c) 2004-2006, Roger Dingledine, Nick Mathewson. * Copyright (c) 2007-2017, The Tor Project, Inc. */ /* See LICENSE for licensing information */ /** * \file tor_api.h * \brief Public C API for the Tor network service. * * This interface is intended for use by programs that need to link Tor as * a library, and launch it in a separate thread. If you have the ability * to run Tor as a separate executable, you should probably do that instead * of embedding it as a library. * * To use this API, first construct a tor_main_configuration_t object using * tor_main_configuration_new(). Then, you use one or more other function * calls (such as tor_main_configuration_set_command_line() to configure how * Tor should be run. Finally, you pass the configuration object to * tor_run_main(). * * At this point, tor_run_main() will block its thread to run a Tor daemon; * when the Tor daemon exits, it will return. See notes on bugs and * limitations below. * * There is no other public C API to Tor: calling any C Tor function not * documented in this file is not guaranteed to be stable. **/ #ifndef TOR_API_H #define TOR_API_H typedef struct tor_main_configuration_t tor_main_configuration_t; /** * Create and return a new tor_main_configuration(). */ tor_main_configuration_t *tor_main_configuration_new(void); /** * Set the command-line arguments in cfg. * * The argc and argv values here are as for main(). The * contents of the argv pointer must remain unchanged until tor_run_main() has * finished and you call tor_main_configuration_free(). * * Return 0 on success, -1 on failure. */ int tor_main_configuration_set_command_line(tor_main_configuration_t *cfg, int argc, char *argv[]); /** * Release all storage held in cfg. * * Once you have passed a tor_main_configuration_t to tor_run_main(), you * must not free it until tor_run_main() has finished. */ void tor_main_configuration_free(tor_main_configuration_t *cfg); /** * Run the tor process, as if from the command line. * * The command line arguments from tor_main_configuration_set_command_line() * are taken as if they had been passed to main(). * * This function will not return until Tor is done running. It returns zero * on success, and nonzero on failure. * * BUG 23848: In many cases, tor_main will call exit() or abort() instead of * returning. This is not the intended long-term behavior; we are trying to * fix it. * * BUG 23847: You can only call tor_main() once in a single process; if it * returns and you call it again, you may crash, or you may encounter other * unexpected behavior, including possible security issues. This is not * intended long-term behavior; we are trying to fix it. * * LIMITATION: You cannot run more than one instance of Tor in the same * process at the same time. Concurrent calls will cause undefined behavior. * We do not currently have plans to change this. * * LIMITATION: While we will try to fix any problems found here, you * should be aware that Tor was originally written to run as its own * process, and that the functionality of this file was added later. If * you find any bugs or strange behavior, please report them, and we'll * try to straighten them out. */ int tor_run_main(const tor_main_configuration_t *); /** * Run the tor process, as if from the command line. * * @deprecated Using this function from outside Tor is deprecated; you should * use tor_run_main() instead. * * BUGS: This function has all the same bugs as tor_run_main(). * * LIMITATIONS: This function has all the limitations of tor_run_main(). */ int tor_main(int argc, char **argv); #endif /* !defined(TOR_API_H) */