| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566 | Filename: 128-bridge-families.txtTitle: Families of private bridgesVersion: $Revision$Last-Modified: $Date$Author: Roger DingledineCreated: 2007-12-xxStatus: Dead1. Overview  Proposal 125 introduced the basic notion of how bridge authorities,  bridge relays, and bridge users should behave. But it doesn't get into  the various mechanisms of how to distribute bridge relay addresses to  bridge users.  One of the mechanisms we have in mind is called 'families of bridges'.  If a bridge user knows about only one private bridge, and that bridge  shuts off for the night or gets a new dynamic IP address, the bridge  user is out of luck and needs to re-bootstrap manually or wait and  hope it comes back. On the other hand, if the bridge user knows about  a family of bridges, then as long as one of those bridges is still  reachable his Tor client can automatically  learn about where the  other bridges have gone.  So in this design, a single volunteer could run multiple coordinated  bridges, or a group of volunteers could each run a bridge. We abstract  out the details of how these volunteers find each other and decide to  set up a family.2. Other notes.  somebody needs to run a bridge authority  it needs to have a torrc option to publish networkstatuses of its bridges  it should also do reachability testing just of those bridges  people ask for the bridge networkstatus by asking for a url that  contains a password. (it's safe to do this because of begin_dir.)  so the bridge users need to know a) a password, and b) a bridge  authority line.  the bridge users need to know the bridge authority line.  the bridge authority needs to know the password.3. Current state  I implemented a BridgePassword config option. Bridge authorities  should set it, and users who want to use those bridge authorities  should set it.  Now there is a new directory URL "/tor/networkstatus-bridges" that  directory mirrors serve if BridgeAuthoritativeDir is set and it's a  begin_dir connection. It looks for the header    Authorization: Basic %s  where %s is the base-64 bridge password.  I never got around to teaching clients how to set the header though,  so it may or may not, and may or may not do what we ultimate want.  I've marked this proposal dead; it really never should have left the  ideas/ directory. Somebody should pick it up sometime and finish the  design and implementation.
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