| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115 | Filename: 163-detecting-clients.txtTitle: Detecting whether a connection comes from a clientAuthor: Nick MathewsonCreated: 22-May-2009Target: 0.2.2Status: OpenOverview:   Some aspects of Tor's design require relays to distinguish   connections from clients from connections that come from relays.   The existing means for doing this is easy to spoof.  We propose   a better approach.Motivation:   There are at least two reasons for which Tor servers want to tell   which connections come from clients and which come from other   servers:     1) Some exits, proposal 152 notwithstanding, want to disallow        their use as single-hop proxies.     2) Some performance-related proposals involve prioritizing        traffic from relays, or limiting traffic per client (but not        per relay).   Right now, we detect client vs server status based on how the   client opens circuits.  (Check out the code that implements the   AllowSingleHopExits option if you want all the details.)  This   method is depressingly easy to fake, though.  This document   proposes better means.Goals:   To make grabbing relay privileges at least as difficult as just   running a relay.   In the analysis below, "using server privileges" means taking any   action that only servers are supposed to do, like delivering a   BEGIN cell to an exit node that doesn't allow single hop exits,   or claiming server-like amounts of bandwidth.Passive detection:   A connection is definitely a client connection if it takes one of   the TLS methods during setup that does not establish an identity   key.   A circuit is definitely a client circuit if it is initiated with   a CREATE_FAST cell, though the node could be a client or a server.   A node that's listed in a recent consensus is probably a server.   A node to which we have successfully extended circuits from   multiple origins is probably a server.Active detection:   If a node doesn't try to use server privileges at all, we never   need to care whether it's a server.   When a node or circuit tries to use server privileges, if it is   "definitely a client" as per above, we can refuse it immediately.   If it's "probably a server" as per above, we can accept it.   Otherwise, we have either a client, or a server that is neither   listed in any consensus or used by any other clients -- in other   words, a new or private server.   For these servers, we should attempt to build one or more test   circuits through them.  If enough of the circuits succeed, the   node is a real relay.  If not, it is probably a client.   While we are waiting for the test circuits to succeed, we should   allow a short grace period in which server privileges are   permitted.  When a test is done, we should remember its outcome   for a while, so we don't need to do it again.Why it's hard to do good testing:   Doing a test circuit starting with an unlisted router requires   only that we have an open connection for it.  Doing a test   circuit starting elsewhere _through_ an unlisted router--though   more reliable-- would require that we have a known address, port,   identity key, and onion key for the router.  Only the address and   identity key are easily available via the current Tor protocol in   all cases.   We could fix this part by requiring that all servers support   BEGIN_DIR and support downloading at least a current descriptor   for themselves.Open questions:   What are the thresholds for the needed numbers of circuits   for us to decide that a node is a relay?      [Suggested answer: two circuits from two distinct hosts.]   How do we pick grace periods?  How long do we remember the   outcome of a test?      [Suggested answer: 10 minute grace period; 48 hour memory of      test outcomes.]   If we can build circuits starting at a suspect node, but we don't   have enough information to try extending circuits elsewhere   through the node, should we conclude that the node is   "server-like" or not?      [Suggested answer: for now, just try making circuits through      the node.  Extend this to extending circuits as needed.]
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