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							- %define  rellevel 1
 
- %define  relbase std.%{rellevel}
 
- %define  rhrel %([ -f /etc/redhat-release ] && (sed -e 's/^Red Hat Linux release //' -e 's/ .*$//' -e 's/\\./_/g' -e 's/^.*$/.rh&/' < /etc/redhat-release))
 
- %define  blddate %(date -u +"%Y%m%d%H%M")
 
- %define  release %{relbase}%{rhrel}.%{blddate}
 
- %define  initdir /etc/rc.d/init.d
 
- Summary: tor: anonymizing overlay network for TCP
 
- Name: tor
 
- Version: 0.0.2pre20
 
- Vendor: R. Dingledine <arma@seul.org>
 
- Release: %{release}
 
- License: BSD-like
 
- Group: Applications/Internet
 
- URL: http://freehaven.net/tor
 
- Source0: http://freehaven.net/tor/dist/tor-0.0.2pre19.tar.gz
 
- Requires(pre): shadow-utils, /usr/bin/id, /bin/date, /bin/sh
 
- Requires(pre): %{_sbindir}/useradd, %{_sbindir}/groupadd
 
- BuildRoot: %{_tmppath}/%{name}-%{version}-%{relbase}-root
 
- %description
 
- Tor is a connection-based low-latency anonymous communication system which
 
- addresses many flaws in the original onion routing design.
 
- In brief, Onion Routing is a connection-oriented anonymizing communication
 
- service. Users choose a source-routed path through a set of nodes, and
 
- negotiate a "virtual circuit" through the network, in which each node
 
- knows its predecessor and successor, but no others. Traffic flowing down
 
- the circuit is unwrapped by a symmetric key at each node, which reveals
 
- the downstream node.
 
- Basically Tor provides a distributed network of servers ("onion
 
- routers"). Users bounce their tcp streams (web traffic, ftp, ssh, etc)
 
- around the routers, and recipients, observers, and even the routers
 
- themselves have difficulty tracking the source of the stream.
 
- Note that Tor does no protocol cleaning.  That means there is a danger that
 
- application protocols and associated programs can be induced to reveal
 
- information about the initiator.  Tor depends on Privoxy and similar protocol
 
- cleaners to solve this problem.
 
- Client applications can use the Tor network by connecting to the local
 
- onion proxy.  If the application itself does not come with socks support
 
- you can use a socks client such as tsocks.  Some web browsers like mozilla
 
- and web proxies like privoxy come with socks support, so you don't need an
 
- extra socks client if you want to use Tor with them.
 
- Remember that this is alpha code, and the network is very small -- Tor will
 
- not provide anonymity currently.
 
- This package provides the "tor" program, which serves as both a client
 
- and a relay node. Scripts will automatically create a "tor" user and
 
- group, set tor up to run as a daemon, and automatically start it at
 
- installation time.
 
- %prep
 
- %setup -q
 
- # Patch the startup script to use the right user and group IDs, store
 
- # the PID in a subdirectory of /var/run (so tor doesn't have to start
 
- # as root) and add in a control line for chkconfig. This (BSD? Debian?)
 
- # script will work, but doesn't use all the weird Red Hat macros to make
 
- # the boot sequence look pretty.
 
- ed -s tor.sh.in << '/EOF/' > /dev/null
 
- # Change the PID file location
 
- ,s/^TORPID=\(.*\)\/run\/tor.pid/TORPID=\1\/run\/tor\/tor.pid/
 
- #
 
- # Set user to "tor" before starting tor
 
- ,s/^\([ 	]*\)\(\$TORBIN.*\)$/\1\/bin\/su -s \/bin\/sh -c "\2" tor/
 
- #
 
- # Add user and group to command line. Suspenders and belt.
 
- ,s/^TORARGS="\(.*\)"/TORARGS="\1 --user tor --group tor"/
 
- #
 
- # Add control lines for chkconfig
 
- 1a
 
- # chkconfig: 2345 90 10
 
- # description: Onion router
 
- .
 
- #
 
- # Save and exit ed
 
- w
 
- q
 
- /EOF/
 
- %build
 
- %configure
 
- %__make
 
- %install
 
- %makeinstall
 
- # Install init script.
 
- %__mkdir_p ${RPM_BUILD_ROOT}%{initdir}
 
- %__install -m 755 tor.sh ${RPM_BUILD_ROOT}%{initdir}/tor
 
- # Directories that don't have any preinstalled files
 
- %__mkdir_p -m 700 ${RPM_BUILD_ROOT}/var/lib/tor
 
- %__mkdir_p -m 755 ${RPM_BUILD_ROOT}/var/run/tor
 
- %__mkdir_p -m 755 ${RPM_BUILD_ROOT}/var/log/tor
 
- %clean
 
- [ "${RPM_BUILD_ROOT}" != "/" ] && rm -rf ${RPM_BUILD_ROOT}
 
- %pre
 
- [ -f %{initdir}/tor  ] && /sbin/service tor stop
 
- if [ ! -n "`/usr/bin/id -g tor 2>/dev/null`" ]; then
 
-     # One would like to default the GID, but doing that properly would
 
-     # require thought.
 
-     %{_sbindir}/groupadd tor 2> /dev/null
 
- fi
 
- if [ ! -n "`/usr/bin/id -u tor 2>/dev/null`" ]; then
 
-     # One would also like to default the UID, but doing that properly would
 
-     # also require thought.
 
-     if [ -x /sbin/nologin ]; then
 
-         %{_sbindir}/useradd -g tor -d / -s /sbin/nologin tor 2> /dev/null
 
-     else
 
-         %{_sbindir}/useradd -g tor -d / -s /bin/false tor 2> /dev/null
 
-     fi
 
- fi
 
- %post
 
- /sbin/chkconfig --add tor
 
- /sbin/service tor start
 
- %preun
 
- /sbin/service tor stop
 
- /sbin/chkconfig --del tor
 
- %files
 
- %defattr(-,root,root)
 
- %doc AUTHORS INSTALL LICENSE README
 
- %{_mandir}/man*/*
 
- %{_bindir}/tor
 
- %{initdir}/tor
 
- %dir %{_sysconfdir}/tor/
 
- %config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/tor/torrc
 
- %config(noreplace) %{_sysconfdir}/tor/dirservers
 
- %attr(-,tor,tor) %dir /var/lib/tor
 
- %attr(-,tor,tor) %dir /var/run/tor
 
- %attr(-,tor,tor) %dir /var/log/tor
 
- %changelog
 
- * Sat Jan 17 2004 John Bashinski <jbash@velvet.com>
 
- - Basic spec file; tested with Red Hat 9.
 
 
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