| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301302303304305306307308309310311312 | Filename: xxx-pluggable-transport.txtTitle: Pluggable transports for circumventionAuthor: Jacob Appelbaum, Nick MathewsonCreated: 15-Oct-2010Status: DraftOverview  This proposal describes a way to decouple protocol-level obfuscation  from the core Tor protocol in order to better resist client-bridge  censorship.  Our approach is to specify a means to add pluggable  transport implementations to Tor clients and bridges so that they can  negotiate a superencipherment for the Tor protocol.Scope  This is a document about transport plugins; it does not cover  discovery improvements, or bridgedb improvements.  While these  requirements might be solved by a program that also functions as a  transport plugin, this proposal only covers the requirements and  operation of transport plugins.Motivation  Frequently, people want to try a novel circumvention method to help  users connect to Tor bridges.  Some of these methods are already  pretty easy to deploy: if the user knows an unblocked VPN or open  SOCKS proxy, they can just use that with the Tor client today.  Less easy to deploy are methods that require participation by both the  client and the bridge.  In order of increasing sophistication, we  might want to support:  1. A protocol obfuscation tool that transforms the output of a TLS     connection into something that looks like HTTP as it leaves the     client, and back to TLS as it arrives at the bridge.  2. An additional authentication step that a client would need to     perform for a given bridge before being allowed to connect.  3. An information passing system that uses a side-channel in some     existing protocol to convey traffic between a client and a bridge     without the two of them ever communicating directly.  4. A set of clients to tunnel client->bridge traffic over an existing     large p2p network, such that the bridge is known by an identifier     in that network rather than by an IP address.  We could in theory support these almost fine with Tor as it stands  today: every Tor client can take a SOCKS proxy to use for its outgoing  traffic, so a suitable client proxy could handle the client's traffic  and connections on its behalf, while a corresponding program on the  bridge side could handle the bridge's side of the protocol  transformation.  Nevertheless, there are some reasons to add support  for transportation plugins to Tor itself:  1. It would be good for bridges to have a standard way to advertise     which transports they support, so that clients can have multiple     local transport proxies, and automatically use the right one for     the right bridge.  2. There are some changes to our architecture that we'll need for a     system like this to work.  For testing purposes, if a bridge blocks     off its regular ORPort and instead has an obfuscated ORPort, the     bridge authority has no way to test it.  Also, unless the bridge     has some way to tell that the bridge-side proxy at 127.0.0.1 is not     the origin of all the connections it is relaying, it might decide     that there are too many connections from 127.0.0.1, and start     paring them down to avoid a DoS.  3. Censorship and anticensorship techniques often evolve faster than     the typical Tor release cycle.  As such, it's a good idea to     provide ways to test out new anticensorship mechanisms on a more     rapid basis.  4. Transport obfuscation is a relatively distinct problem     from the other privacy problems that Tor tries to solve, and it     requires a fairly distinct skill-set from hacking the rest of Tor.     By decoupling transport obfuscation from the Tor core, we hope to     encourage people working on transport obfuscation who would     otherwise not be interested in hacking Tor.  5. Finally, we hope that defining a generic transport obfuscation plugin     mechanism will be useful to other anticensorship projects.Non-Goals  We're not going to talk about automatic verification of plugin  correctness and safety via sandboxing, proof-carrying code, or  whatever.  We need to do more with discovery and distribution, but that's not  what this proposal is about.  We're pretty convinced that the problems  are sufficiently orthogonal that we should be fine so long as we don't  preclude a single program from implementing both transport and  discovery extensions.  This proposal is not about what transport plugins are the best ones  for people to write.  We do, however, make some general  recommendations for plugin authors in an appendix.  We've considered issues involved with completely replacing Tor's TLS  with another encryption layer, rather than layering it inside the  obfuscation layer.  We describe how to do this in an appendix to the  current proposal, though we are not currently sure whether it's a good  idea to implement.  We deliberately reject any design that would involve linking more code  into Tor's process space.Design overview  To write a new transport protocol, an implementer must provide two  pieces: a "Client Proxy" to run at the initiator side, and a "Server  Proxy" to run a the server side.  These two pieces may or may not be  implemented by the same program.  Each client may run any number of Client Proxies.  Each one acts like  a SOCKS proxy that accepts accept connections on localhost.  Each one  runs on a different port, and implements one or more transport  methods.  If the protocol has any parameters, they passed from Tor  inside the regular username/password parts of the SOCKS protocol.  Bridges (and maybe relays) may run any number of Server Proxies: these  programs provide an interface like stunnel-server (or whatever the  option is): they get connections from the network (typically by  listening for connections on the network) and relay them to the  Bridge's real ORPort.  To configure one of these programs, it should be sufficient simply to  list it in your torrc.  The program tells Tor which transports it  provides.  The Tor consensus should carry a new approved version number that  is specific for pluggable transport; this will allow Tor to know when a  particular transport is known to be unsafe safe or non-functional.  Bridges (and maybe relays) report in their descriptors which transport  protocols they support.  This information can be copied into bridge  lines.  Bridges using a transport protocol may have multiple bridge  lines.  Any methods that are wildly successful, we can bake into Tor.Specifications: Client behavior  Bridge lines can now follow the extended format "bridge method  address:port [[keyid=]id-fingerprint] [k=v] [k=v] [k=v]". To connect  to such a bridge, a client must open a local connection to the SOCKS  proxy for "method", and ask it to connect to address:port.  If  [id-fingerprint] is provided, it should expect the public identity key  on the TLS connection to match the digest provided in  [id-fingerprint].  If any [k=v] items are provided, they are  configuration parameters for the proxy: Tor should separate them with  semicolons and put them user and password fields of the request,  splitting them across the fields as necessary.  If a key or value  value must contain a semicolon or a backslash, it is escaped with a  backslash.  The "id-fingerprint" field is always provided in a field named  "keyid", if it was given.  Method names must be C identifiers.  Example: if the bridge line is "bridge trebuchet www.example.com:3333     rocks=20 height=5.6m" AND if the Tor client knows that the     'trebuchet' method is provided by a SOCKS5 proxy on     127.0.0.1:19999, the client should connect to that proxy, ask it to     connect to www.example.com, and provide the string     "rocks=20;height=5.6m" as the username, the password, or split     across the username and password.  There are two ways to tell Tor clients about protocol proxies:  external proxies and managed proxies.  An external proxy is configured  with "ClientTransportPlugin trebuchet socks5 127.0.0.1:9999".  This  tells Tor that another program is already running to handle  'trubuchet' connections, and Tor doesn't need to worry about it.  A  managed proxy is configured with "ClientTransportPlugin trebuchet  exec /usr/libexec/tor-proxies/trebuchet [options]", and tells Tor to launch  an external program on-demand to provide a socks proxy for 'trebuchet'  connections. The Tor client only launches one instance of each  external program, even if the same executable is listed for more than  one method.  The same program can implement a managed or an external proxy: it just  needs to take an argument saying which one to be.Client proxy behavior   When launched from the command-line by a Tor client, a transport   proxy needs to tell Tor which methods and ports it supports.  It does   this by printing one or more CMETHOD: lines to its stdout.  These look   like   CMETHOD: trebuchet SOCKS5 127.0.0.1:19999 ARGS:rocks,height \              OPT-ARGS:tensile-strength   The ARGS field lists mandatory parameters that must appear in every   bridge line for this method. The OPT-ARGS field lists optional   parameters.  If no ARGS or OPT-ARGS field is provided, Tor should not   check the parameters in bridge lines for this method.   The proxy should print a single "METHODS: DONE" line after it is   finished telling Tor about the methods it provides.   The transport proxy MUST exit cleanly when it receives a SIGTERM from   Tor.   The Tor client MUST ignore lines beginning with a keyword and a colon   if it does not recognize the keyword.   In the future, if we need a control mechanism, we can use the   stdin/stdout from Tor to the transport proxy.   A transport proxy MUST handle SOCKS connect requests using the SOCKS   version it advertises.   Tor clients SHOULD NOT use any method from a client proxy unless it   is both listed as a possible method for that proxy in torrc, and it   is listed by the proxy as a method it supports.   [XXXX say something about versioning.]Server behavior   Server proxies are configured similarly to client proxies.   Server proxy behavior   [so, we can have this work like client proxies, where the bridge   launches some programs, and they tell the bridge, "I am giving you   method X with parameters Y"?  Do you have to take all the methods? If   not, which do you specify?]   [Do we allow programs that get started independently?]   [We'll need to figure out how this works with port forwarding.  Is   port forwarding the bridge's problem, the proxy's problem, or some   combination of the two?]   [If we're using the bridge authority/bridgedb system for distributing   bridge info, the right place to advertise bridge lines is probably   the extrainfo document.  We also need a way to tell the bridge   authority "don't give out a default bridge line for me"]Server behaviorBridge authority behaviorImplementation plan   Turn this into a draft proposal   Circulate and discuss on or-dev.   We should ship a couple of null plugin implementations in one or two   popular, portable languages so that people get an idea of how to   write the stuff.   1. We should have one that's just a proof of concept that does      nothing but transfer bytes back and forth.   1. We should not do a rot13 one.   2. We should implement a basic proxy that does not transform the bytes at all   1. We should implement DNS or HTTP using other software (as goodell      did years ago with DNS) as an example of wrapping existing code into      our plugin model.   2. The obfuscated-ssh superencipherment is pretty trivial and pretty   useful.  It makes the protocol stringwise unfingerprintable.      1. Nick needs to be told firmly not to bikeshed the obfuscated-ssh        superencipherment too badly         1. Go ahead, bikeshed my day   1. If we do a raw-traffic proxy, openssh tunnels would be the logical choice.Appendix: recommendations for transports  Be free/open-source software.  Also, if you think your code might  someday do so well at circumvention that it should be implemented  inside Tor, it should use the same license as Tor.  Use libraries that Tor already requires. (You can rely on openssl and  libevent being present if current Tor is present.)  Be portable: most Tor users are on Windows, and most Tor developers  are not, so designing your code for just one of these platforms will  make it either get a small userbase, or poor auditing.  Think secure: if your code is in a C-like language, and it's hard to  read it and become convinced it's safe then, it's probably not safe.  Think small: we want to minimize the bytes that a Windows user needs  to download for a transport client.  Specify: if you can't come up with a good explanation  Avoid security-through-obscurity if possible.  Specify.  Resist trivial fingerprinting: There should be no good string or regex  to search for to distinguish your protocol from protocols permitted by  censors.  Imitate a real profile: There are many ways to implement most  protocols -- and in many cases, most possible variants of a given  protocol won't actually exist in the wild.Appendix: Raw-traffic transports  This section describes an optional extension to the proposal above.  We  are not sure whether it is a good idea.
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