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  1. Hacking Tor: An Incomplete Guide
  2. ================================
  3. Important links
  4. ---------------
  5. For full information on how Tor is supposed to work, look at the files in
  6. https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git/tree
  7. For an explanation of how to change Tor's design to work differently, look at
  8. https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git/blob_plain/HEAD:/proposals/001-process.txt
  9. For the latest version of the code, get a copy of git, and
  10. git clone https://git.torproject.org/git/tor
  11. We talk about Tor on the tor-talk mailing list. Design proposals and
  12. discussion belong on the tor-dev mailing list. We hang around on
  13. irc.oftc.net, with general discussion happening on #tor and development
  14. happening on #tor-dev.
  15. For a nice quick-start guide to hacking on Tor, have a look at
  16. doc/GettingStarted.txt, included with the Tor distribution.
  17. How we use Git branches
  18. -----------------------
  19. Each main development series (like 0.2.1, 0.2.2, etc) has its main work
  20. applied to a single branch. At most one series can be the development series
  21. at a time; all other series are maintenance series that get bug-fixes only.
  22. The development series is built in a git branch called "master"; the
  23. maintenance series are built in branches called "maint-0.2.0", "maint-0.2.1",
  24. and so on. We regularly merge the active maint branches forward.
  25. For all series except the development series, we also have a "release" branch
  26. (as in "release-0.2.1"). The release series is based on the corresponding
  27. maintenance series, except that it deliberately lags the maint series for
  28. most of its patches, so that bugfix patches are not typically included in a
  29. maintenance release until they've been tested for a while in a development
  30. release. Occasionally, we'll merge an urgent bugfix into the release branch
  31. before it gets merged into maint, but that's rare.
  32. If you're working on a bugfix for a bug that occurs in a particular version,
  33. base your bugfix branch on the "maint" branch for the first supported series
  34. that has that bug. (As of June 2013, we're supporting 0.2.3 and later.) If
  35. you're working on a new feature, base it on the master branch.
  36. How we log changes
  37. ------------------
  38. When you do a commit that needs a ChangeLog entry, add a new file to
  39. the "changes" toplevel subdirectory. It should have the format of a
  40. one-entry changelog section from the current ChangeLog file, as in
  41. o Major bugfixes:
  42. - Fix a potential buffer overflow. Fixes bug 99999; bugfix on
  43. 0.3.1.4-beta.
  44. To write a changes file, first categorize the change. Some common categories
  45. are: Minor bugfixes, Major bugfixes, Minor features, Major features, Code
  46. simplifications and refactoring. Then say what the change does. If
  47. it's a bugfix, mention what bug it fixes and when the bug was
  48. introduced. To find out which Git tag the change was introduced in,
  49. you can use "git describe --contains <sha1 of commit>".
  50. If at all possible, try to create this file in the same commit where you are
  51. making the change. Please give it a distinctive name that no other branch will
  52. use for the lifetime of your change. To verify the format of the changes file,
  53. you can use "make check-changes".
  54. When we go to make a release, we will concatenate all the entries
  55. in changes to make a draft changelog, and clear the directory. We'll
  56. then edit the draft changelog into a nice readable format.
  57. What needs a changes file?::
  58. A not-exhaustive list: Anything that might change user-visible
  59. behavior. Anything that changes internals, documentation, or the build
  60. system enough that somebody could notice. Big or interesting code
  61. rewrites. Anything about which somebody might plausibly wonder "when
  62. did that happen, and/or why did we do that" 6 months down the line.
  63. Why use changes files instead of Git commit messages?::
  64. Git commit messages are written for developers, not users, and they
  65. are nigh-impossible to revise after the fact.
  66. Why use changes files instead of entries in the ChangeLog?::
  67. Having every single commit touch the ChangeLog file tended to create
  68. zillions of merge conflicts.
  69. Useful tools
  70. ------------
  71. These aren't strictly necessary for hacking on Tor, but they can help track
  72. down bugs.
  73. Jenkins
  74. ~~~~~~~
  75. https://jenkins.torproject.org
  76. Dmalloc
  77. ~~~~~~~
  78. The dmalloc library will keep track of memory allocation, so you can find out
  79. if we're leaking memory, doing any double-frees, or so on.
  80. dmalloc -l ~/dmalloc.log
  81. (run the commands it tells you)
  82. ./configure --with-dmalloc
  83. Valgrind
  84. ~~~~~~~~
  85. valgrind --leak-check=yes --error-limit=no --show-reachable=yes src/or/tor
  86. (Note that if you get a zillion openssl warnings, you will also need to
  87. pass --undef-value-errors=no to valgrind, or rebuild your openssl
  88. with -DPURIFY.)
  89. Coverity
  90. ~~~~~~~~
  91. Nick regularly runs the coverity static analyzer on the Tor codebase.
  92. The preprocessor define __COVERITY__ is used to work around instances
  93. where coverity picks up behavior that we wish to permit.
  94. clang Static Analyzer
  95. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  96. The clang static analyzer can be run on the Tor codebase using Xcode (WIP)
  97. or a command-line build.
  98. The preprocessor define __clang_analyzer__ is used to work around instances
  99. where clang picks up behavior that we wish to permit.
  100. clang Runtime Sanitizers
  101. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  102. To build the Tor codebase with the clang Address and Undefined Behavior
  103. sanitizers, see the file contrib/clang/sanitize_blacklist.txt.
  104. Preprocessor workarounds for instances where clang picks up behavior that
  105. we wish to permit are also documented in the blacklist file.
  106. Running lcov for unit test coverage
  107. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  108. Lcov is a utility that generates pretty HTML reports of test code coverage.
  109. To generate such a report:
  110. -----
  111. ./configure --enable-coverage
  112. make
  113. make coverage-html
  114. $BROWSER ./coverage_html/index.html
  115. -----
  116. This will run the tor unit test suite `./src/test/test` and generate the HTML
  117. coverage code report under the directory ./coverage_html/. To change the
  118. output directory, use `make coverage-html HTML_COVER_DIR=./funky_new_cov_dir`.
  119. Coverage diffs using lcov are not currently implemented, but are being
  120. investigated (as of July 2014).
  121. Running the unit tests
  122. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  123. To quickly run all the tests distributed with Tor:
  124. -----
  125. make check
  126. -----
  127. To run the fast unit tests only:
  128. -----
  129. make test
  130. -----
  131. To selectively run just some tests (the following can be combined
  132. arbitrarily):
  133. -----
  134. ./src/test/test <name_of_test> [<name of test 2>] ...
  135. ./src/test/test <prefix_of_name_of_test>.. [<prefix_of_name_of_test2>..] ...
  136. ./src/test/test :<name_of_excluded_test> [:<name_of_excluded_test2]...
  137. -----
  138. To run all tests, including those based on Stem or Chutney:
  139. -----
  140. make test-full
  141. -----
  142. To run all tests, including those basedd on Stem or Chutney that require a
  143. working connection to the internet:
  144. -----
  145. make test-full-online
  146. -----
  147. Running gcov for unit test coverage
  148. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  149. -----
  150. ./configure --enable-coverage
  151. make
  152. make check
  153. # or--- make test-full ? make test-full-online?
  154. mkdir coverage-output
  155. ./scripts/test/coverage coverage-output
  156. -----
  157. (On OSX, you'll need to start with "--enable-coverage CC=clang".)
  158. Then, look at the .gcov files in coverage-output. '-' before a line means
  159. that the compiler generated no code for that line. '######' means that the
  160. line was never reached. Lines with numbers were called that number of times.
  161. If that doesn't work:
  162. * Try configuring Tor with --disable-gcc-hardening
  163. * You might need to run 'make clean' after you run './configure'.
  164. If you make changes to Tor and want to get another set of coverage results,
  165. you can run "make reset-gcov" to clear the intermediary gcov output.
  166. If you have two different "coverage-output" directories, and you want to see
  167. a meaningful diff between them, you can run:
  168. -----
  169. ./scripts/test/cov-diff coverage-output1 coverage-output2 | less
  170. -----
  171. In this diff, any lines that were visited at least once will have coverage
  172. "1". This lets you inspect what you (probably) really want to know: which
  173. untested lines were changed? Are there any new untested lines?
  174. Running integration tests
  175. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  176. We have the beginnings of a set of scripts to run integration tests using
  177. Chutney. To try them, set CHUTNEY_PATH to your chutney source directory, and
  178. run "make test-network".
  179. We also have scripts to run integration tests using Stem. To try them, set
  180. STEM_SOURCE_DIR to your Stem source directory, and run "test-stem".
  181. Profiling Tor with oprofile
  182. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  183. The oprofile tool runs (on Linux only!) to tell you what functions Tor is
  184. spending its CPU time in, so we can identify berformance pottlenecks.
  185. Here are some basic instructions
  186. - Build tor with debugging symbols (you probably already have, unless
  187. you messed with CFLAGS during the build process).
  188. - Build all the libraries you care about with debugging symbols
  189. (probably you only care about libssl, maybe zlib and Libevent).
  190. - Copy this tor to a new directory
  191. - Copy all the libraries it uses to that dir too (ldd ./tor will
  192. tell you)
  193. - Set LD_LIBRARY_PATH to include that dir. ldd ./tor should now
  194. show you it's using the libs in that dir
  195. - Run that tor
  196. - Reset oprofiles counters/start it
  197. * "opcontrol --reset; opcontrol --start", if Nick remembers right.
  198. - After a while, have it dump the stats on tor and all the libs
  199. in that dir you created.
  200. * "opcontrol --dump;"
  201. * "opreport -l that_dir/*"
  202. - Profit
  203. Generating and analyzing a callgraph
  204. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  205. 1. Run ./scripts/maint/generate_callgraph.sh . This will generate a
  206. bunch of files in a new ./callgraph directory.
  207. 2. Run ./scripts/maint/analyze_callgraph.py callgraph/src/*/* . This
  208. will do a lot of graph operations and then dump out a new
  209. "callgraph.pkl" file, containing data in Python's "pickle" format.
  210. 3. Run ./scripts/maint/display_callgraph.py . It will display:
  211. - the number of functions reachable from each function.
  212. - all strongly-connnected components in the Tor callgraph
  213. - the largest bottlenecks in the largest SCC in the Tor callgraph.
  214. Note that currently the callgraph generator can't detect calls that pass
  215. through function pointers.
  216. Coding conventions
  217. ------------------
  218. Patch checklist
  219. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  220. If possible, send your patch as one of these (in descending order of
  221. preference)
  222. - A git branch we can pull from
  223. - Patches generated by git format-patch
  224. - A unified diff
  225. Did you remember...
  226. - To build your code while configured with --enable-gcc-warnings?
  227. - To run "make check-spaces" on your code?
  228. - To run "make check-docs" to see whether all new options are on
  229. the manpage?
  230. - To write unit tests, as possible?
  231. - To base your code on the appropriate branch?
  232. - To include a file in the "changes" directory as appropriate?
  233. Whitespace and C conformance
  234. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  235. Invoke "make check-spaces" from time to time, so it can tell you about
  236. deviations from our C whitespace style. Generally, we use:
  237. - Unix-style line endings
  238. - K&R-style indentation
  239. - No space before newlines
  240. - A blank line at the end of each file
  241. - Never more than one blank line in a row
  242. - Always spaces, never tabs
  243. - No more than 79-columns per line.
  244. - Two spaces per indent.
  245. - A space between control keywords and their corresponding paren
  246. "if (x)", "while (x)", and "switch (x)", never "if(x)", "while(x)", or
  247. "switch(x)".
  248. - A space between anything and an open brace.
  249. - No space between a function name and an opening paren. "puts(x)", not
  250. "puts (x)".
  251. - Function declarations at the start of the line.
  252. We try hard to build without warnings everywhere. In particular, if you're
  253. using gcc, you should invoke the configure script with the option
  254. "--enable-gcc-warnings". This will give a bunch of extra warning flags to
  255. the compiler, and help us find divergences from our preferred C style.
  256. Getting emacs to edit Tor source properly
  257. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  258. Nick likes to put the following snippet in his .emacs file:
  259. -----
  260. (add-hook 'c-mode-hook
  261. (lambda ()
  262. (font-lock-mode 1)
  263. (set-variable 'show-trailing-whitespace t)
  264. (let ((fname (expand-file-name (buffer-file-name))))
  265. (cond
  266. ((string-match "^/home/nickm/src/libevent" fname)
  267. (set-variable 'indent-tabs-mode t)
  268. (set-variable 'c-basic-offset 4)
  269. (set-variable 'tab-width 4))
  270. ((string-match "^/home/nickm/src/tor" fname)
  271. (set-variable 'indent-tabs-mode nil)
  272. (set-variable 'c-basic-offset 2))
  273. ((string-match "^/home/nickm/src/openssl" fname)
  274. (set-variable 'indent-tabs-mode t)
  275. (set-variable 'c-basic-offset 8)
  276. (set-variable 'tab-width 8))
  277. ))))
  278. -----
  279. You'll note that it defaults to showing all trailing whitespace. The "cond"
  280. test detects whether the file is one of a few C free software projects that I
  281. often edit, and sets up the indentation level and tab preferences to match
  282. what they want.
  283. If you want to try this out, you'll need to change the filename regex
  284. patterns to match where you keep your Tor files.
  285. If you use emacs for editing Tor and nothing else, you could always just say:
  286. -----
  287. (add-hook 'c-mode-hook
  288. (lambda ()
  289. (font-lock-mode 1)
  290. (set-variable 'show-trailing-whitespace t)
  291. (set-variable 'indent-tabs-mode nil)
  292. (set-variable 'c-basic-offset 2)))
  293. -----
  294. There is probably a better way to do this. No, we are probably not going
  295. to clutter the files with emacs stuff.
  296. Functions to use
  297. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  298. We have some wrapper functions like tor_malloc, tor_free, tor_strdup, and
  299. tor_gettimeofday; use them instead of their generic equivalents. (They
  300. always succeed or exit.)
  301. You can get a full list of the compatibility functions that Tor provides by
  302. looking through src/common/util.h and src/common/compat.h. You can see the
  303. available containers in src/common/containers.h. You should probably
  304. familiarize yourself with these modules before you write too much code, or
  305. else you'll wind up reinventing the wheel.
  306. Use 'INLINE' instead of 'inline', so that we work properly on Windows.
  307. Calling and naming conventions
  308. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  309. Whenever possible, functions should return -1 on error and 0 on success.
  310. For multi-word identifiers, use lowercase words combined with
  311. underscores. (e.g., "multi_word_identifier"). Use ALL_CAPS for macros and
  312. constants.
  313. Typenames should end with "_t".
  314. Function names should be prefixed with a module name or object name. (In
  315. general, code to manipulate an object should be a module with the same name
  316. as the object, so it's hard to tell which convention is used.)
  317. Functions that do things should have imperative-verb names
  318. (e.g. buffer_clear, buffer_resize); functions that return booleans should
  319. have predicate names (e.g. buffer_is_empty, buffer_needs_resizing).
  320. If you find that you have four or more possible return code values, it's
  321. probably time to create an enum. If you find that you are passing three or
  322. more flags to a function, it's probably time to create a flags argument that
  323. takes a bitfield.
  324. What To Optimize
  325. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  326. Don't optimize anything if it's not in the critical path. Right now, the
  327. critical path seems to be AES, logging, and the network itself. Feel free to
  328. do your own profiling to determine otherwise.
  329. Log conventions
  330. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  331. https://www.torproject.org/docs/faq#LogLevel
  332. No error or warning messages should be expected during normal OR or OP
  333. operation.
  334. If a library function is currently called such that failure always means ERR,
  335. then the library function should log WARN and let the caller log ERR.
  336. Every message of severity INFO or higher should either (A) be intelligible
  337. to end-users who don't know the Tor source; or (B) somehow inform the
  338. end-users that they aren't expected to understand the message (perhaps
  339. with a string like "internal error"). Option (A) is to be preferred to
  340. option (B).
  341. Doxygen
  342. ~~~~~~~~
  343. We use the 'doxygen' utility to generate documentation from our
  344. source code. Here's how to use it:
  345. 1. Begin every file that should be documented with
  346. /**
  347. * \file filename.c
  348. * \brief Short description of the file.
  349. **/
  350. (Doxygen will recognize any comment beginning with /** as special.)
  351. 2. Before any function, structure, #define, or variable you want to
  352. document, add a comment of the form:
  353. /** Describe the function's actions in imperative sentences.
  354. *
  355. * Use blank lines for paragraph breaks
  356. * - and
  357. * - hyphens
  358. * - for
  359. * - lists.
  360. *
  361. * Write <b>argument_names</b> in boldface.
  362. *
  363. * \code
  364. * place_example_code();
  365. * between_code_and_endcode_commands();
  366. * \endcode
  367. */
  368. 3. Make sure to escape the characters "<", ">", "\", "%" and "#" as "\<",
  369. "\>", "\\", "\%", and "\#".
  370. 4. To document structure members, you can use two forms:
  371. struct foo {
  372. /** You can put the comment before an element; */
  373. int a;
  374. int b; /**< Or use the less-than symbol to put the comment
  375. * after the element. */
  376. };
  377. 5. To generate documentation from the Tor source code, type:
  378. $ doxygen -g
  379. To generate a file called 'Doxyfile'. Edit that file and run
  380. 'doxygen' to generate the API documentation.
  381. 6. See the Doxygen manual for more information; this summary just
  382. scratches the surface.
  383. Doxygen comment conventions
  384. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
  385. Say what functions do as a series of one or more imperative sentences, as
  386. though you were telling somebody how to be the function. In other words, DO
  387. NOT say:
  388. /** The strtol function parses a number.
  389. *
  390. * nptr -- the string to parse. It can include whitespace.
  391. * endptr -- a string pointer to hold the first thing that is not part
  392. * of the number, if present.
  393. * base -- the numeric base.
  394. * returns: the resulting number.
  395. */
  396. long strtol(const char *nptr, char **nptr, int base);
  397. Instead, please DO say:
  398. /** Parse a number in radix <b>base</b> from the string <b>nptr</b>,
  399. * and return the result. Skip all leading whitespace. If
  400. * <b>endptr</b> is not NULL, set *<b>endptr</b> to the first character
  401. * after the number parsed.
  402. **/
  403. long strtol(const char *nptr, char **nptr, int base);
  404. Doxygen comments are the contract in our abstraction-by-contract world: if
  405. the functions that call your function rely on it doing something, then your
  406. function should mention that it does that something in the documentation. If
  407. you rely on a function doing something beyond what is in its documentation,
  408. then you should watch out, or it might do something else later.
  409. Putting out a new release
  410. -------------------------
  411. Here are the steps Roger takes when putting out a new Tor release:
  412. 1) Use it for a while, as a client, as a relay, as a hidden service,
  413. and as a directory authority. See if it has any obvious bugs, and
  414. resolve those.
  415. 1.5) As applicable, merge the maint-X branch into the release-X branch.
  416. 2) Gather the changes/* files into a changelog entry, rewriting many
  417. of them and reordering to focus on what users and funders would find
  418. interesting and understandable.
  419. 2.1) Make sure that everything that wants a bug number has one.
  420. Make sure that everything which is a bugfix says what version
  421. it was a bugfix on.
  422. 2.2) Concatenate them.
  423. 2.3) Sort them by section. Within each section, sort by "version it's
  424. a bugfix on", else by numerical ticket order.
  425. 2.4) Clean them up:
  426. Standard idioms:
  427. "Fixes bug 9999; bugfix on 0.3.3.3-alpha."
  428. One space after a period.
  429. Make stuff very terse
  430. Make sure each section name ends with a colon
  431. Describe the user-visible problem right away
  432. Mention relevant config options by name. If they're rare or unusual,
  433. remind people what they're for
  434. Avoid starting lines with open-paren
  435. Present and imperative tense: not past.
  436. 'Relays', not 'servers' or 'nodes' or 'Tor relays'.
  437. "Stop FOOing", not "Fix a bug where we would FOO".
  438. Try not to let any given section be longer than about a page. Break up
  439. long sections into subsections by some sort of common subtopic. This
  440. guideline is especially important when organizing Release Notes for
  441. new stable releases.
  442. If a given changes stanza showed up in a different release (e.g.
  443. maint-0.2.1), be sure to make the stanzas identical (so people can
  444. distinguish if these are the same change).
  445. 2.5) Merge them in.
  446. 2.6) Clean everything one last time.
  447. 2.7) Run ./scripts/maint/format_changelog.py to make it prettier.
  448. 3) Compose a short release blurb to highlight the user-facing
  449. changes. Insert said release blurb into the ChangeLog stanza. If it's
  450. a stable release, add it to the ReleaseNotes file too. If we're adding
  451. to a release-0.2.x branch, manually commit the changelogs to the later
  452. git branches too.
  453. 4) In maint-0.2.x, bump the version number in configure.ac and run
  454. scripts/maint/updateVersions.pl to update version numbers in other
  455. places, and commit. Then merge maint-0.2.x into release-0.2.x.
  456. (NOTE: TO bump the version number, edit configure.ac, and then run
  457. either make, or 'perl scripts/maint/updateVersions.pl', depending on
  458. your version.)
  459. 5) Make dist, put the tarball up somewhere, and tell #tor about it. Wait
  460. a while to see if anybody has problems building it. Try to get Sebastian
  461. or somebody to try building it on Windows.
  462. 6) Get at least two of weasel/arma/sebastian to put the new version number
  463. in their approved versions list.
  464. 7) Sign the tarball, then sign and push the git tag:
  465. gpg -ba <the_tarball>
  466. git tag -u <keyid> tor-0.2.x.y-status
  467. git push origin tag tor-0.2.x.y-status
  468. 8a) scp the tarball and its sig to the dist website, i.e.
  469. /srv/dist-master.torproject.org/htdocs/ on dist-master. When you want
  470. it to go live, you run "static-update-component dist.torproject.org"
  471. on dist-master.
  472. 8b) Edit "include/versions.wmi" and "Makefile" to note the new version.
  473. 9) Email the packagers (cc'ing tor-assistants) that a new tarball is up.
  474. The current list of packagers is:
  475. {weasel,gk,mikeperry} at torproject dot org
  476. {blueness} at gentoo dot org
  477. {paul} at invizbox dot io
  478. {ondrej.mikle} at gmail dot com
  479. {lfleischer} at archlinux dot org
  480. 10) Add the version number to Trac. To do this, go to Trac, log in,
  481. select "Admin" near the top of the screen, then select "Versions" from
  482. the menu on the left. At the right, there will be an "Add version"
  483. box. By convention, we enter the version in the form "Tor:
  484. 0.2.2.23-alpha" (or whatever the version is), and we select the date as
  485. the date in the ChangeLog.
  486. 11) Forward-port the ChangeLog.
  487. 12) Wait up to a day or two (for a development release), or until most
  488. packages are up (for a stable release), and mail the release blurb and
  489. changelog to tor-talk or tor-announce.
  490. (We might be moving to faster announcements, but don't announce until
  491. the website is at least updated.)
  492. 13) If it's a stable release, bump the version number in the maint-x.y.z
  493. branch to "newversion-dev", and do a "merge -s ours" merge to avoid
  494. taking that change into master. Do a similar 'merge -s theirs'
  495. merge to get the change (and only that change) into release. (Some
  496. of the build scripts require that maint merge cleanly into release.)