123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138 |
- Filename: 122-unnamed-flag.txt
- Title: Network status entries need a new Unnamed flag
- Version: $Revision$
- Last-Modified: $Date$
- Author: Roger Dingledine
- Created: 04-Oct-2007
- Status: Closed
- Implemented-In: 0.2.0.x
- 1. Overview:
- Tor's directory authorities can give certain servers a "Named" flag
- in the network-status entry, when they want to bind that nickname to
- that identity key. This allows clients to specify a nickname rather
- than an identity fingerprint and still be certain they're getting the
- "right" server. As dir-spec.txt describes it,
- Name X is bound to identity Y if at least one binding directory lists
- it, and no directory binds X to some other Y'.
- In practice, clients can refer to servers by nickname whether they are
- Named or not; if they refer to nicknames that aren't Named, a complaint
- shows up in the log asking them to use the identity key in the future
- --- but it still works.
- The problem? Imagine a Tor server with nickname Bob. Bob and his
- identity fingerprint are registered in tor26's approved-routers
- file, but none of the other authorities registered him. Imagine
- there are several other unregistered servers also with nickname Bob
- ("the imposters").
- While Bob is online, all is well: a) tor26 gives a Named flag to
- the real one, and refuses to list the other ones; and b) the other
- authorities list the imposters but don't give them a Named flag. Clients
- who have all the network-statuses can compute which one is the real Bob.
- But when the real Bob disappears and his descriptor expires? tor26
- continues to refuse to list any of the imposters, and the other
- authorities continue to list the imposters. Clients don't have any
- idea that there exists a Named Bob, so they can ask for server Bob and
- get one of the imposters. (A warning will also appear in their log,
- but so what.)
- 2. The stopgap solution:
- tor26 should start accepting and listing the imposters, but it should
- assign them a new flag: "Unnamed".
- This would produce three cases in terms of assigning flags in the consensus
- networkstatus:
- i) a router gets the Named flag in the v3 networkstatus if
- a) it's the only router with that nickname that has the Named flag
- out of all the votes, and
- b) no vote lists it as Unnamed
- else,
- ii) a router gets the Unnamed flag if
- a) some vote lists a different router with that nickname as Named, or
- b) at least one vote lists it as Unnamed, or
- c) there are other routers with the same nickname that are Unnamed
- else,
- iii) the router neither gets a Named nor an Unnamed flag.
- (This whole proposal is meant only for v3 dir flags; we shouldn't try
- to backport it to the v2 dir world.)
- Then client behavior is:
- a) If there's a Bob with a Named flag, pick that one.
- else b) If the Bobs don't have the Unnamed flag (notice that they should
- either all have it, or none), pick one of them and warn.
- else c) They all have the Unnamed flag -- no router found.
- 3. Problems not solved by this stopgap:
- 3.1. Naming authorities can go offline.
- If tor26 is the only authority that provides a binding for Bob, when
- tor26 goes offline we're back in our previous situation -- the imposters
- can be referenced with a mere ignorable warning in the client's log.
- If some other authority Names a different Bob, and tor26 goes offline,
- then that other Bob becomes the unique Named Bob.
- So be it. We should try to solve these one day, but there's no clear way
- to do it that doesn't destroy usability in other ways, and if we want
- to get the Unnamed flag into v3 network statuses we should add it soon.
- 3.2. V3 dir spec magnifies brief discrepancies.
- Another point to notice is if tor26 names Bob(1), doesn't know about
- Bob(2), but moria lists Bob(2). Then Bob(2) doesn't get an Unnamed flag
- even if it should (and Bob(1) is not around).
- Right now, in v2 dirs, the case where an authority doesn't know about
- a server but the other authorities do know is rare. That's because
- authorities periodically ask for other networkstatuses and then fetch
- descriptors that are missing.
- With v3, if that window occurs at the wrong time, it is extended for the
- entire period. We could solve this by making the voting more complex,
- but that doesn't seem worth it.
- [3.3. Tor26 is only one tor26.
- We need more naming authorities, possibly with some kind of auto-naming
- feature. This is out-of-scope for this proposal -NM]
- 4. Changes to the v2 directory
- Previously, v2 authorities that had a binding for a server named Bob did
- not list any other server named Bob. This will change too:
- Version 2 authorities will start listing all routers they know about,
- whether they conflict with a name-binding or not: Servers for which
- this authority has a binding will continue to be marked Named,
- additionally all other servers of that nickname will be listed without the
- Named flag (i.e. there will be no Unnamed flag in v2 status documents).
- Clients already should handle having a named Bob alongside unnamed
- Bobs correctly, and having the unnamed Bobs in the status file even
- without the named server is no worse than the current status quo where
- clients learn about those servers from other authorities.
- The benefit of this is that an authority's opinion on a server like
- Guard, Stable, Fast etc. can now be learned by clients even if that
- specific authority has reserved that server's name for somebody else.
- 5. Other benefits:
- This new flag will allow people to operate servers that happen to have
- the same nickname as somebody who registered their server two years ago
- and left soon after. Right now there are dozens of nicknames that are
- registered on all three binding directory authorities, yet haven't been
- running for years. While it's bad that these nicknames are effectively
- blacklisted from the network, the really bad part is that this logic
- is really unintuitive to prospective new server operators.
|