| 12345678910111213141516171819202122232425262728293031323334353637383940414243444546474849505152535455565758 | Filename: 147-prevoting-opinions.txtTitle: Eliminate the need for v2 directories in generating v3 directoriesAuthor: Nick MathewsonCreated: 2-Jul-2008Status: AcceptedTarget: 0.2.1.xOverview  We propose a new v3 vote document type to replace the role of v2  networkstatus information in generating v3 consensuses.Motivation  When authorities vote on which descriptors are to be listed in the  next consensus, it helps if they all know about the same descriptors  as one another.  But a hostile, confused, or out-of-date server may  upload a descriptor to only some authorities.  In the current v3  directory design, the authorities don't have a good way to tell one  another about the new descriptor until they exchange votes... but by  the time this happens, they are already committed to their votes,  and they can't add anybody they learn about from other authorities  until the next voting cycle.  That's no good!  The current Tor implementation avoids this problem by having  authorities also look at v2 networkstatus documents, but we'd like  in the long term to eliminate these, once 0.1.2.x is obsolete.Design:  We add a new value for vote-status in v3 consensus documents in  addition to "consensus" and "vote": "opinion".  Authorities generate  and sign an opinion document as if they were generating a vote,  except that they generate opinions earlier than they generate votes.  Authorities don't need to generate more than one opinion document  per voting interval, but may.  They should send it to the other  authorities they know about, at the regular vote upload URL, before  the authorities begin voting, so that enough time remains for the  authorities to fetch new descriptors.  Additionally, authories make their opinions available at     http://<hostname>/tor/status-vote/next/opinion.z  and download opinions from authorities they haven't heard from in a  while.  Authorities MAY generate opinions on demand.  Upon receiving an opinion document, authorities scan it for any  descriptors that:     - They might accept.     - Are for routers they don't know about, or are published more       recently than any descriptor they have for that router.  Authorities then begin downloading such descriptors from authorities  that claim to have them.  Authorities MAY cache opinion documents, but don't need to.
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