In VSCode, the staticcheck tool emits this warning:
> should call wg.Add(1) before starting the goroutine to
> avoid a race (SA2000)go-staticcheck
To avoid this warning, just move wg.Add outside.
Send the client poll request and response in a json-encoded format in
the HTTP request body rather than sending the data in HTTP headers. This
will pave the way for using domain-fronting alternatives for the
Snowflake rendezvous.
Make a stack of cleanup functions to run (as with defer), but clear the
stack before returning if no error occurs.
Uselessly pushing the stream.Close() cleanup just before clearing the
stack is an intentional safeguard, for in case additional operations are
added before the return in the future.
Fixes#40042.
This update required two main changes to how we use the library. First,
we had to make sure we created the datachannel on the offering peer side
before creating the offer. Second, we had to make sure we wait for the
gathering of all candidates to complete since trickle-ice is enabled by
default. See the release notes for more details:
https://github.com/pion/webrtc/wiki/Release-WebRTC@v3.0.0.
Run the snowflake collection ReconnectTimeout timer in parallel to the
negotiation with the broker. This way, if the broker takes a long time
to respond the client doesn't have to wait the full timeout to respond.
Normally all dangling goroutines are terminated when the main function
exits. However, for projects that use a patched version of snowflake as
a library, these goroutines continued running as long as the main function
had not yet terminated. This commit has all open SOCKS connections close
after receiving a shutdown signal.
Each SOCKS connection has its own set of snowflakes and broker poll
loop. Since the session manager was tied to a single set of snowflakes,
this resulted in a bug where RedialPacketConn would sometimes try to
pull snowflakes from a previously melted pool. The fix is to maintain
separate smux sessions for each SOCKS connection, tied to its own
snowflake pool.
Instead of continuously polling the broker until the client receives a
snowflake, fail back to the Connect() loop and try again to collect more
peers after ReconnectTimeout.
This fixes a race condition in which snowflakes.End() is called while
snowflakes.Collect() is in progress resulting in a write to a closed
channel. We now wait for all in-progress collections to finish and add
an extra check before proceeding with a collection.
Bug #21314: maintains a separate snowflake connect loop per SOCKS
connection. This way, if Tor decides to stop using Snowflake, Snowflake
will stop using the client's network.
The client and proxy use the net/http default transport to make round
trip connecitons to the broker. These by default don't time out and can
wait indefinitely for the broker to respond if the broker hangs and
doesn't terminate the connection.
Snowflake clients will now attempt NAT discovery using the provided STUN
servers and report their NAT type to the Snowflake broker for matching.
The three possibilities for NAT types are:
- unknown (the client was unable to determine their NAT type),
- restricted (the client has a restrictive NAT and can only be paired
with unrestricted NATs)
- unrestricted (the client can be paired with any other NAT).
The underlying smux layer sends a keep-alive ping every 10 seconds. This
modification will allow for one dropped/delayed ping before discarding
the snowflake
It was sticking out in the context of other log messages.
2020/04/30 22:39:10 WebRTC: DataChannel created.
2020/04/30 22:39:20 establishDataChannel: timeout waiting for DataChannel.OnOpen
2020/04/30 22:39:20 WebRTC: closing PeerConnection
2020/04/30 22:39:20 WebRTC: Closing
2020/04/30 22:39:20 WebRTC: WebRTC: Could not establish DataChannel Retrying in 10s...
Now callers cannot call Write without there being a DataChannel to write
to. This lets us remove the internal buffer and checks for transport ==
nil.
Don't set internal fields like writePipe, transport, and pc to nil when
closing; just close them and let them return errors if further calls are
made on them.
There's now a constant DataChannelTimeout that's separate from
SnowflakeTimeout (the latter is what checkForStaleness uses). Now we can
set DataChannel timeout to a lower value, to quickly dispose of
unconnectable proxies, while still keeping the threshold for detecting
the failure of a once-working proxy at 30 seconds.
https://bugs.torproject.org/33897
Formerly, preparePeerConnection set up a callback that sent into a
channel, and exchangeSDP waited until it could receive from the channel.
We can move the channel entirely into preparePeerConnection (having it
not return until the callback has been called) and that way remove some
shared state.
Do it as a side effect of NewWebRTCPeer.
Remove WebRTCPeer tests as they currently require invasively modifying
internal fields at different stages of construction.
The other interfaces in client/lib/interfaces.go exist for the purpose
of running tests, but not Snowflake. Existing code would not have worked
with other types anyway, because it does unchecked .(*WebRTCPeer)
conversions.
A short write will result in a non-nil error. It's an io.PipeWriter
anyway, which blocks until all the data has been read or the read end is
closed, in which case it returns io.ErrClosedPipe if not some other
error.
This allows multiple SOCKS connections to share the available proxies,
and in particular prevents a SOCKS connection from being starved of a
proxy when the maximum proxy capacity is less then the number of the
number of SOCKS connections.
This is option 4 from https://bugs.torproject.org/33519.
The client opts into turbotunnel mode by sending a magic token at the
beginning of each WebSocket connection (before sending even the
ClientID). The token is just a random byte string I generated. The
server peeks at the token and, if it matches, uses turbotunnel mode.
Otherwise, it unreads the token and continues in the old
one-session-per-WebSocket mode.
Formerly we waiting until *both* directions finished. What this meant in
practice is that when the remote connection ended, copyLoop would become
useless but would continue blocking its caller until something else
finally closed the socks connection.