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[or-cvs] r13154: explain a bit about router descriptor purposes (tor/trunk/doc/spec)
Author: arma
Date: 2008-01-17 00:47:44 -0500 (Thu, 17 Jan 2008)
New Revision: 13154
Modified:
tor/trunk/doc/spec/control-spec.txt
tor/trunk/doc/spec/path-spec.txt
Log:
explain a bit about router descriptor purposes
Modified: tor/trunk/doc/spec/control-spec.txt
===================================================================
--- tor/trunk/doc/spec/control-spec.txt 2008-01-17 05:25:21 UTC (rev 13153)
+++ tor/trunk/doc/spec/control-spec.txt 2008-01-17 05:47:44 UTC (rev 13154)
@@ -654,8 +654,8 @@
CRLF Descriptor CRLF "." CRLF
This message informs the server about a new descriptor. If Purpose is
- specified, it must be either "general" or "controller", else we
- return a 552 error.
+ specified, it must be either "general", "controller", or "bridge",
+ else we return a 552 error.
If Cache is specified, it must be either "no" or "yes", else we
return a 552 error. If Cache is not specified, Tor will decide for
Modified: tor/trunk/doc/spec/path-spec.txt
===================================================================
--- tor/trunk/doc/spec/path-spec.txt 2008-01-17 05:25:21 UTC (rev 13153)
+++ tor/trunk/doc/spec/path-spec.txt 2008-01-17 05:47:44 UTC (rev 13154)
@@ -182,7 +182,7 @@
proportional to its advertised bandwidth [the smaller of the 'rate' and
'observed' arguments to the "bandwidth" element in its descriptor]. If a
router's advertised bandwidth is greater than MAX_BELIEVABLE_BANDWIDTH
- (10 MB/s), we clip to that value.
+ (currently 10 MB/s), we clip to that value.
For non-exit positions on "fast" circuits, we pick routers as above, but
we weight the clipped advertised bandwidth of Exit-flagged nodes depending
@@ -351,10 +351,25 @@
Tor does not add a guard persistently to the list until the first time we
have connected to it successfully.
+6. Router descriptor purposes
+ There are currently three "purposes" supported for router descriptors:
+ general, controller, and bridge. Most descriptors are of type general
+ -- these are the ones listed in the consensus, and the ones fetched
+ and used in normal cases.
+ Controller-purpose descriptors are those delivered by the controller
+ and labelled as such: they will be kept around (and expire like
+ normal descriptors), and they can be used by the controller in its
+ CIRCUITEXTEND commands. Otherwise they are ignored by Tor when it
+ chooses paths.
+ Bridge-purpose descriptors are for routers that are used as bridges. See
+ doc/design-paper/blocking.pdf for more design explanation, or proposal
+ 125 for specific details. Currently bridge descriptors are used in place
+ of normal entry guards, for Tor clients that have UseBridges enabled.
+
X. Old notes
X.1. Do we actually do this?