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[or-cvs] r13684: more details on 'everybody can be a relay' (tor/trunk/doc/design-paper)



Author: arma
Date: 2008-02-22 19:50:45 -0500 (Fri, 22 Feb 2008)
New Revision: 13684

Modified:
   tor/trunk/doc/design-paper/roadmap-future.pdf
   tor/trunk/doc/design-paper/roadmap-future.tex
   tor/trunk/doc/design-paper/tor-design.bib
Log:
more details on 'everybody can be a relay'


Modified: tor/trunk/doc/design-paper/roadmap-future.pdf
===================================================================
(Binary files differ)

Modified: tor/trunk/doc/design-paper/roadmap-future.tex
===================================================================
--- tor/trunk/doc/design-paper/roadmap-future.tex	2008-02-22 23:20:28 UTC (rev 13683)
+++ tor/trunk/doc/design-paper/roadmap-future.tex	2008-02-23 00:50:45 UTC (rev 13684)
@@ -17,6 +17,7 @@
 
 \title{Tor Development Roadmap: Wishlist for 2008 and beyond}
 \author{Roger Dingledine \and Nick Mathewson}
+\date{}
 
 \maketitle
 \pagestyle{plain}
@@ -138,11 +139,58 @@
 this leaks information to an active attacker about when local traffic
 was sent/received.
 
-\subsection{Tolerate absurdly wrong clocks, even for servers}
+\subsection{Tolerate absurdly wrong clocks, even for relays}
+
+Many of our users are on Windows, running with a clock several days or
+even several years off from reality. Some of them are even intentionally
+in this state so they can run software that will only run in the past.
+
+Before Tor 0.1.1.x, Tor clients would still function if their clock was
+wildly off --- they simply got a copy of the directory and believed it.
+Starting in Tor 0.1.2.x, the clients only believed networkstatus documents
+that they believed to be recent, so clients with extremely wrong clocks
+stopped working. (This bug has been an unending source of vague and
+confusing bug reports.)
+
+Step one is for clients to recognize when all the directory material
+they're fetching has roughly the same offset from their current time,
+and then automatically correct for it.
+
+Once that's working well, clients who opt to become bridge relays should
+be able to use the same approach to serve accurate directory information
+to their bridge users.
+
+\subsection{Risks from being a relay}
+
+Three different research
+papers~\cite{back01,clog-the-queue,attack-tor-oak05} describe ways to
+identify the nodes in a circuit by running traffic through candidate nodes
+and looking for dips in the traffic while the circuit is active. These
+clogging attacks are not that scary in the Tor context so long as relays
+are never clients too. But if we're trying to encourage more clients to
+turn on relay functionality too (whether as bridge relays or as normal
+relays), then we need to understand this threat better and learn how to
+mitigate it.
+
+One promising research direction is to investigate the RelayBandwidthRate
+feature that lets Tor rate limit relayed traffic differently from local
+traffic. Since the attacker's ``clogging'' traffic is not in the same
+bandwidth class as the traffic initiated by the user, it may be harder
+to detect interference. Or it may not be.
+
 \subsection{First a bridge, then a public relay?}
-Metrics for deciding when you're fast enough and stable enough
-      to opt to switch from being a bridge relay to a public relay.
-\subsection{Risks from being a relay}
+
+Once enough of the items in this section are done, I want all clients
+to start out automatically detecting their reachability and opting
+to be bridge relays.
+
+Then if they realize they have enough consistency and bandwidth, they
+should automatically upgrade to being non-exit relays.
+
+What metrics should we use for deciding when we're fast enough
+and stable enough to switch? Given that the list of bridge relays needs
+to be kept secret, it doesn't make much sense to switch back.
+
 \section{Tor on low resources / slow links}
 \subsection{Reducing directory fetches further}
 \label{subsec:fewer-descriptor-fetches}

Modified: tor/trunk/doc/design-paper/tor-design.bib
===================================================================
--- tor/trunk/doc/design-paper/tor-design.bib	2008-02-22 23:20:28 UTC (rev 13683)
+++ tor/trunk/doc/design-paper/tor-design.bib	2008-02-23 00:50:45 UTC (rev 13684)
@@ -1435,6 +1435,14 @@
   publisher = {Springer-Verlag, LNCS 2578},
 }
 
+@inproceedings{clog-the-queue,
+  title = {Don't Clog the Queue: Circuit Clogging and Mitigation in {P2P} anonymity schemes},
+  author = {Jon McLachlan and Nicholas Hopper},
+  booktitle = {Proceedings of Financial Cryptography (FC '08)},
+  year = {2008},
+  month = {January},
+}
+
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