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[tor-dev] Walking onions specifications: Project wrap-up
On a grant from the zcash foundation, I've been working on a
full specification for the Walking Onions design. This is the last update
for the spec project.
My previous updates are linked below:
Week 1:
formats, preliminaries, git repositories, binary diffs,
metaformat decisions, and Merkle Tree trickery.
https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-dev/2020-March/014178.html
Week 2:
Specifying details of SNIP and ENDIVE formats, in CDDL.
https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-dev/2020-March/014181.html
Week 3:
Expanding ENDIVEs into SNIPs.
https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-dev/2020-March/014194.html
Week 4:
Voting (part 1) and extending circuits.
https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-dev/2020-March/014207.html
Week 5:
Voting (part 2)
https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-dev/2020-April/014218.html
Week 6:
Editing, voting rules, and client behavior (part 1)
https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-dev/2020-April/014222.html
Week 7:
Exit policies: How do they work?
https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-dev/2020-April/014232.html
Week 8:
Onion services, relay honesty, migration and families
https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-dev/2020-April/014255.html
Week 9:
(There was no week 9)
Week 10:
Pushing towards completion
https://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-dev/2020-May/014281.html
== Since the last update
The last couple weeks of the walking onions project were mostly the
"fiddly bits" left over from previous work. I had to edit for
consistency and clarity, move text around, add specifications for
missing details, and so on. There were parts of the voting design
that didn't actually work as written, and needed to get tweaked
around.
Index voting was tricky for a few reasons: notably, index weights
are a complex function of bandwidths, which themselves are voted on.
I had hoped that we could move the algorithms we use for weighting
out of the consensus algorithm and into the authorities, but for
now, I think we're stuck with having them as yet another thing
authorities need to implement identically. At least the new consensus
system itself is extensible, so we have a clear path forward to a
better consensus approach for indices (if we ever figure one out).
I also needed to figure out handling for VoterCerts: I had done the
first version of the spec for how they should appear in parameters
documents before I actually figured out how voting would work, and
the two approaches weren't compatible. This took some revision, but
I think it should work out now.
Similarly, I had known that we'd need to use the "detached
signatures" mechanism from the existing consensus protocol, but the
Walking Onions spec didn't actually allow for this. Fortunately,
this was an easy chance to make.
And overall, I went through a pretty large number of places in the
document where there were "XXXX" comments indicating things I had to
come back to later.
With that, the first version Walking Onions proposal was ready to go
out as [PROP323]. You can see a rendered version of it over at
[PROP323-RENDERED], though there will be a better URL for that in
the future.
I also put out the remaining side related proposals ([PROP321] for
families, and [PROP322] for link specifiers for directory ports).
== Project recap
When I first described Walking Onions [PROP300], I had only the
general outlines of a design for a more efficient Tor network: a
couple of tricks to allow clients to continue building secure paths
through the network without having to know a list of relays on the
network. But I had known there would be remaining problems to
solve, and listed them in that proposal.
Thanks to this grant, I've been able to flesh out Walking Onions to
a specified design that I think we could actually build. In doing
so, I ran into the typical specification curse, where each change
led to a need for other changes. Notably:
* The need for a new kind of directory-like structure led to the
need for a more flexible and parsable metadocument format, and a
more generic voting algorithm for authorities.
* When designing the new meta-format, I found a better approach
for handling expiration and clock synchronization between
clients and relays that should allow us to be a little more lax
with skew, while better resisting attacks based on serving
obsolete information.
* The search for a reasonable solution to exit policies led to
a hybrid extraction/designed approach for clustering exit ports
by their correlatedness, then designing exit policies around
semantic similarity in port types.
* When enumerating the various ways that clients need to be able
to request SNIPs and circuits, I found a need for a span-based
SNIP query request, which I hadn't previously known that we'd
need. This simplifies some of our logic.
* (and more; please see previous updates.)
The resulting documents (proposals 318 through 323) are not final: I
believe that as we continue to discuss them, and eventually implement
them, we'll find further opportunities for improvement--and for fixing
things that I missed when I was designing and writing all of this. But
I think we've got a much firmer grasp of this project now.
I think there are parts that we could in principle start building
now: the preliminary proposals 318 (limiting protocol versions), 319
(cell fragmentation) and 321 (improved family handling) are high on
my list for now, if we get time.
And now the design iteration begins!
[PROP300] https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git/plain/proposals/300-walking-onions.txt
[PROP321] https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git/plain/proposals/321-happy-families.md
[PROP322] https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git/plain/proposals/322-dirport-linkspec.md
[PROP323] https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git/plain/proposals/323-walking-onions-full.md
[PROP323-RENDERED] https://people.torproject.org/~nickm/volatile/rendered.html
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