Legend: SPEC!! - Not specified SPEC - Spec not finalized NICK - nick claims ARMA - arma claims - Not done * Top priority . Partially done o Done D Deferred X Abandoned For sometime soon: - Server instructions for OSX and Windows operators. - Audit all changes to bandwidth buckets for integer over/underflow. - whine if your socks port is an open proxy. N - parse routerinfo->contactinfo into a string we can use. - The goal is to log IP and ContactInfo when the dirserver refuses an uploaded descriptor, so we have some idea of who to contact. Refactoring and infrastructure: N . Switch to libevent - Hold-open-until-flushed now works by accident; it should work by design. . The logic for reading from TLS sockets is likely to overrun the bandwidth buckets under heavy load. (Really, the logic was never right in the first place.) Also, we should audit all users of get_pending_bytes(). Security: - Make sure logged info is "safe"ish. Functionality - Tests for new controller features N . NT Service code o Clean up NT service code even more. o Enable it by default. o Make sure it works. . Document it. Documentation r - Correct and clarify the wiki entry on port forwarding. o Document where OSX logs and torrc go. o Document where windows logs and torrc go. - (Make sure they actually go there.) Installers N - Vet all pending installer patches - Win32 installer plus privoxy, sockscap/freecap, etc. - Vet win32 systray helper code N . Make logs go into platform default locations. o OSX - Windows. (?) Correctness - how do ulimits work on win32, anyway? (We should handle WSAENOBUFS as needed, look at the MaxConnections registry entry, look at the MaxUserPort entry, and look at the TcpTimedWaitDelay entry. We may also want to provide a way to set them as needed. See bug 98.) Arguable - Bug: Why do idle cpuworkers sometimes get thought of as busy? - IP-based blacklisting of which servers get recommended by dirservers. N - tor-resolve script should use socks5 to get better error messages. o Script to try pulling bytes through slow-seeming servers so they can notice that they might be fast. N . Reverse DNS o specify - implement r - make min uptime a function of the available choices (say, choose 60th percentile, not 1 day.) r - kill dns workers more slowly r - build testing circuits? going through non-verified nodes? - config option to publish what ports you listen on, beyond ORPort/DirPort N - It would be nice to have a FirewalledIPs thing that works like FirewallPorts. - If we have a trusted directory on port 80, stop falling back to forbidden ports when fascistfirewall blocks all good dirservers. N - Code cleanup - Make configure.in handle cross-compilation - Have NULL_REP_IS_ZERO_BYTES default to 1. - Make with-ssl-dir disable search for ssl. - Efficiency/speed improvements. - Write limiting; configurable token buckets. - Make it harder to circumvent bandwidth caps: look at number of bytes sent across sockets, not number sent inside TLS stream. o Hidden service improvements o Investigate hidden service performance/reliability - Add private:* alias in exit policies to make it easier to ban all the fiddly little 192.168.foo addresses. - controller should have an event to learn about new addressmappings? No Todo: when you connect and get a guy you didn't expect, tell him hey i wasn't expecting you i'm going to go now bye, instead of just hanging up. This lets him know that he's doing something funny. - choose entry node to be one you're already connected to? - Convert man pages to pod, or whatever's right. - support hostnames as well as IPs for authdirservers. - GPSLocation optional config string. - Windows - Make millisecond accuracy work on win32 - IPv6 support - teach connection_ap_handshake_socks_reply() about ipv6 and friends so connection_ap_handshake_socks_resolved() doesn't also need to know about them. - Let more config options (e.g. ORPort) change dynamically. - hidserv offerers shouldn't need to define a SocksPort * figure out what breaks for this, and do it. - Destroy and truncated cells should have reasons. - Packaging - Figure out how to make the rpm not strip the binaries it makes. - Integrate an http proxy into Tor (maybe as a third class of worker process), so we can stop shipping with the beast that is Privoxy. - Implement If-Modified-Since for directories. - Big, incompatible re-architecting and decentralization of directory system. - Only the top of a directory needs to be signed. - Windows - Get a controller to launch tor and keep it on the system tray. For 0.1.1.x: Decentralizing: - self-measurement - remote measurement - you've been running for an hour - it's sufficiently satisfied with its bandwidth - remove approval crap, add blacklisting by IP - gather more permanent dirservers and put their keys into the code - ship with a master key, and implement a way to query dirservers for a blob which is a timestamped signed newest pile of dirservers. put that on disk and use it on startup rather than the built-in default. - threshold belief from clients about up-ness - a way for clients to get fresh enough server descriptors - a way for clients to partition the set of servers in a safe way: so they don't have to learn all of them but so they're not easily partitionable. Tier two: N - Handle rendezvousing with unverified nodes. - Specify: Stick rendezvous point's key in INTRODUCE cell. Bob should _always_ use key from INTRODUCE cell. - Implement. N - IPv6 support (For exit addresses) - Spec issue: if a resolve returns an IP4 and an IP6 address, which to use? - Add to exit policy code - Make tor_gethostbyname into tor_getaddrinfo - Make everything that uses uint32_t as an IP address change to use a generalize address struct. - Change relay cell types to accept new addresses. - Add flag to serverdescs to tell whether IPv6 is supported. - Security fixes - christian grothoff's attack of infinite-length circuit. the solution is to have a separate 'extend-data' cell type which is used for the first N data cells, and only extend-data cells can be extend requests. - Code cleanup o fix router_get_by_* functions so they can get ourselves too ... - and audit everything to make sure rend and intro points are just as likely to be us as not. - tor should be able to have a pool of outgoing IP addresses that it is able to rotate through. (maybe) Packaging, docs, etc: - Exit node caching: tie into squid or other caching web proxy. Deferred until needed: - Do something to prevent spurious EXTEND cells from making middleman nodes connect all over. Rate-limit failed connections, perhaps? - Limit to 2 dir, 2 OR, N SOCKS connections per IP. - Handle full buffers without totally borking * do this eventually, no rush. - Rate-limit OR and directory connections overall and per-IP and maybe per subnet. - DoS protection: TLS puzzles, public key ops, bandwidth exhaustion. - Have clients and dirservers preserve reputation info over reboots. - authdirserver lists you as running iff: - he can connect to you - he has successfully extended to you - you have sufficient mean-time-between-failures * keep doing nothing for now. - Include HTTP status messages in logging (see parse_http_response). Blue sky or deferred indefinitely: - Support egd or other non-OS-integrated strong entropy sources - password protection for on-disk identity key - Possible to get autoconf to easily install things into ~/.tor? - server descriptor declares min log level, clients avoid servers that are too loggy. - put expiry date on onion-key, so people don't keep trying old ones that they could know are expired? - Add a notion of nickname->Pubkey binding that's not 'verification' - Conn key rotation. - Need a relay teardown cell, separate from one-way ends. Big tasks that would demonstrate progress: - Facility to automatically choose long-term helper nodes; perhaps on by default for hidden services. - patch privoxy and socks protocol to pass strings to the browser. - patch tsocks with our current patches + gethostbyname, getpeername, etc. - make freecap (or whichever) do what we want. - scrubbing proxies for protocols other than http. - Find an smtp proxy? . Get socks4a support into Mozilla - figure out enclaves, e.g. so we know what to recommend that people do, and so running a tor server on your website is helpful. - Do enclaves for same IP only. - Resolve first, then if IP is an OR, extend to him first. - implement a trivial fun gui to demonstrate our control interface. ************************ Roadmap for 2004-2005 ********************** Hard problems that need to be solved: - Separating node discovery from routing. - Arranging membership management for independence. Sybil defenses without having a human bottleneck. How to gather random sample of nodes. How to handle nodelist recommendations. Consider incremental switches: a p2p tor with only 50 users has different anonymity properties than one with 10k users, and should be treated differently. - Measuring performance of other nodes. Measuring whether they're up. - Choosing exit node by meta-data, e.g. country. - Incentives to relay; incentives to exit. - Allowing dissidents to relay through Tor clients. - How to intercept, or not need to intercept, dns queries locally. - Improved anonymity: - Experiment with mid-latency systems. How do they impact usability, how do they impact safety? - Understand how powerful fingerprinting attacks are, and experiment with ways to foil them (long-range padding?). - Come up with practical approximations to picking entry and exit in different routing zones. - Find ideal churn rate for helper nodes; how safe is it? - What info squeaks by Privoxy? Are other scrubbers better? - Attacking freenet-gnunet/timing-delay-randomness-arguments. - Is abandoning the circuit the only option when an extend fails, or can we do something without impacting anonymity too much? - Is exiting from the middle of the circuit always a bad idea? Sample Publicity Landmarks: - we have N servers / N users - we have servers at epic and aclu and foo - hidden services are robust and fast - a more decentralized design - tor win32 installer works - win32 tray icon for end-users - tor server works on win32 - win32 service for servers - mac installer works ***************************Future tasks:**************************** Rendezvous and hidden services: make it fast: o preemptively build and start rendezvous circs. o preemptively build n-1 hops of intro circs? o cannibalize general circs? make it reliable: - standby/hotswap/redundant services. - store stuff to disk? dirservers forget service descriptors when they restart; nodes offering hidden services forget their chosen intro points when they restart. make it robust: - auth mechanisms to let midpoint and bob selectively choose connection requests. make it scalable: - robust decentralized storage for hidden service descriptors. make it accessible: - web proxy gateways to let normal people browse hidden services. Tor scalability: Relax clique assumptions. Redesign how directories are handled. - Resolve directory agreement somehow. Find and remove bottlenecks - Address linear searches on e.g. circuit and connection lists. Reputation/memory system, so dirservers can measure people, and so other people can verify their measurements. - Need to measure via relay, so it's not distinguishable. Let dissidents get to Tor servers via Tor users. ("Backbone model") Make it more correct: Handle half-open connections: right now we don't support all TCP streams, at least according to the protocol. But we handle all that we've seen in the wild. Support IPv6. Efficiency/speed/robustness: Congestion control. Is our current design sufficient once we have heavy use? Need to measure and tweak, or maybe overhaul. Allow small cells and large cells on the same network? Cell buffering and resending. This will allow us to handle broken circuits as long as the endpoints don't break, plus will allow connection (tls session key) rotation. Implement Morphmix, so we can compare its behavior, complexity, etc. Use cpuworker for more heavy lifting. - Signing (and verifying) hidserv descriptors - Signing (and verifying) intro/rend requests - Signing (and verifying) router descriptors - Signing (and verifying) directories - Doing TLS handshake (this is very hard to separate out, though) Buffer size pool: allocate a maximum size for all buffers, not a maximum size for each buffer. So we don't have to give up as quickly (and kill the thickpipe!) when there's congestion. Other transport. HTTP, udp, rdp, airhook, etc. May have to do our own link crypto, unless we can bully openssl into it.