On 6 Dec. 2016, at 08:02, David Goulet dgoulet@ev0ke.net wrote:
On 06 Dec (07:53:16), teor wrote:
On 6 Dec. 2016, at 07:42, David Goulet dgoulet@ev0ke.net wrote:
On 22 Nov (17:36:33), David Goulet wrote:
Hi everyone!
We are soon at the stage of implementing the service part of proposal 224 (next gen. hidden service.). Parent ticket is #20657 but I'll be discussing here ticket #18054.
In a nutshell, we need to figure out the interface for the torrc file[1]. We currently have some options to configure an hidden service and the question is now how do we proceed on using those for next version?
[snip]
(Please read original email for some initial context.)
So over the last week, we've mashed up all the things that were said in this thread, me and asn discussed it with some arma also on the side!
I think the following is the best of all the non ideal solutions we can come up with. Below is a superb ascii timeline of what we plan to do in terms of transition from v2 to v3:
Our dystopian reality of now. (https://youtu.be/NrmMk1Myrxc it's not a Black Mirror SO3 trailer) v | ~Aug '17 ~Dec '17 Unknown date |-----------------|-----------------|----------------|----------> | ^ ^ ^ v3 Network/Code | tor stable release Maturity | with v3 support No more v2 (0.3.1)
Ok, might not be my best ascii art work but I hope it will do. In short:
- With 0.3.1 (scheduled for August 2017, subject to change), we'll have a tor
with v3 support BUT v2 will still be the default value for *new* HS. (HiddenServiceVersion option)
- For a period of ~4 months we estimate, we'll hope that enough of the network
has upgraded to support v3 (relay and HSDir support are in 030) and that the code as some sort of maturity that we are confident to switch and make all new HS be v3. This is the "v3 Network/Code Maturity" marker. Note that it could easily go to 2018 for this switch to happen.
- When the switch happens, there will be, most likely years, a long period of
time where v2 will be deprecated and warnings given to users but still used. That "Unknown date" will be the time we will release a tor stable version _without_ v2 support at all. It's quite unknown when we'll be able to do it. Chances are that we'll rely on our HS statistics and metrics for that.
That being said, here are the conclusions based on this thread and f2f discussion considering the above "procedure":
- When v3 is released in a tor stable version, it will NOT be the default
version for new service, v2 will until maturity.
- HiddenServiceVersion is used to control which version of the service you
want. Starting from the first time v3 is supported, you'll be able to use it but without any guarantee as we'll be entering the "stabilizing period" but it should be usable.
- ADD_ONION "BEST" will map to whatever default value HiddenServiceVersion is
with the tor you have.
- In order to avoid relying on a tor stable version release to switch the
default version from 2 to 3, we'll use a consensus parameter. Meaning that once we set that param. to v3, HiddenServiceVersion default value will be that value unless explicitely defined in torrc. It will also allow us to rollback to v2 if we see a swarm of badness occuring. To be clear, service already v3 will stay v3 but the default version for creation will simply change. ...
This is problematic: we validate and create onion services at torrc load, before loading the consensus.
Do we plan to do it afterwards? That seems like it could be really confusing.
You need a consensus anyway to pick your intro point or HSDir but yes the engineering part here will be that if you ever configured v2 service and you realize it's v3, we'll rollback all the things.
I agree with you that it could be confusing and will require some fun engineering but I think the advantages of having such a thing outweight the engineering effort. Unfun part will be on the user side as they will think their service is ready to start but then will have a warning after consensus download that it's not.
It also means we need to do key creation _after_ consensus download so we don't expose the wrong address to the user.
Fun... Maybe we can do better, not sure :S
I'd much prefer a #define for the default, and we can change it in the next release.
That way, we ensure the code gets proper testing in an alpha series.
T