Thanks a lot Tim.
We've looked into Chutney, but we're looking at building out a whole network for various research purposes (I'm just the grad grunt, whatever research plans they have are above me!) It looks like you're saying that we could use chutney to at least generate all of the base configuration files, is that right?
We've been running into these issues with completely clean installs of CentOS, no new/extraneous services running with single instances of the tor service going at any one time.
Nicholas R. Parker Rochester Institute of Technology 5thYear, BS/MS Computing Security 585-794-0029 / nrp7859@rit.edu dmg9645@rit.edu
On Fri, Apr 8, 2016 at 8:34 PM, Tim Wilson-Brown - teor teor2345@gmail.com wrote:
On 9 Apr 2016, at 04:21, Nicholas R. Parker (RIT Student) <
nrp7859@rit.edu> wrote:
Hi all,
I've got an issue that I'm seeking help with. I'm with a small group out
of RIT that's trying to construct a private TOR network for research purposes, but we've hit a bit of a snag.
I've worked with both liu fengyun's (
http://liufengyun.chaos-lab.com/prog/2015/01/09/private-tor-network.html) and Ritter's write up ( https://ritter.vg/blog-run_your_own_tor_network.html), but when trying to set up authority directories the whole thing really falls apart.
Depending on your research needs, you might find chutney helpful: https://gitweb.torproject.org/chutney.git
chutney configures and launches a tor network on the local machine. It's designed to quickly smoke-test tor's key functionality, so it has a lot of torrc options set that speed things up.
You should be able to get it to run using:
- git clone https://git.torproject.org/chutney.git
- git clone https://git.torproject.org/tor.git
- cd tor
- make test-network-all
You might find this useful to test your code changes, or to give you a set of starting configurations that you can then modify to your own needs (including putting various nodes on different IP addresses).
Trying to edit the torrc file gives errors where it doesn't attempt to
bind to the correct ports and trying to set --dirserver or --datadirectory results in errors that there isn't permission to access /var/lib/tor regardless of the owner of the directory (we've tried leaving it as being owned by _tor, tried changing ownership to root, etc) so we can't get the authority directories off the ground.
At the high level of detail your provided, these sound like typical network daemon configuration issues. Have you tried consulting a network daemon FAQ for your OS?
Typically, ports under 1024 shouldn't be used, because they often require root permissions or OS-specific capabilities. Each tor authority has a configured IP and ports, and these need to be consistent in each authority, relay, and client's torrc. Multiple tor instances on the same machine should not use the same ports - this includes default ports like SOCKSPort. (Set to 0 to disable). Do you have any other services running on these machines? Do you have old tor processes still running?
Typically, network daemons need to be run as the user that owns the directory (or, at the very least, the user needs permission to modify it). Have you tried using a user / permissions FAQ for your OS to help you configure the user and permissions correctly? Tor also has more specific requirements for security reasons, this protects the keys from other users on the system.
It's hard to give more advice without more specific details. If this advice doesn't help, please copy and paste the configuration options you used, and the errors you got, and then tell us what you've tried to do to fix them.
Tim
Tim Wilson-Brown (teor)
teor2345 at gmail dot com PGP 968F094B ricochet:ekmygaiu4rzgsk6n
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