All of the ports respond on the external IP except for 443 but I can connect via SSL on 9001. I don't understand how ORListenAddress is supposed to work: my bridge times out on 443 but when I comment out the ORListenAddress line it doesn't connect via obfsproxy at all.Please advise.On Thu, Aug 15, 2013 at 1:47 AM, lee colleton <lee@colleton.net> wrote:With the ORListenAddress line uncommented, a slightly different failure results:
Orbot is starting…got tor proc id: 28490
Orbot is starting…
Tor process id=28490Privoxy process id=28508
Connecting to control port: 9051
SUCCESS connected to control port
SUCCESS authenticated to control port
Starting Tor client… complete.
adding control port event handler
SUCCESS added control port event handler
Starting privoxy process
/data/data/org.torproject.android/app_bin/privoxy /data/data/org.torproject.android/app_bin/privoxy.config &
NOTICE: Heartbeat: Tor's uptime is 0:00 hours, with 0 circuits open. I've sent 0 kB and received 0 kB.
Privoxy is running on port:8118
Network connectivity is good. Waking Tor up...
Circuit (1) LAUNCHED:
NOTICE: Bootstrapped 5%: Connecting to directory server.
orConnStatus (173.255.119.202:443): LAUNCHED
NOTICE: Bootstrapped 10%: Finishing handshake with directory server.Circuit (1) FAILED: ONEHOP_TUNNEL > IS_INTERNAL > NEED_CAPACITYNOTICE: Your application (using socks4a to port 443) instructed Tor to take care of the DNS resolution itself if necessary. This is good.NOTICE: Tried for 120 seconds to get a connection to [scrubbed]:443. Giving up. (waiting for circuit)
NOTICE: Your application (using socks4a to port 80) instructed Tor to take care of the DNS resolution itself if necessary. This is good.
NOTICE: Your application (using socks4a to port 443) instructed Tor to take care of the DNS resolution itself if necessary. This is good.
NOTICE: Your application (using socks4a to port 80) instructed Tor to take care of the DNS resolution itself if necessary. This is good.
NOTICE: Your application (using socks4a to port 443) instructed Tor to take care of the DNS resolution itself if necessary. This is good.
NOTICE: Your application (using socks4a to port 80) instructed Tor to take care of the DNS resolution itself if necessary. This is good.
NOTICE: Your application (using socks4a to port 443) instructed Tor to take care of the DNS resolution itself if necessary. This is good.NOTICE: Your application (using socks4a to port 443) instructed Tor to take care of the DNS resolution itself if necessary. This is good.
On Aug 15, 2013 1:41 AM, "lee colleton" <lee@colleton.net> wrote:When I attempt to connect to this bridge, I see a failure in handshaking:
Orbot is starting…
Orbot is starting…
got tor proc id: 27365
Tor process id=27365
Connecting to control port: 9051
SUCCESS connected to control port
SUCCESS authenticated to control port
Starting Tor client… complete.
adding control port event handler
SUCCESS added control port event handler
Starting privoxy process
/data/data/org.torproject.android/app_bin/privoxy /data/data/org.torproject.android/app_bin/privoxy.config &
NOTICE: Heartbeat: Tor's uptime is 0:00 hours, with 0 circuits open. I've sent 0 kB and received 0 kB.
Privoxy is running on port:8118
Privoxy process id=27393
Network connectivity is good. Waking Tor up...
Circuit (1) LAUNCHED:
NOTICE: Bootstrapped 5%: Connecting to directory server.
orConnStatus (173.255.119.202:443): LAUNCHED
NOTICE: Bootstrapped 10%: Finishing handshake with directory server.
NOTICE: We weren't able to find support for all of the TLS ciphersuites that we wanted to advertise. This won't hurt security, but it might make your Tor (if run as a client) more easy for censors to block.
NOTICE: To correct this, use a more recent OpenSSL, built without disabling any secure ciphers or features.
Circuit (1) FAILED: ONEHOP_TUNNEL > IS_INTERNAL > NEED_CAPACITY
orConnStatus (173.255.119.202:443): FAILED
WARN: Problem bootstrapping. Stuck at 10%: Finishing handshake with directory server. (DONE; DONE; count 1; recommendation warn)
WARN: 1 connections have failed:
WARN: 1 connections died in state handshaking (TLS) with SSL state SSLv2/v3 read server hello A in HANDSHAKE
NOTICE: Your application (using socks4a to port 80) instructed Tor to take care of the DNS resolution itself if necessary. This is good.
NOTICE: Your application (using socks4a to port 443) instructed Tor to take care of the DNS resolution itself if necessary. This is good.
NOTICE: Your application (using socks4a to port 80) instructed Tor to take care of the DNS resolution itself if necessary. This is good.
On Aug 15, 2013 12:31 AM, "lee colleton" <lee@colleton.net> wrote:When I comment out the ORListenAddress line things look OK.# Listen on a port other than the one advertised in ORPort (that is, # advertise 443 but bind to 9001). #ORListenAddress 0.0.0.0:9001Aug 15 06:52:50.000 [notice] Tor 0.2.4.16-rc (git-dcf6b6d7dda9ffbd) opening log file. Aug 15 06:52:50.000 [notice] We were built to run on a 64-bit CPU, with OpenSSL 1.0.1 or later, but with a version of OpenSSL that apparently lacks accelerated support for the NIST P-224 and P-256 groups. Building openssl with such support (using the enable-ec_nistp_64_gcc_128 option when configuring it) would make ECDH much faster. Aug 15 06:52:50.000 [notice] Your Tor server's identity key fingerprint is 'gcedemo 08C752E8E86EB5916574A8625030B0EC204EABB8' Aug 15 06:52:50.000 [notice] Configured hibernation. This interval began at 2013-08-15 00:00:00; the scheduled wake-up time was 2013-08-15 00:00:00; we expect to exhaust our quota for this interval around 2013-08-16 00:00:00; the next interval begins at 2013-08-16 00:00:00 (all times local) Aug 15 06:52:50.000 [notice] Parsing GEOIP IPv4 file /usr/share/tor/geoip. Aug 15 06:52:50.000 [notice] Parsing GEOIP IPv6 file /usr/share/tor/geoip6. Aug 15 06:52:50.000 [notice] Configured to measure statistics. Look for the *-stats files that will first be written to the data directory in 24 hours from now. Aug 15 06:52:51.000 [notice] We now have enough directory information to build circuits. Aug 15 06:52:51.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 80%: Connecting to the Tor network. Aug 15 06:52:52.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 85%: Finishing handshake with first hop. Aug 15 06:52:53.000 [notice] Guessed our IP address as 173.255.119.202 (source: 38.229.70.33). Aug 15 06:52:53.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 90%: Establishing a Tor circuit. Aug 15 06:52:53.000 [notice] Registered server transport 'obfs3' at '0.0.0.0:40872' Aug 15 06:52:53.000 [notice] Registered server transport 'obfs2' at '0.0.0.0:52176' Aug 15 06:52:55.000 [notice] Tor has successfully opened a circuit. Looks like client functionality is working. Aug 15 06:52:55.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 100%: Done. Aug 15 06:52:55.000 [notice] Now checking whether ORPort 173.255.119.202:443 is reachable... (this may take up to 20 minutes -- look for log messages indicating success) Aug 15 06:53:04.000 [notice] New control connection opened. Aug 15 07:10:11.000 [notice] Self-testing indicates your ORPort is reachable from the outside. Excellent. Publishing server descriptor.On Wed, Aug 14, 2013 at 9:53 PM, lee colleton <lee@colleton.net> wrote:
Yes, I've opened the ports in the Google Compute Engine (see below). I'll follow up on their forum to make sure I've altered the firewall properly.--leelee@li388-156:~$ gcutil --service_version="v1beta15" --project="colleton.net:tor-cloud" listfirewalls +------------------------+---------------------------------------+---------+------------+-------------+-------------+ | name | description | network | source-ips | source-tags | target-tags | +------------------------+---------------------------------------+---------+------------+-------------+-------------+ | default-allow-internal | Internal traffic from default allowed | default | 10.0.0.0/8 | | | | default-ssh | SSH allowed from anywhere | default | 0.0.0.0/0 | | | | tor-obfsproxy | | default | 0.0.0.0/0 | | obfsproxy | +------------------------+---------------------------------------+---------+------------+-------------+-------------+ lee@li388-156:~$ gcutil --service_version="v1beta15" --project="colleton.net:tor-cloud" getfirewall tor-obfsproxy +---------------+-------------------------------+ | property | value | +---------------+-------------------------------+ | name | tor-obfsproxy | | description | | | creation-time | 2013-08-07T18:37:35.986-07:00 | | network | default | | source-ips | 0.0.0.0/0 | | source-tags | | | target-tags | obfsproxy | | allowed | tcp: 443, 9001, 40872, 52176 | +---------------+-------------------------------+ lee@li388-156:~$On Wed, Aug 14, 2013 at 9:19 PM, Roger Dingledine <arma@mit.edu> wrote:
On Wed, Aug 14, 2013 at 09:08:03AM -0700, lee colleton wrote:Well, that's because it's unreachable. (I just tried.)
> There's a more serious issue in that my server doesn't appear to be
> reachable. I've opened tcp:443,9001 along with the two specifiedobfsproxy
> ports
>
> Aug 14 15:26:58.000 [notice] Bootstrapped 100%: Done.
> Aug 14 15:26:58.000 [notice] Now checking whether ORPort
> 173.255.119.202:443 is reachable... (this may take up to 20 minutes --
> look for log messages indicating success)
> Aug 14 15:28:00.000 [notice] New control connection opened.
> Aug 14 15:46:56.000 [warn] Your server (173.255.119.202:443) has not
> managed to confirm that its ORPort is reachable. Please check your
> firewalls, ports, address, /etc/hosts file, etc.
Can you try following the suggestion in the log message?
--Roger
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