[or-cvs] [tor/master] Proposal 165: Easy migration for voting authority sets.

Nick Mathewson nickm at seul.org
Thu May 28 16:49:44 UTC 2009


Author: Nick Mathewson <nickm at torproject.org>
Date: Thu, 28 May 2009 12:48:38 -0400
Subject: Proposal 165: Easy migration for voting authority sets.
Commit: 2c8b56c029988adf65c38fc34fdba6d91cd0608c

This proposal tries to do what 134 tried to do, but more securely and
with less whiz-bang NP-hard computation.  Peter had the basic idea.
---
 doc/spec/proposals/000-index.txt                |    2 +
 doc/spec/proposals/165-simple-robust-voting.txt |  119 +++++++++++++++++++++++
 2 files changed, 121 insertions(+), 0 deletions(-)
 create mode 100644 doc/spec/proposals/165-simple-robust-voting.txt

diff --git a/doc/spec/proposals/000-index.txt b/doc/spec/proposals/000-index.txt
index b2907e0..b26f382 100644
--- a/doc/spec/proposals/000-index.txt
+++ b/doc/spec/proposals/000-index.txt
@@ -85,6 +85,7 @@ Proposals by number:
 162  Publish the consensus in multiple flavors [OPEN]
 163  Detecting whether a connection comes from a client [OPEN]
 164  Reporting the status of server votes [OPEN]
+165  Easy migration for voting authority sets [OPEN]
 
 
 Proposals by status:
@@ -111,6 +112,7 @@ Proposals by status:
    162  Publish the consensus in multiple flavors [for 0.2.2]
    163  Detecting whether a connection comes from a client [for 0.2.2]
    164  Reporting the status of server votes [for 0.2.2]
+   165  Easy migration for voting authority sets
  ACCEPTED:
    110  Avoiding infinite length circuits [for 0.2.1.x] [in 0.2.1.3-alpha]
    117  IPv6 exits [for 0.2.1.x]
diff --git a/doc/spec/proposals/165-simple-robust-voting.txt b/doc/spec/proposals/165-simple-robust-voting.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d8993c9
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/spec/proposals/165-simple-robust-voting.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,119 @@
+Filename: 165-simple-robust-voting.txt
+Title: Easy migration for voting authority sets
+Author: Nick Mathewson
+Created: 2009-05-28
+Status: Open
+
+Overview:
+
+  This proposal describes any easy-to-implement, easy-to-verify way to
+  change the set of authorities without creating a "flag day" situation.
+
+Motivation:
+
+  From proposal 134 ("More robust consensus voting with diverse
+  authority sets") by Peter Palfrader:
+
+      Right now there are about five authoritative directory servers
+      in the Tor network, tho this number is expected to rise to about
+      15 eventually.
+
+      Adding a new authority requires synchronized action from all
+      operators of directory authorities so that at any time during the
+      update at least half of all authorities are running and agree on
+      who is an authority.  The latter requirement is there so that the
+      authorities can arrive at a common consensus: Each authority
+      builds the consensus based on the votes from all authorities it
+      recognizes, and so a different set of recognized authorities will
+      lead to a different consensus document.
+
+  In response to this problem, proposal 134 suggested that every
+  candidate authority list in its vote whom it believes to be an
+  authority.  These A-says-B-is-an-authority relationships form a
+  directed graph.  Each authority then iteratively finds the largest
+  clique in the graph and remove it, until they find one containing
+  them.  They vote with this clique.
+
+  Proposal 134 had some problems:
+
+    - It had a security problem in that M hostile authorities in a
+      clique could effectively kick out M-1 honest authorities.  This
+      could enable a minority of the original authorities to take over.
+
+    - It was too complex in its implications to analyze well: it took us
+      over a year to realize that it was insecure.
+
+    - It tried to solve a bigger problem: general fragmentation of
+      authority trust.  Really, all we wanted to have was the ability to
+      add and remove authorities without forcing a flag day.
+
+Proposed protocol design:
+
+   A "Voting Set" is a set of authorities.  Each authority has a list of
+   the voting sets it considers acceptable.  These sets must always
+   contain the authority itself.  Each authority lists all of these
+   voting sets in its votes.
+
+   Authorities exchange votes with every other authority in any of their
+   voting sets.
+
+   When it comes time to calculate a consensus, an authority votes with
+   whichever voting set it lists that is listed by the most members of
+   that set.
+
+   For example, suppose authority A recognizes two sets, "A B C D" and
+   "A E F G H".  Suppose that the first set is recognized by all of A,
+   B, C, and D, whereas the second set is recognized only by A, E, and
+   F.  Because the first set is recognize by more of the authorities in
+   it than the other one, A will vote with the first set.
+
+   Ties are broken in favor of some arbitrary function of the identity
+   keys of the authorities in the set.
+
+How to migrate authority sets:
+
+   In steady state, each authority should list only the current actual
+   voting set as accepted.
+
+   When we want to add an authority, we list two voting sets: one
+   containing all the old authorities, and one containing the old
+   authorities and the new authority too.  Once all authorities are
+   listing the new set of authorities, they will start preferring that
+   set because of its size.
+
+   When we want to remove an authority, we list two voting sets: one
+   containing all the authorities, and one omitting the authority we
+   want to remove.  Once enough authorities list the new set as
+   acceptable, we start having authorities stop listing the old set.
+   Once there are more listing the new set than the old set, the new set
+   will win.
+
+Data format changes:
+
+   Add a new 'voting-set' line to the vote document format.  Allow it to
+   occur any number of times.  Its format is:
+
+      voting-set SP 'fingerprint' SP 'fingerprint' ... NL
+
+   where each fingerprint is the hex fingerprint of an identity key of
+   an authority.  Sort fingerprints in ascending order.
+
+   When the consensus method is at least 'X' (decide this when we
+   implement the proposal), add this line to the consensus format as
+   well, before the first dir-source line.  [This information is not
+   redundant with the dir-source sections in the consensus: If an
+   authority is recognized didn't vote, that authority will appear in
+   the voting-set line but not in the dir-source sections.]
+
+   We don't need to list other information about authorities in our
+   vote.
+
+Migration issues:
+
+   We should keep track somewhere of which Tor client versions
+   recognized which authorities.
+
+Acknowledgments:
+
+   The design came out of an IRC conversation with Peter Palfrader.  He
+   had the basic idea first.
-- 
1.5.6.5



More information about the tor-commits mailing list