3 Tor directory protocol, version 3
5 0. Scope and preliminaries
7 This directory protocol is used by Tor version 0.2.0.x-alpha and later.
8 See dir-spec-v1.txt for information on the protocol used up to the
9 0.1.0.x series, and dir-spec-v2.txt for information on the protocol
10 used by the 0.1.1.x and 0.1.2.x series.
12 Caches and authorities must still support older versions of the
13 directory protocols, until the versions of Tor that require them are
14 finally out of commission. See Section XXXX on backward compatibility.
16 This document merges and supersedes the following proposals:
18 101 Voting on the Tor Directory System
19 103 Splitting identity key from regularly used signing key
20 104 Long and Short Router Descriptors
22 AS OF 14 JUNE 2007, THIS SPECIFICATION HAS NOT YET BEEN COMPLETELY
23 IMPLEMENTED, OR COMPLETELY COMPLETED.
25 XXX when to download certificates.
31 The earliest versions of Onion Routing shipped with a list of known
32 routers and their keys. When the set of routers changed, users needed to
35 The Version 1 Directory protocol
36 --------------------------------
38 Early versions of Tor (0.0.2) introduced "Directory authorities": servers
39 that served signed "directory" documents containing a list of signed
40 "router descriptors", along with short summary of the status of each
41 router. Thus, clients could get up-to-date information on the state of
42 the network automatically, and be certain that the list they were getting
43 was attested by a trusted directory authority.
45 Later versions (0.0.8) added directory caches, which download
46 directories from the authorities and serve them to clients. Non-caches
47 fetch from the caches in preference to fetching from the authorities, thus
48 distributing bandwidth requirements.
50 Also added during the version 1 directory protocol were "router status"
51 documents: short documents that listed only the up/down status of the
52 routers on the network, rather than a complete list of all the
53 descriptors. Clients and caches would fetch these documents far more
54 frequently than they would fetch full directories.
56 The Version 2 Directory Protocol
57 --------------------------------
59 During the Tor 0.1.1.x series, Tor revised its handling of directory
60 documents in order to address two major problems:
62 * Directories had grown quite large (over 1MB), and most directory
63 downloads consisted mainly of router descriptors that clients
66 * Every directory authority was a trust bottleneck: if a single
67 directory authority lied, it could make clients believe for a time
68 an arbitrarily distorted view of the Tor network. (Clients
69 trusted the most recent signed document they downloaded.) Thus,
70 adding more authorities would make the system less secure, not
73 To address these, we extended the directory protocol so that
74 authorities now published signed "network status" documents. Each
75 network status listed, for every router in the network: a hash of its
76 identity key, a hash of its most recent descriptor, and a summary of
77 what the authority believed about its status. Clients would download
78 the authorities' network status documents in turn, and believe
79 statements about routers iff they were attested to by more than half of
82 Instead of downloading all router descriptors at once, clients
83 downloaded only the descriptors that they did not have. Descriptors
84 were indexed by their digests, in order to prevent malicious caches
85 from giving different versions of a router descriptor to different
88 Routers began working harder to upload new descriptors only when their
89 contents were substantially changed.
92 0.2. Goals of the version 3 protocol
94 Version 3 of the Tor directory protocol tries to solve the following
97 * A great deal of bandwidth used to transmit router descriptors was
98 used by two fields that are not actually used by Tor routers
99 (namely read-history and write-history). We save about 60% by
100 moving them into a separate document that most clients do not
103 * It was possible under certain perverse circumstances for clients
104 to download an unusual set of network status documents, thus
105 partitioning themselves from clients who have a more recent and/or
106 typical set of documents. Even under the best of circumstances,
107 clients were sensitive to the ages of the network status documents
108 they downloaded. Therefore, instead of having the clients
109 correlate multiple network status documents, we have the
110 authorities collectively vote on a single consensus network status
113 * The most sensitive data in the entire network (the identity keys
114 of the directory authorities) needed to be stored unencrypted so
115 that the authorities can sign network-status documents on the fly.
116 Now, the authorities' identity keys are stored offline, and used
117 to certify medium-term signing keys that can be rotated.
119 0.3. Some Remaining questions
121 Things we could solve on a v3 timeframe:
123 The SHA-1 hash is showing its age. We should do something about our
124 dependency on it. We could probably future-proof ourselves here in
125 this revision, at least so far as documents from the authorities are
128 Too many things about the authorities are hardcoded by IP.
130 Perhaps we should start accepting longer identity keys for routers
133 Things to solve eventually:
135 Requiring every client to know about every router won't scale forever.
137 Requiring every directory cache to know every router won't scale
143 There is a small set (say, around 5-10) of semi-trusted directory
144 authorities. A default list of authorities is shipped with the Tor
145 software. Users can change this list, but are encouraged not to do so,
146 in order to avoid partitioning attacks.
148 Every authority has a very-secret, long-term "Authority Identity Key".
149 This is stored encrypted and/or offline, and is used to sign "key
150 certificate" documents. Every key certificate contains a medium-term
151 (3-12 months) "authority signing key", that is used by the authority to
152 sign other directory information. (Note that the authority identity
153 key is distinct from the router identity key that the authority uses
154 in its role as an ordinary router.)
156 Routers periodically upload signed "routers descriptors" to the
157 directory authorities describing their keys, capabilities, and other
158 information. Routers may also upload signed "extra info documents"
159 containing information that is not required for the Tor protocol.
160 Directory authorities serve router descriptors indexed by router
161 identity, or by hash of the descriptor.
163 Routers may act as directory caches to reduce load on the directory
164 authorities. They announce this in their descriptors.
166 Periodically, each directory authority generates a view of
167 the current descriptors and status for known routers. They send a
168 signed summary of this view (a "status vote") to the other
169 authorities. The authorities compute the result of this vote, and sign
170 a "consensus status" document containing the result of the vote.
172 Directory caches download, cache, and re-serve consensus documents.
174 Clients, directory caches, and directory authorities all use consensus
175 documents to find out when their list of routers is out-of-date.
176 (Directory authorities also use vote statuses.) If it is, they download
177 any missing router descriptors. Clients download missing descriptors
178 from caches; caches and authorities download from authorities.
179 Descriptors are downloaded by the hash of the descriptor, not by the
180 server's identity key: this prevents servers from attacking clients by
181 giving them descriptors nobody else uses.
183 All directory information is uploaded and downloaded with HTTP.
185 [Authorities also generate and caches also cache documents produced and
186 used by earlier versions of this protocol; see section XXX for notes.]
188 1.1. What's different from version 2?
190 Clients used to download multiple network status documents,
191 corresponding roughly to "status votes" above. They would compute the
192 result of the vote on the client side.
194 Authorities used to sign documents using the same private keys they used
195 for their roles as routers. This forced them to keep these extremely
196 sensitive keys in memory unencrypted.
198 All of the information in extra-info documents used to be kept in the
201 1.2. Document meta-format
203 Router descriptors, directories, and running-routers documents all obey the
204 following lightweight extensible information format.
206 The highest level object is a Document, which consists of one or more
207 Items. Every Item begins with a KeywordLine, followed by zero or more
208 Objects. A KeywordLine begins with a Keyword, optionally followed by
209 whitespace and more non-newline characters, and ends with a newline. A
210 Keyword is a sequence of one or more characters in the set [A-Za-z0-9-].
211 An Object is a block of encoded data in pseudo-Open-PGP-style
212 armor. (cf. RFC 2440)
216 Document ::= (Item | NL)+
217 Item ::= KeywordLine Object*
218 KeywordLine ::= Keyword NL | Keyword WS ArgumentChar+ NL
219 Keyword = KeywordChar+
220 KeywordChar ::= 'A' ... 'Z' | 'a' ... 'z' | '0' ... '9' | '-'
221 ArgumentChar ::= any printing ASCII character except NL.
223 Object ::= BeginLine Base-64-encoded-data EndLine
224 BeginLine ::= "-----BEGIN " Keyword "-----" NL
225 EndLine ::= "-----END " Keyword "-----" NL
227 The BeginLine and EndLine of an Object must use the same keyword.
229 When interpreting a Document, software MUST ignore any KeywordLine that
230 starts with a keyword it doesn't recognize; future implementations MUST NOT
231 require current clients to understand any KeywordLine not currently
234 The "opt" keyword was used until Tor 0.1.2.5-alpha for non-critical future
235 extensions. All implementations MUST ignore any item of the form "opt
236 keyword ....." when they would not recognize "keyword ....."; and MUST
237 treat "opt keyword ....." as synonymous with "keyword ......" when keyword
240 Implementations before 0.1.2.5-alpha rejected any document with a
241 KeywordLine that started with a keyword that they didn't recognize.
242 When generating documents that need to be read by older versions of Tor,
243 implementations MUST prefix items not recognized by older versions of
244 Tor with an "opt" until those versions of Tor are obsolete. [Note that
245 key certificates, status vote documents, extra info documents, and
246 status consensus documents will never be read by older versions of Tor.]
248 Other implementations that want to extend Tor's directory format MAY
249 introduce their own items. The keywords for extension items SHOULD start
250 with the characters "x-" or "X-", to guarantee that they will not conflict
251 with keywords used by future versions of Tor.
253 In our document descriptions below, we tag Items with a multiplicity in
254 brackets. Possible tags are:
256 "At start, exactly once": These items MUST occur in every instance of
257 the document type, and MUST appear exactly once, and MUST be the
258 first item in their documents.
260 "Exactly once": These items MUST occur exactly one time in every
261 instance of the document type.
263 "At end, exactly once": These items MUST occur in every instance of
264 the document type, and MUST appear exactly once, and MUST be the
265 last item in their documents.
267 "At most once": These items MAY occur zero or one times in any
268 instance of the document type, but MUST NOT occur more than once.
270 "Any number": These items MAY occur zero, one, or more times in any
271 instance of the document type.
273 "Once or more": These items MUST occur at least once in any instance
274 of the document type, and MAY occur more.
276 1.3. Signing documents
278 Every signable document below is signed in a similar manner, using a
279 given "Initial Item", a final "Signature Item", a digest algorithm, and
282 The Initial Item must be the first item in the document.
284 The Signature Item has the following format:
286 <signature item keyword> [arguments] NL SIGNATURE NL
288 The "SIGNATURE" Object contains a signature (using the signing key) of
289 the PKCS1-padded digest of the entire document, taken from the
290 beginning of the Initial item, through the newline after the Signature
291 Item's keyword and its arguments.
293 Unless otherwise, the digest algorithm is SHA-1.
295 All documents are invalid unless signed with the correct signing key.
297 The "Digest" of a document, unless stated otherwise, is its digest *as
298 signed by this signature scheme*.
302 Every consensus document has a "valid-after" (VA) time, a "fresh-until"
303 (FU) time and a "valid-until" (VU) time. VA MUST precede FU, which MUST
304 in turn precede VU. Times are chosen so that every consensus will be
305 "fresh" until the next consensus becomes valid, and "valid" for a while
306 after. At least 3 consensuses should be valid at any given time.
308 The timeline for a given consensus is as follows:
310 VA-DistSeconds-VoteSeconds: The authorities exchange votes.
312 VA-DistSeconds-VoteSeconds/2: The authorities try to download any
313 votes they don't have.
315 VA-DistSeconds: The authorities calculate the consensus and exchange
318 VA-DistSeconds/2: The authorities try to download any signatures
321 VA: All authorities have a multiply signed consensus.
323 VA ... FU: Caches download the consensus. (Note that since caches have
324 no way of telling what VA and FU are until they have downloaded
325 the consensus, they assume that the present consensus's VA is
326 equal to the previous one's FU, and that its FU is one interval after
329 FU: The consensus is no longer the freshest consensus.
331 FU ... (the current consensus's VU): Clients download the consensus.
332 (See note above: clients guess that the next consensus's FU will be
333 two intervals after the current VA.)
335 VU: The consensus is no longer valid.
337 VoteSeconds and DistSeconds MUST each be at least 20 seconds; FU-VA and
338 VU-FU MUST each be at least 5 minutes.
340 2. Router operation and formats
342 ORs SHOULD generate a new router descriptor and a new extra-info
343 document whenever any of the following events have occurred:
345 - A period of time (18 hrs by default) has passed since the last
346 time a descriptor was generated.
348 - A descriptor field other than bandwidth or uptime has changed.
350 - Bandwidth has changed by a factor of 2 from the last time a
351 descriptor was generated, and at least a given interval of time
352 (20 mins by default) has passed since then.
354 - Its uptime has been reset (by restarting).
356 [XXX this list is incomplete; see router_differences_are_cosmetic()
357 in routerlist.c for others]
359 ORs SHOULD NOT publish a new router descriptor or extra-info document
360 if none of the above events have occurred and not much time has passed
361 (12 hours by default).
363 After generating a descriptor, ORs upload them to every directory
364 authority they know, by posting them (in order) to the URL
366 http://<hostname:port>/tor/
368 2.1. Router descriptor format
370 Router descriptors consist of the following items. For backward
371 compatibility, there should be an extra NL at the end of each router
374 In lines that take multiple arguments, extra arguments SHOULD be
375 accepted and ignored. Many of the nonterminals below are defined in
378 "router" nickname address ORPort SOCKSPort DirPort NL
380 [At start, exactly once.]
382 Indicates the beginning of a router descriptor. "nickname" must be a
383 valid router nickname as specified in 2.3. "address" must be an IPv4
384 address in dotted-quad format. The last three numbers indicate the
385 TCP ports at which this OR exposes functionality. ORPort is a port at
386 which this OR accepts TLS connections for the main OR protocol;
387 SOCKSPort is deprecated and should always be 0; and DirPort is the
388 port at which this OR accepts directory-related HTTP connections. If
389 any port is not supported, the value 0 is given instead of a port
390 number. (At least one of DirPort and ORPort SHOULD be set;
391 authorities MAY reject any descriptor with both DirPort and ORPort of
394 "bandwidth" bandwidth-avg bandwidth-burst bandwidth-observed NL
398 Estimated bandwidth for this router, in bytes per second. The
399 "average" bandwidth is the volume per second that the OR is willing to
400 sustain over long periods; the "burst" bandwidth is the volume that
401 the OR is willing to sustain in very short intervals. The "observed"
402 value is an estimate of the capacity this server can handle. The
403 server remembers the max bandwidth sustained output over any ten
404 second period in the past day, and another sustained input. The
405 "observed" value is the lesser of these two numbers.
411 A human-readable string describing the system on which this OR is
412 running. This MAY include the operating system, and SHOULD include
413 the name and version of the software implementing the Tor protocol.
415 "published" YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS NL
419 The time, in GMT, when this descriptor (and its corresponding
420 extra-info document if any) was generated.
422 "fingerprint" fingerprint NL
426 A fingerprint (a HASH_LEN-byte of asn1 encoded public key, encoded in
427 hex, with a single space after every 4 characters) for this router's
428 identity key. A descriptor is considered invalid (and MUST be
429 rejected) if the fingerprint line does not match the public key.
431 [We didn't start parsing this line until Tor 0.1.0.6-rc; it should
432 be marked with "opt" until earlier versions of Tor are obsolete.]
434 "hibernating" bool NL
438 If the value is 1, then the Tor server was hibernating when the
439 descriptor was published, and shouldn't be used to build circuits.
441 [We didn't start parsing this line until Tor 0.1.0.6-rc; it should be
442 marked with "opt" until earlier versions of Tor are obsolete.]
448 The number of seconds that this OR process has been running.
450 "onion-key" NL a public key in PEM format
454 This key is used to encrypt EXTEND cells for this OR. The key MUST be
455 accepted for at least 1 week after any new key is published in a
456 subsequent descriptor. It MUST be 1024 bits.
458 "signing-key" NL a public key in PEM format
462 The OR's long-term identity key. It MUST be 1024 bits.
464 "accept" exitpattern NL
465 "reject" exitpattern NL
469 These lines describe an "exit policy": the rules that an OR follows
470 when deciding whether to allow a new stream to a given address. The
471 'exitpattern' syntax is described below. There MUST be at least one
472 such entry. The rules are considered in order; if no rule matches,
473 the address will be accepted. For clarity, the last such entry SHOULD
474 be accept *:* or reject *:*.
476 "router-signature" NL Signature NL
478 [At end, exactly once]
480 The "SIGNATURE" object contains a signature of the PKCS1-padded
481 hash of the entire router descriptor, taken from the beginning of the
482 "router" line, through the newline after the "router-signature" line.
483 The router descriptor is invalid unless the signature is performed
484 with the router's identity key.
490 Describes a way to contact the server's administrator, preferably
491 including an email address and a PGP key fingerprint.
497 'Names' is a space-separated list of server nicknames or
498 hexdigests. If two ORs list one another in their "family" entries,
499 then OPs should treat them as a single OR for the purpose of path
502 For example, if node A's descriptor contains "family B", and node B's
503 descriptor contains "family A", then node A and node B should never
504 be used on the same circuit.
506 "read-history" YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS (NSEC s) NUM,NUM,NUM,NUM,NUM... NL
508 "write-history" YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS (NSEC s) NUM,NUM,NUM,NUM,NUM... NL
511 Declare how much bandwidth the OR has used recently. Usage is divided
512 into intervals of NSEC seconds. The YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS field
513 defines the end of the most recent interval. The numbers are the
514 number of bytes used in the most recent intervals, ordered from
517 [We didn't start parsing these lines until Tor 0.1.0.6-rc; they should
518 be marked with "opt" until earlier versions of Tor are obsolete.]
520 [See also migration notes in section 2.2.1.]
526 Declare whether this version of Tor is using the newer enhanced
527 dns logic. Versions of Tor with this field set to false SHOULD NOT
528 be used for reverse hostname lookups.
530 [All versions of Tor before 0.1.2.2-alpha should be assumed to have
531 this option set to 0 if it is not present. All Tor versions at
532 0.1.2.2-alpha or later should be assumed to have this option set to
533 1 if it is not present. Until 0.1.2.1-alpha-dev, this option was
534 not generated, even when the new DNS code was in use. Versions of Tor
535 before 0.1.2.1-alpha-dev did not parse this option, so it should be
536 marked "opt". The dnsworker logic has been removed, so this option
537 should not be used by new server code. However, it can still be
538 used, and should still be recognized by new code until Tor 0.1.2.x
541 "caches-extra-info" NL
545 Present only if this router is a directory cache that provides
546 extra-info documents.
548 [Versions before 0.2.0.1-alpha don't recognize this, and versions
549 before 0.1.2.5-alpha will reject descriptors containing it unless
550 it is prefixed with "opt"; it should be so prefixed until these
551 versions are obsolete.]
553 "extra-info-digest" digest NL
557 "Digest" is a hex-encoded digest (using upper-case characters) of the
558 router's extra-info document, as signed in the router's extra-info
559 (that is, not including the signature). (If this field is absent, the
560 router is not uploading a corresponding extra-info document.)
562 [Versions before 0.2.0.1-alpha don't recognize this, and versions
563 before 0.1.2.5-alpha will reject descriptors containing it unless
564 it is prefixed with "opt"; it should be so prefixed until these
565 versions are obsolete.]
567 "hidden-service-dir" *(SP VersionNum) NL
571 Present only if this router stores and serves hidden service
572 descriptors. If any VersionNum(s) are specified, this router
573 supports those descriptor versions. If none are specified, it
574 defaults to version 2 descriptors.
576 [Versions of Tor before 0.1.2.5-alpha rejected router descriptors
577 with unrecognized items; the protocols line should be preceded with
578 an "opt" until these Tors are obsolete.]
580 "protocols" SP "Link" SP LINK-VERSION-LIST SP "Circuit" SP
581 CIRCUIT-VERSION-LIST NL
585 Both lists are space-separated sequences of numbers, to indicate which
586 protocols the server supports. As of 30 Mar 2008, specified
587 protocols are "Link 1 2 Circuit 1". See section 4.1 of tor-spec.txt
588 for more information about link protocol versions.
590 [Versions of Tor before 0.1.2.5-alpha rejected router descriptors
591 with unrecognized items; the protocols line should be preceded with
592 an "opt" until these Tors are obsolete.]
594 2.2. Extra-info documents
596 Extra-info documents consist of the following items:
598 "extra-info" Nickname Fingerprint NL
599 [At start, exactly once.]
601 Identifies what router this is an extra info descriptor for.
602 Fingerprint is encoded in hex (using upper-case letters), with
609 The time, in GMT, when this document (and its corresponding router
610 descriptor if any) was generated. It MUST match the published time
611 in the corresponding router descriptor.
613 "read-history" YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS (NSEC s) NUM,NUM,NUM,NUM,NUM... NL
615 "write-history" YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS (NSEC s) NUM,NUM,NUM,NUM,NUM... NL
618 As documented in 2.1 above. See migration notes in section 2.2.1.
620 "geoip-start" YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS NL
621 "geoip-client-origins" CC=N,CC=N,... NL
623 Only generated by bridge routers (see blocking.pdf), and only
624 when they have been configured with a geoip database.
625 Non-bridges SHOULD NOT generate these fields. Contains a list
626 of mappings from two-letter country codes (CC) to the number
627 of clients that have connected to that bridge from that
628 country (approximate, and rounded to the nearest multiple of 8
629 in order to hamper traffic analysis). A country is included
630 only if it has at least 8 addresses, and only if the bridge
631 has seen at least 16 addresses total. The time in
632 "geoip-start" is the time at which we began collecting geoip
635 "router-signature" NL Signature NL
636 [At end, exactly once.]
638 A document signature as documented in section 1.3, using the
639 initial item "extra-info" and the final item "router-signature",
640 signed with the router's identity key.
642 2.2.1. Moving history fields to extra-info documents.
644 Tools that want to use the read-history and write-history values SHOULD
645 download extra-info documents as well as router descriptors. Such
646 tools SHOULD accept history values from both sources; if they appear in
647 both documents, the values in the extra-info documents are authoritative.
649 New versions of Tor no longer generate router descriptors
650 containing read-history or write-history. Tools should continue to
651 accept read-history and write-history values in router descriptors
652 produced by older versions of Tor until all Tor versions earlier
653 than 0.2.0.x are obsolete.
655 2.3. Nonterminals in router descriptors
657 nickname ::= between 1 and 19 alphanumeric characters, case-insensitive.
658 hexdigest ::= a '$', followed by 20 hexadecimal characters.
659 [Represents a server by the digest of its identity key.]
661 exitpattern ::= addrspec ":" portspec
662 portspec ::= "*" | port | port "-" port
663 port ::= an integer between 1 and 65535, inclusive.
665 [Some implementations incorrectly generate ports with value 0.
666 Implementations SHOULD accept this, and SHOULD NOT generate it.
667 Connections to port 0 are never permitted.]
669 addrspec ::= "*" | ip4spec | ip6spec
670 ipv4spec ::= ip4 | ip4 "/" num_ip4_bits | ip4 "/" ip4mask
671 ip4 ::= an IPv4 address in dotted-quad format
672 ip4mask ::= an IPv4 mask in dotted-quad format
673 num_ip4_bits ::= an integer between 0 and 32
674 ip6spec ::= ip6 | ip6 "/" num_ip6_bits
675 ip6 ::= an IPv6 address, surrounded by square brackets.
676 num_ip6_bits ::= an integer between 0 and 128
680 3. Formats produced by directory authorities.
682 Every authority has two keys used in this protocol: a signing key, and
683 an authority identity key. (Authorities also have a router identity
684 key used in their role as a router and by earlier versions of the
685 directory protocol.) The identity key is used from time to time to
686 sign new key certificates using new signing keys; it is very sensitive.
687 The signing key is used to sign key certificates and status documents.
689 There are three kinds of documents generated by directory authorities:
695 Each is discussed below.
697 3.1. Key certificates
699 Key certificates consist of the following items:
701 "dir-key-certificate-version" version NL
703 [At start, exactly once.]
705 Determines the version of the key certificate. MUST be "3" for
706 the protocol described in this document. Implementations MUST
707 reject formats they don't understand.
712 An IP:Port for this authority's directory port.
714 "fingerprint" fingerprint NL
718 Hexadecimal encoding without spaces based on the authority's
721 "dir-identity-key" NL a public key in PEM format
725 The long-term authority identity key for this authority. This key
726 SHOULD be at least 2048 bits long; it MUST NOT be shorter than
729 "dir-key-published" YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS NL
733 The time (in GMT) when this document and corresponding key were
736 "dir-key-expires" YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS NL
740 A time (in GMT) after which this key is no longer valid.
742 "dir-signing-key" NL a key in PEM format
746 The directory server's public signing key. This key MUST be at
747 least 1024 bits, and MAY be longer.
749 "dir-key-certification" NL Signature NL
751 [At end, exactly once.]
753 A document signature as documented in section 1.3, using the
754 initial item "dir-key-certificate-version" and the final item
755 "dir-key-certification", signed with the authority identity key.
757 Authorities MUST generate a new signing key and corresponding
758 certificate before the key expires.
760 3.2. Vote and consensus status documents
762 Votes and consensuses are more strictly formatted then other documents
763 in this specification, since different authorities must be able to
764 generate exactly the same consensus given the same set of votes.
766 The procedure for deciding when to generate vote and consensus status
767 documents are described in section XXX below.
769 Status documents contain a preamble, an authority section, a list of
770 router status entries, and one more footers signature, in that order.
772 Unlike other formats described above, a SP in these documents must be a
773 single space character (hex 20).
775 Some items appear only in votes, and some items appear only in
776 consensuses. Unless specified, items occur in both.
778 The preamble contains the following items. They MUST occur in the
781 "network-status-version" SP version NL.
783 [At start, exactly once.]
785 A document format version. For this specification, the version is
788 "vote-status" SP type NL
792 The status MUST be "vote" or "consensus", depending on the type of
795 "consensus-methods" SP IntegerList NL
797 [Exactly once for votes; does not occur in consensuses.]
799 A space-separated list of supported methods for generating
800 consensuses from votes. See section 3.4.1 for details. Method "1"
803 "consensus-method" SP Integer NL
805 [Exactly once for consensuses; does not occur in votes.]
807 See section 3.4.1 for details.
809 (Only included when the vote is generated with consensus-method 2 or
812 "published" SP YYYY-MM-DD SP HH:MM:SS NL
814 [Exactly once for votes; does not occur in consensuses.]
816 The publication time for this status document (if a vote).
818 "valid-after" SP YYYY-MM-DD SP HH:MM:SS NL
822 The start of the Interval for this vote. Before this time, the
823 consensus document produced from this vote should not be used.
824 See 1.4 for voting timeline information.
826 "fresh-until" SP YYYY-MM-DD SP HH:MM:SS NL
830 The time at which the next consensus should be produced; before this
831 time, there is no point in downloading another consensus, since there
832 won't be a new one. See 1.4 for voting timeline information.
834 "valid-until" SP YYYY-MM-DD SP HH:MM:SS NL
838 The end of the Interval for this vote. After this time, the
839 consensus produced by this vote should not be used. See 1.4 for
840 voting timeline information.
842 "voting-delay" SP VoteSeconds SP DistSeconds NL
846 VoteSeconds is the number of seconds that we will allow to collect
847 votes from all authorities; DistSeconds is the number of seconds
848 we'll allow to collect signatures from all authorities. See 1.4 for
849 voting timeline information.
851 "client-versions" SP VersionList NL
855 A comma-separated list of recommended client versions, in
856 ascending order. If absent, no opinion is held about client
859 "server-versions" SP VersionList NL
863 A comma-separated list of recommended server versions, in
864 ascending order. If absent, no opinion is held about server
867 "known-flags" SP FlagList NL
871 A space-separated list of all of the flags that this document
872 might contain. A flag is "known" either because the authority
873 knows about them and might set them (if in a vote), or because
874 enough votes were counted for the consensus for an authoritative
875 opinion to have been formed about their status.
878 The authority section of a vote contains the following items, followed
879 in turn by the authority's current key certificate:
881 "dir-source" SP nickname SP identity SP address SP IP SP dirport SP
884 [Exactly once, at start]
886 Describes this authority. The nickname is a convenient identifier
887 for the authority. The identity is an uppercase hex fingerprint of
888 the authority's current (v3 authority) identity key. The address is
889 the server's hostname. The IP is the server's current IP address,
890 and dirport is its current directory port. XXXXorport
892 "contact" SP string NL
896 An arbitrary string describing how to contact the directory
897 server's administrator. Administrators should include at least an
898 email address and a PGP fingerprint.
900 The authority section of a consensus contains groups the following items,
901 in the order given, with one group for each authority that contributed to
902 the consensus, with groups sorted by authority identity digest:
904 "dir-source" SP nickname SP identity SP address SP IP SP dirport SP
907 [Exactly once, at start]
909 As in the authority section of a vote.
911 "contact" SP string NL
915 As in the authority section of a vote.
917 "vote-digest" SP digest NL
921 A digest of the vote from the authority that contributed to this
922 consensus, as signed (that is, not including the signature).
925 Each router status entry contains the following items. Router status
926 entries are sorted in ascending order by identity digest.
928 "r" SP nickname SP identity SP digest SP publication SP IP SP ORPort
931 [At start, exactly once.]
933 "Nickname" is the OR's nickname. "Identity" is a hash of its
934 identity key, encoded in base64, with trailing equals sign(s)
935 removed. "Digest" is a hash of its most recent descriptor as
936 signed (that is, not including the signature), encoded in base64 as
937 "identity". "Publication" is the
938 publication time of its most recent descriptor, in the form
939 YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS, in GMT. "IP" is its current IP address;
940 ORPort is its current OR port, "DirPort" is it's current directory
941 port, or "0" for "none".
947 A series of space-separated status flags, in alphabetical order.
948 Currently documented flags are:
950 "Authority" if the router is a directory authority.
951 "BadExit" if the router is believed to be useless as an exit node
952 (because its ISP censors it, because it is behind a restrictive
953 proxy, or for some similar reason).
954 "BadDirectory" if the router is believed to be useless as a
955 directory cache (because its directory port isn't working,
956 its bandwidth is always throttled, or for some similar
958 "Exit" if the router is useful for building general-purpose exit
960 "Fast" if the router is suitable for high-bandwidth circuits.
961 "Guard" if the router is suitable for use as an entry guard.
962 "HSDir" if the router is considered a v2 hidden service directory.
963 "Named" if the router's identity-nickname mapping is canonical,
964 and this authority binds names.
965 "Stable" if the router is suitable for long-lived circuits.
966 "Running" if the router is currently usable.
967 "Valid" if the router has been 'validated'.
968 "V2Dir" if the router implements the v2 directory protocol.
969 "V3Dir" if the router implements this protocol.
975 The version of the Tor protocol that this server is running. If
976 the value begins with "Tor" SP, the rest of the string is a Tor
977 version number, and the protocol is "The Tor protocol as supported
978 by the given version of Tor." Otherwise, if the value begins with
979 some other string, Tor has upgraded to a more sophisticated
980 protocol versioning system, and the protocol is "a version of the
981 Tor protocol more recent than any we recognize."
983 Directory authorities SHOULD omit version strings they receive from
984 descriptors if they would cause "v" lines to be over 128 characters
987 The signature section contains the following item, which appears
988 Exactly Once for a vote, and At Least Once for a consensus.
990 "directory-signature" SP identity SP signing-key-digest NL Signature
992 This is a signature of the status document, with the initial item
993 "network-status-version", and the signature item
994 "directory-signature", using the signing key. (In this case, we take
995 the hash through the _space_ after directory-signature, not the
996 newline: this ensures that all authorities sign the same thing.)
997 "identity" is the hex-encoded digest of the authority identity key of
998 the signing authority, and "signing-key-digest" is the hex-encoded
999 digest of the current authority signing key of the signing authority.
1001 3.3. Deciding how to vote.
1003 (This section describes how directory authorities choose which status
1004 flags to apply to routers, as of Tor 0.2.0.0-alpha-dev. Later directory
1005 authorities MAY do things differently, so long as clients keep working
1006 well. Clients MUST NOT depend on the exact behaviors in this section.)
1008 In the below definitions, a router is considered "active" if it is
1009 running, valid, and not hibernating.
1011 "Valid" -- a router is 'Valid' if it is running a version of Tor not
1012 known to be broken, and the directory authority has not blacklisted
1015 "Named" -- Directory authority administrators may decide to support name
1016 binding. If they do, then they must maintain a file of
1017 nickname-to-identity-key mappings, and try to keep this file consistent
1018 with other directory authorities. If they don't, they act as clients, and
1019 report bindings made by other directory authorities (name X is bound to
1020 identity Y if at least one binding directory lists it, and no directory
1021 binds X to some other Y'.) A router is called 'Named' if the router
1022 believes the given name should be bound to the given key.
1024 Two strategies exist on the current network for deciding on
1025 values for the Named flag. In the original version, server
1026 operators were asked to send nickname-identity pairs to a
1027 mailing list of Naming directory authorities operators. The
1028 operators were then supposed to add the pairs to their
1029 mapping files; in practice, they didn't get to this often.
1031 Newer Naming authorities run a script that registers routers
1032 in their mapping files once the routers have been online at
1033 least two weeks, no other router has that nickname, and no
1034 other router has wanted the nickname for a month. If a router
1035 has not been online for six months, the router is removed.
1037 "Unnamed" -- Directory authorities that support naming should vote for a
1038 router to be 'Unnamed' if its given nickname is mapped to a different
1041 "Running" -- A router is 'Running' if the authority managed to connect to
1042 it successfully within the last 30 minutes.
1044 "Stable" -- A router is 'Stable' if it is active, and either its Weighted
1045 MTBF is at least the median for known active routers or its Weighted MTBF
1046 corresponds to at least 7 days. Routers are never called Stable if they are
1047 running a version of Tor known to drop circuits stupidly. (0.1.1.10-alpha
1048 through 0.1.1.16-rc are stupid this way.)
1050 To calculate weighted MTBF, compute the weighted mean of the lengths
1051 of all intervals when the router was observed to be up, weighting
1052 intervals by $\alpha^n$, where $n$ is the amount of time that has
1053 passed since the interval ended, and $\alpha$ is chosen so that
1054 measurements over approximately one month old no longer influence the
1057 [XXXX what happens when we have less than 4 days of MTBF info.]
1059 "Fast" -- A router is 'Fast' if it is active, and its bandwidth is
1060 either in the top 7/8ths for known active routers or at least 100KB/s.
1062 "Guard" -- A router is a possible 'Guard' if its Weighted Fractional
1063 Uptime is at least the median for "familiar" active routers, and if
1064 its bandwidth is at least median or at least 250KB/s.
1065 If the total bandwidth of active non-BadExit Exit servers is less
1066 than one third of the total bandwidth of all active servers, no Exit is
1069 To calculate weighted fractional uptime, compute the fraction
1070 of time that the router is up in any given day, weighting so that
1071 downtime and uptime in the past counts less.
1073 A node is 'familiar' if 1/8 of all active nodes have appeared more
1074 recently than it, OR it has been around for a few weeks.
1076 "Authority" -- A router is called an 'Authority' if the authority
1077 generating the network-status document believes it is an authority.
1079 "V2Dir" -- A router supports the v2 directory protocol if it has an open
1080 directory port, and it is running a version of the directory protocol that
1081 supports the functionality clients need. (Currently, this is
1082 0.1.1.9-alpha or later.)
1084 "V3Dir" -- A router supports the v3 directory protocol if it has an open
1085 directory port, and it is running a version of the directory protocol that
1086 supports the functionality clients need. (Currently, this is
1087 0.2.0.?????-alpha or later.)
1089 "HSDir" -- A router is a v2 hidden service directory if it stores and
1090 serves v2 hidden service descriptors and the authority managed to connect
1091 to it successfully within the last 24 hours.
1093 Directory server administrators may label some servers or IPs as
1094 blacklisted, and elect not to include them in their network-status lists.
1096 Authorities SHOULD 'disable' any servers in excess of 3 on any single IP.
1097 When there are more than 3 to choose from, authorities should first prefer
1098 authorities to non-authorities, then prefer Running to non-Running, and
1099 then prefer high-bandwidth to low-bandwidth. To 'disable' a server, the
1100 authority *should* advertise it without the Running or Valid flag.
1102 Thus, the network-status vote includes all non-blacklisted,
1103 non-expired, non-superseded descriptors.
1105 3.4. Computing a consensus from a set of votes
1107 Given a set of votes, authorities compute the contents of the consensus
1108 document as follows:
1110 The "valid-after", "valid-until", and "fresh-until" times are taken as
1111 the median of the respective values from all the votes.
1113 The times in the "voting-delay" line are taken as the median of the
1114 VoteSeconds and DistSeconds times in the votes.
1116 Known-flags is the union of all flags known by any voter.
1118 "client-versions" and "server-versions" are sorted in ascending
1119 order; A version is recommended in the consensus if it is recommended
1120 by more than half of the voting authorities that included a
1121 client-versions or server-versions lines in their votes.
1123 The authority item groups (dir-source, contact, fingerprint,
1124 vote-digest) are taken from the votes of the voting
1125 authorities. These groups are sorted by the digests of the
1126 authorities identity keys, in ascending order.
1128 A router status entry:
1129 * is included in the result if some router status entry with the same
1130 identity is included by more than half of the authorities (total
1131 authorities, not just those whose votes we have).
1133 * For any given identity, we include at most one router status entry.
1135 * A router entry has a flag set if that is included by more than half
1136 of the authorities who care about that flag.
1138 * Two router entries are "the same" if they have the same
1139 <descriptor digest, published time, nickname, IP, ports> tuple.
1140 We choose the tuple for a given router as whichever tuple appears
1141 for that router in the most votes. We break ties in favor of
1142 the more recently published.
1144 * The Named flag appears if it is included for this routerstatus by
1145 _any_ authority, and if all authorities that list it list the same
1146 nickname. However, if consensus-method 2 or later is in use, and
1147 any authority calls this identity/nickname pair Unnamed, then
1148 this routerstatus does not get the Named flag.
1150 * If consensus-method 2 or later is in use, the Unnamed flag is
1151 set for a routerstatus if any authorities have voted for a different
1152 identities to be Named with that nickname, or if any authority
1153 lists that nickname/ID pair as Unnamed.
1155 (With consensus-method 1, Unnamed is set like any other flag.)
1157 * The version is given as whichever version is listed by the most
1158 voters, with ties decided in favor of more recent versions.
1160 The signatures at the end of a consensus document are sorted in
1161 ascending order by identity digest.
1163 All ties in computing medians are broken in favor of the smaller or
1166 3.4.1. Forward compatibility
1168 Future versions of Tor will need to include new information in the
1169 consensus documents, but it is important that all authorities (or at least
1170 half) generate and sign the same signed consensus.
1172 To achieve this, authorities list in their votes their supported methods
1173 for generating consensuses from votes. Later methods will be assigned
1174 higher numbers. Currently recognized methods:
1175 "1" -- The first implemented version.
1176 "2" -- Added support for the Unnamed flag.
1178 Before generating a consensus, an authority must decide which consensus
1179 method to use. To do this, it looks for the highest version number
1180 supported by more than 2/3 of the authorities voting. If it supports this
1181 method, then it uses it. Otherwise, it falls back to method 1.
1183 (The consensuses generated by new methods must be parsable by
1184 implementations that only understand the old methods, and must not cause
1185 those implementations to compromise their anonymity. This is a means for
1186 making changes in the contents of consensus; not for making
1187 backward-incompatible changes in their format.)
1189 3.5. Detached signatures
1191 Assuming full connectivity, every authority should compute and sign the
1192 same consensus directory in each period. Therefore, it isn't necessary to
1193 download the consensus computed by each authority; instead, the
1194 authorities only push/fetch each others' signatures. A "detached
1195 signature" document contains items as follows:
1197 "consensus-digest" SP Digest NL
1199 [At start, at most once.]
1201 The digest of the consensus being signed.
1203 "valid-after" SP YYYY-MM-DD SP HH:MM:SS NL
1204 "fresh-until" SP YYYY-MM-DD SP HH:MM:SS NL
1205 "valid-until" SP YYYY-MM-DD SP HH:MM:SS NL
1207 [As in the consensus]
1209 "directory-signature"
1211 [As in the consensus; the signature object is the same as in the
1212 consensus document.]
1215 4. Directory server operation
1217 All directory authorities and directory caches ("directory servers")
1218 implement this section, except as noted.
1220 4.1. Accepting uploads (authorities only)
1222 When a router posts a signed descriptor to a directory authority, the
1223 authority first checks whether it is well-formed and correctly
1224 self-signed. If it is, the authority next verifies that the nickname
1225 in question is not already assigned to a router with a different
1227 Finally, the authority MAY check that the router is not blacklisted
1228 because of its key, IP, or another reason.
1230 If the descriptor passes these tests, and the authority does not already
1231 have a descriptor for a router with this public key, it accepts the
1232 descriptor and remembers it.
1234 If the authority _does_ have a descriptor with the same public key, the
1235 newly uploaded descriptor is remembered if its publication time is more
1236 recent than the most recent old descriptor for that router, and either:
1237 - There are non-cosmetic differences between the old descriptor and the
1239 - Enough time has passed between the descriptors' publication times.
1240 (Currently, 12 hours.)
1242 Differences between router descriptors are "non-cosmetic" if they would be
1243 sufficient to force an upload as described in section 2 above.
1245 Note that the "cosmetic difference" test only applies to uploaded
1246 descriptors, not to descriptors that the authority downloads from other
1249 When a router posts a signed extra-info document to a directory authority,
1250 the authority again checks it for well-formedness and correct signature,
1251 and checks that its matches the extra-info-digest in some router
1252 descriptor that it believes is currently useful. If so, it accepts it and
1253 stores it and serves it as requested. If not, it drops it.
1255 4.2. Voting (authorities only)
1257 Authorities divide time into Intervals. Authority administrators SHOULD
1258 try to all pick the same interval length, and SHOULD pick intervals that
1259 are commonly used divisions of time (e.g., 5 minutes, 15 minutes, 30
1260 minutes, 60 minutes, 90 minutes). Voting intervals SHOULD be chosen to
1261 divide evenly into a 24-hour day.
1263 Authorities SHOULD act according to interval and delays in the
1264 latest consensus. Lacking a latest consensus, they SHOULD default to a
1265 30-minute Interval, a 5 minute VotingDelay, and a 5 minute DistDelay.
1267 Authorities MUST take pains to ensure that their clocks remain accurate
1268 within a few seconds. (Running NTP is usually sufficient.)
1270 The first voting period of each day begins at 00:00 (midnight) GMT. If
1271 the last period of the day would be truncated by one-half or more, it is
1272 merged with the second-to-last period.
1274 An authority SHOULD publish its vote immediately at the start of each voting
1275 period (minus VoteSeconds+DistSeconds). It does this by making it
1277 http://<hostname>/tor/status-vote/next/authority.z
1278 and sending it in an HTTP POST request to each other authority at the URL
1279 http://<hostname>/tor/post/vote
1281 If, at the start of the voting period, minus DistSeconds, an authority
1282 does not have a current statement from another authority, the first
1283 authority downloads the other's statement.
1285 Once an authority has a vote from another authority, it makes it available
1287 http://<hostname>/tor/status-vote/next/<fp>.z
1288 where <fp> is the fingerprint of the other authority's identity key.
1290 http://<hostname>/tor/status-vote/next/d/<d>.z
1291 where <d> is the digest of the vote document.
1293 The consensus status, along with as many signatures as the server
1294 currently knows, should be available at
1295 http://<hostname>/tor/status-vote/next/consensus.z
1296 All of the detached signatures it knows for consensus status should be
1298 http://<hostname>/tor/status-vote/next/consensus-signatures.z
1300 Once there are enough signatures, or once the voting period starts,
1301 these documents are available at
1302 http://<hostname>/tor/status-vote/current/consensus.z
1304 http://<hostname>/tor/status-vote/current/consensus-signatures.z
1305 [XXX current/consensus-signatures is not currently implemented, as it
1306 is not used in the voting protocol.]
1308 The other vote documents are analogously made available under
1309 http://<hostname>/tor/status-vote/current/authority.z
1310 http://<hostname>/tor/status-vote/current/<fp>.z
1311 http://<hostname>/tor/status-vote/current/d/<d>.z
1312 once the consensus is complete.
1314 Once an authority has computed and signed a consensus network status, it
1315 should send its detached signature to each other authority in an HTTP POST
1317 http://<hostname>/tor/post/consensus-signature
1319 [XXX Note why we support push-and-then-pull.]
1321 [XXX possible future features include support for downloading old
1324 4.3. Downloading consensus status documents (caches only)
1326 All directory servers (authorities and caches) try to keep a recent
1327 network-status consensus document to serve to clients. A cache ALWAYS
1328 downloads a network-status consensus if any of the following are true:
1329 - The cache has no consensus document.
1330 - The cache's consensus document is no longer valid.
1331 Otherwise, the cache downloads a new consensus document at a randomly
1332 chosen time after its current consensus stops being fresh. (This time is
1333 chosen at random to avoid swarming the authorities at the start of each
1336 4.4. Downloading and storing router descriptors (authorities and caches)
1338 Periodically (currently, every 10 seconds), directory servers check
1339 whether there are any specific descriptors that they do not have and that
1340 they are not currently trying to download. Caches identify these
1341 descriptors by hash in the recent network-status consensus documents;
1342 authorities identify them by hash in vote (if publication date is more
1343 recent than the descriptor we currently have).
1345 [XXXX need a way to fetch descriptors ahead of the vote? v2 status docs can
1348 If so, the directory server launches requests to the authorities for these
1349 descriptors, such that each authority is only asked for descriptors listed
1350 in its most recent vote (if the requester is an authority) or in the
1351 consensus (if the requester is a cache). If we're an authority, and more
1352 than one authority lists the descriptor, we choose which to ask at random.
1354 If one of these downloads fails, we do not try to download that descriptor
1355 from the authority that failed to serve it again unless we receive a newer
1356 network-status (consensus or vote) from that authority that lists the same
1359 Directory servers must potentially cache multiple descriptors for each
1360 router. Servers must not discard any descriptor listed by any recent
1361 consensus. If there is enough space to store additional descriptors,
1362 servers SHOULD try to hold those which clients are likely to download the
1363 most. (Currently, this is judged based on the interval for which each
1364 descriptor seemed newest.)
1365 [XXXX define recent]
1367 Authorities SHOULD NOT download descriptors for routers that they would
1368 immediately reject for reasons listed in 3.1.
1370 4.5. Downloading and storing extra-info documents
1372 All authorities, and any cache that chooses to cache extra-info documents,
1373 and any client that uses extra-info documents, should implement this
1376 Note that generally, clients don't need extra-info documents.
1378 Periodically, the Tor instance checks whether it is missing any extra-info
1379 documents: in other words, if it has any router descriptors with an
1380 extra-info-digest field that does not match any of the extra-info
1381 documents currently held. If so, it downloads whatever extra-info
1382 documents are missing. Caches download from authorities; non-caches try
1383 to download from caches. We follow the same splitting and back-off rules
1384 as in 4.4 (if a cache) or 5.3 (if a client).
1386 4.6. General-use HTTP URLs
1388 "Fingerprints" in these URLs are base-16-encoded SHA1 hashes.
1390 The most recent v3 consensus should be available at:
1391 http://<hostname>/tor/status-vote/current/consensus.z
1393 A concatenated set of all the current key certificates should be available
1395 http://<hostname>/tor/keys/all.z
1397 The key certificate for this server (if it is an authority) should be
1399 http://<hostname>/tor/keys/authority.z
1401 The key certificate for an authority whose authority identity fingerprint
1402 is <F> should be available at:
1403 http://<hostname>/tor/keys/fp/<F>.z
1405 The key certificate whose signing key fingerprint is <F> should be
1407 http://<hostname>/tor/keys/sk/<F>.z
1408 [XXX020 cross-certify?]
1410 The most recent descriptor for a server whose identity key has a
1411 fingerprint of <F> should be available at:
1412 http://<hostname>/tor/server/fp/<F>.z
1414 The most recent descriptors for servers with identity fingerprints
1415 <F1>,<F2>,<F3> should be available at:
1416 http://<hostname>/tor/server/fp/<F1>+<F2>+<F3>.z
1418 (NOTE: Implementations SHOULD NOT download descriptors by identity key
1419 fingerprint. This allows a corrupted server (in collusion with a cache) to
1420 provide a unique descriptor to a client, and thereby partition that client
1421 from the rest of the network.)
1423 The server descriptor with (descriptor) digest <D> (in hex) should be
1425 http://<hostname>/tor/server/d/<D>.z
1427 The most recent descriptors with digests <D1>,<D2>,<D3> should be
1429 http://<hostname>/tor/server/d/<D1>+<D2>+<D3>.z
1431 The most recent descriptor for this server should be at:
1432 http://<hostname>/tor/server/authority.z
1433 [Nothing in the Tor protocol uses this resource yet, but it is useful
1434 for debugging purposes. Also, the official Tor implementations
1435 (starting at 0.1.1.x) use this resource to test whether a server's
1436 own DirPort is reachable.]
1438 A concatenated set of the most recent descriptors for all known servers
1439 should be available at:
1440 http://<hostname>/tor/server/all.z
1442 Extra-info documents are available at the URLS
1443 http://<hostname>/tor/extra/d/...
1444 http://<hostname>/tor/extra/fp/...
1445 http://<hostname>/tor/extra/all[.z]
1446 http://<hostname>/tor/extra/authority[.z]
1447 (As for /tor/server/ URLs: supports fetching extra-info
1448 documents by their digest, by the fingerprint of their servers,
1449 or all at once. When serving by fingerprint, we serve the
1450 extra-info that corresponds to the descriptor we would serve by
1451 that fingerprint. Only directory authorities of version
1452 0.2.0.1-alpha or later are guaranteed to support the first
1453 three classes of URLs. Caches may support them, and MUST
1454 support them if they have advertised "caches-extra-info".)
1456 For debugging, directories SHOULD expose non-compressed objects at URLs like
1457 the above, but without the final ".z".
1458 Clients MUST handle compressed concatenated information in two forms:
1459 - A concatenated list of zlib-compressed objects.
1460 - A zlib-compressed concatenated list of objects.
1461 Directory servers MAY generate either format: the former requires less
1462 CPU, but the latter requires less bandwidth.
1464 Clients SHOULD use upper case letters (A-F) when base16-encoding
1465 fingerprints. Servers MUST accept both upper and lower case fingerprints
1468 5. Client operation: downloading information
1470 Every Tor that is not a directory server (that is, those that do
1471 not have a DirPort set) implements this section.
1473 5.1. Downloading network-status documents
1475 Each client maintains a list of directory authorities. Insofar as
1476 possible, clients SHOULD all use the same list.
1478 Clients try to have a live consensus network-status document at all times.
1479 A network-status document is "live" if the time in its valid-until field
1482 If a client is missing a live network-status document, it tries to fetch
1483 it from a directory cache (or from an authority if it knows no caches).
1484 On failure, the client waits briefly, then tries that network-status
1485 document again from another cache. The client does not build circuits
1486 until it has a live network-status consensus document, and it has
1487 descriptors for more than 1/4 of the routers that it believes are running.
1489 (Note: clients can and should pick caches based on the network-status
1490 information they have: once they have first fetched network-status info
1491 from an authority, they should not need to go to the authority directly
1495 5.2. Downloading and storing router descriptors
1497 Clients try to have the best descriptor for each router. A descriptor is
1499 * It is listed in the consensus network-status document.
1501 Periodically (currently every 10 seconds) clients check whether there are
1502 any "downloadable" descriptors. A descriptor is downloadable if:
1503 - It is the "best" descriptor for some router.
1504 - The descriptor was published at least 10 minutes in the past.
1505 (This prevents clients from trying to fetch descriptors that the
1506 mirrors have probably not yet retrieved and cached.)
1507 - The client does not currently have it.
1508 - The client is not currently trying to download it.
1509 - The client would not discard it immediately upon receiving it.
1510 - The client thinks it is running and valid (see 6.1 below).
1512 If at least 16 known routers have downloadable descriptors, or if
1513 enough time (currently 10 minutes) has passed since the last time the
1514 client tried to download descriptors, it launches requests for all
1515 downloadable descriptors, as described in 5.3 below.
1517 When a descriptor download fails, the client notes it, and does not
1518 consider the descriptor downloadable again until a certain amount of time
1519 has passed. (Currently 0 seconds for the first failure, 60 seconds for the
1520 second, 5 minutes for the third, 10 minutes for the fourth, and 1 day
1521 thereafter.) Periodically (currently once an hour) clients reset the
1524 Clients retain the most recent descriptor they have downloaded for each
1525 router so long as it is not too old (currently, 48 hours), OR so long as
1526 no better descriptor has been downloaded for the same router.
1528 [Versions of Tor before 0.1.2.3-alpha would discard descriptors simply for
1529 being published too far in the past.] [The code seems to discard
1530 descriptors in all cases after they're 5 days old. True? -RD]
1532 5.3. Managing downloads
1534 When a client has no consensus network-status document, it downloads it
1535 from a randomly chosen authority. In all other cases, the client
1536 downloads from caches randomly chosen from among those believed to be V2
1537 directory servers. (This information comes from the network-status
1538 documents; see 6 below.)
1540 When downloading multiple router descriptors, the client chooses multiple
1542 - At least 3 different mirrors are used, except when this would result
1543 in more than one request for under 4 descriptors.
1544 - No more than 128 descriptors are requested from a single mirror.
1545 - Otherwise, as few mirrors as possible are used.
1546 After choosing mirrors, the client divides the descriptors among them
1549 After receiving any response client MUST discard any network-status
1550 documents and descriptors that it did not request.
1552 6. Using directory information
1554 Everyone besides directory authorities uses the approaches in this section
1555 to decide which servers to use and what their keys are likely to be.
1556 (Directory authorities just believe their own opinions, as in 3.1 above.)
1558 6.1. Choosing routers for circuits.
1560 Circuits SHOULD NOT be built until the client has enough directory
1561 information: a live consensus network status [XXXX fallback?] and
1562 descriptors for at least 1/4 of the servers believed to be running.
1564 A server is "listed" if it is included by the consensus network-status
1565 document. Clients SHOULD NOT use unlisted servers.
1567 These flags are used as follows:
1569 - Clients SHOULD NOT use non-'Valid' or non-'Running' routers unless
1572 - Clients SHOULD NOT use non-'Fast' routers for any purpose other than
1573 very-low-bandwidth circuits (such as introduction circuits).
1575 - Clients SHOULD NOT use non-'Stable' routers for circuits that are
1576 likely to need to be open for a very long time (such as those used for
1577 IRC or SSH connections).
1579 - Clients SHOULD NOT choose non-'Guard' nodes when picking entry guard
1582 - Clients SHOULD NOT download directory information from non-'V2Dir'
1585 See the "path-spec.txt" document for more details.
1587 6.2. Managing naming
1589 In order to provide human-memorable names for individual server
1590 identities, some directory servers bind names to IDs. Clients handle
1593 When a client encounters a name it has not mapped before:
1595 If the consensus lists any router with that name as "Named", or if
1596 consensus-method 2 or later is in use and the consensus lists any
1597 router with that name as having the "Unnamed" flag, then the name is
1598 bound. (It's bound to the ID listed in the entry with the Named,
1599 or to an unknown ID if no name is found.)
1601 When the user refers to a bound name, the implementation SHOULD provide
1602 only the router with ID bound to that name, and no other router, even
1603 if the router with the right ID can't be found.
1605 When a user tries to refer to a non-bound name, the implementation SHOULD
1606 warn the user. After warning the user, the implementation MAY use any
1607 router that advertises the name.
1609 Not every router needs a nickname. When a router doesn't configure a
1610 nickname, it publishes with the default nickname "Unnamed". Authorities
1611 SHOULD NOT ever mark a router with this nickname as Named; client software
1612 SHOULD NOT ever use a router in response to a user request for a router
1615 6.3. Software versions
1617 An implementation of Tor SHOULD warn when it has fetched a consensus
1618 network-status, and it is running a software version not listed.
1620 6.4. Warning about a router's status.
1622 If a router tries to publish its descriptor to a Naming authority
1623 that has its nickname mapped to another key, the router SHOULD
1624 warn the operator that it is either using the wrong key or is using
1625 an already claimed nickname.
1627 If a router has fetched a consensus document,, and the
1628 authorities do not publish a binding for the router's nickname, the
1629 router MAY remind the operator that the chosen nickname is not
1630 bound to this key at the authorities, and suggest contacting the
1631 authority operators.
1635 6.5. Router protocol versions
1637 A client should believe that a router supports a given feature if that
1638 feature is supported by the router or protocol versions in more than half
1639 of the live networkstatuses' "v" entries for that router. In other words,
1640 if the "v" entries for some router are:
1641 v Tor 0.0.8pre1 (from authority 1)
1642 v Tor 0.1.2.11 (from authority 2)
1643 v FutureProtocolDescription 99 (from authority 3)
1644 then the client should believe that the router supports any feature
1645 supported by 0.1.2.11.
1647 This is currently equivalent to believing the median declared version for
1648 a router in all live networkstatuses.
1650 7. Standards compliance
1652 All clients and servers MUST support HTTP 1.0. Clients and servers MAY
1653 support later versions of HTTP as well.
1657 Servers MAY set the Content-Length: header. Servers SHOULD set
1658 Content-Encoding to "deflate" or "identity".
1660 Servers MAY include an X-Your-Address-Is: header, whose value is the
1661 apparent IP address of the client connecting to them (as a dotted quad).
1662 For directory connections tunneled over a BEGIN_DIR stream, servers SHOULD
1663 report the IP from which the circuit carrying the BEGIN_DIR stream reached
1664 them. [Servers before version 0.1.2.5-alpha reported 127.0.0.1 for all
1665 BEGIN_DIR-tunneled connections.]
1667 Servers SHOULD disable caching of multiple network statuses or multiple
1668 router descriptors. Servers MAY enable caching of single descriptors,
1669 single network statuses, the list of all router descriptors, a v1
1670 directory, or a v1 running routers document. XXX mention times.
1672 7.2. HTTP status codes
1674 Tor delivers the following status codes. Some were chosen without much
1675 thought; other code SHOULD NOT rely on specific status codes yet.
1677 200 -- the operation completed successfully
1678 -- the user requested statuses or serverdescs, and none of the ones we
1679 requested were found (0.2.0.4-alpha and earlier).
1681 304 -- the client specified an if-modified-since time, and none of the
1682 requested resources have changed since that time.
1684 400 -- the request is malformed, or
1685 -- the URL is for a malformed variation of one of the URLs we support,
1687 -- the client tried to post to a non-authority, or
1688 -- the authority rejected a malformed posted document, or
1690 404 -- the requested document was not found.
1691 -- the user requested statuses or serverdescs, and none of the ones we
1692 requested were found (0.2.0.5-alpha and later).
1694 503 -- we are declining the request in order to save bandwidth
1695 -- user requested some items that we ordinarily generate or store,
1696 but we do not have any available.
1698 9. Backward compatibility and migration plans
1700 Until Tor versions before 0.1.1.x are completely obsolete, directory
1701 authorities should generate, and mirrors should download and cache, v1
1702 directories and running-routers lists, and allow old clients to download
1703 them. These documents and the rules for retrieving, serving, and caching
1704 them are described in dir-spec-v1.txt.
1706 Until Tor versions before 0.2.0.x are completely obsolete, directory
1707 authorities should generate, mirrors should download and cache, v2
1708 network-status documents, and allow old clients to download them.
1709 Additionally, all directory servers and caches should download, store, and
1710 serve any router descriptor that is required because of v2 network-status
1711 documents. These documents and the rules for retrieving, serving, and
1712 caching them are described in dir-spec-v1.txt.
1714 A. Consensus-negotiation timeline.
1717 Period begins: this is the Published time.
1718 Everybody sends votes
1719 Reconciliation: everybody tries to fetch missing votes.
1720 consensus may exist at this point.
1721 End of voting period:
1722 everyone swaps signatures.
1723 Now it's okay for caches to download
1724 Now it's okay for clients to download.
1726 Valid-after/valid-until switchover