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From: | Nigko Yerden |
Subject: | [bug#70341] [PATCH v3] services: tor: Add support for pluggable transports. |
Date: | Thu, 25 Apr 2024 11:08:52 +0500 |
User-agent: | Mozilla Thunderbird |
Hi André, Thank you for the feedback!
I can confirm that the tor service is unable to fork-exec a pluggable-transport and the bootstrap process is halted at its start when trying to use a system wide bridge + PT. However, this patch does not seem to address the issue at hand, since it just creates newtor-service-type configuration options that accomplish the same as configuring on config-file directly. Have you had success with this? I had no luck.
Yes, I have! This patch not only creates new tor-service-type configuration options but, which is crucial, adds pluggable transport (PT) executable, if provided, to #:mappings argument of the least-authority-wrapper, see 'tor-shepherd-service' chunk. With this patch Tor process gets access to PT plugin and, if bridges are configured via config-file field, Tor starts using obfuscated traffic.
Even if it had succeeded though, I'm not sure if this is the best approach to it, since it would break guix system configuration,right?
No, the patch does not break any existing tor-service-type configuration. If PT is not used, 'transport-plugin' defaults to '#f', and the Tor works exactly as if there wasn't any patch at all.
There is much simpler and convenient way of doing this. If users want to bring PT into action, they may simply writeHow would one know beforehand which binary to point to? One would first need to install the PT and look to its path on store and then link to it in a new configuration. And then this link would have to be manualy updated. Am I missing something here?
(service tor-service-type (config-file ".... Bridge obfs4 ...") (transport-plugin (file-append PT-PACKAGE "/bin/name-of-executable")) The PT-PACKAGE does not even have to be present in the list of 'operating-system 'packages field, since Guix will find the reference to PT-package and install it automatically. The only thing which should be known beforehand is the "name-of-executable". For'go-gitlab-torproject-org-tpo-anti-censorship-pluggable-transports-lyrebird package it is "lyrebird", while for 'go-github-com-operatorfoundation-obfs4 it is "obfs4proxy". It is
unlikely that these names will change with upgrades.
Finally, next time, try to keep the issue to a single thread. I'm replying to #70332 and #70302 just for reference, but let's keep to #70341 going forward.
Sorry about that! I have tried not to create new bug issue but was unsuccessful. Perhaps I shouldn't have touched the email heading. Regards, Nigko André Batista wrote:
Hi Nigko, seg 22 abr 2024 às 08:58:39 (1713787119), nigko.yerden@gmail.com enviou:Pluggable transports are programs that disguise Tor traffic, which can be useful in case Tor is censored. Pluggable transports cannotbe configured by #:config-file file exclusively because Tor process is run via 'least-authority-wrapper' and cannot have access totransport plugin, which is a separate executable (Bug#70302, Bug#70332).I can confirm that the tor service is unable to fork-exec a pluggable-transport and the bootstrap process is halted at its start when trying to use a system wide bridge + PT. However, this patch does not seem to address the issue at hand, since it just creates newtor-service-type configuration options that accomplish the same as configuring on config-file directly. Have you had success with this? I had no luck. More comments bellow.* doc/guix.texi (Networking Services): Document 'transport-plugin' and 'pluggable-transport' options for 'tor-configuration'. * gnu/services/networking.scm: Export'tor-configuration-transport-plugin-path', 'tor-configuration-pluggable-transport'. (<tor-configuration>): Add 'transport-plugin' and 'pluggable-transport' fields. (tor-configuration->torrc)[transport-plugin]: Add content to'torrc' computed-file. (tor-shepherd-service)[transport-plugin]: Add file-system-mapping.Change-Id: I64e7632729287ea0ab27818bb7322fddae43de48 --- doc/guix.texi | 11 ++++++++ gnu/services/networking.scm | 54++++++++++++++++++++++++++----------- 2 files changed, 49 insertions(+), 16 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/guix.texi b/doc/guix.texi index 65af136e61..eb0837860e 100644 --- a/doc/guix.texi +++ b/doc/guix.texi @@ -127,6 +127,7 @@ Copyright @copyright{} 2024Herman Rimm@* Copyright @copyright{} 2024 Matthew Trzcinski@* Copyright @copyright{} 2024 Richard Sent@* +Copyright @copyright{}2024 Nigko Yerden@* Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License,Version 1.3 or @@ -21849,6 +21850,16 @@ Networking Services @file{/var/run/tor/control-sock}, which will be made writable bymembers of the @code{tor} group. +@item @code{transport-plugin} (default: @code{#f}) +This must beeither @code{#f} or a ``file-like'' object pointing to the +pluggable transport plugin executable. In the latter case the +@code{#:config-file} file should contain line(s) configuring +oneor more bridges. + +@item @code{pluggable-transport} (default: @code{"obfs4"}) +A string that specifies the type of the pluggabletransport in +case @code{#:transport-plugin} is not @code{#f}. + @end table @end deftpdiff --git a/gnu/services/networking.scmb/gnu/services/networking.scm index 8e64e529ab..6e535ea8ef 100644 --- a/gnu/services/networking.scm +++b/gnu/services/networking.scm @@ -22,6 +22,7 @@ ;;; Copyright © 2023 Declan Tsien <declantsien@riseup.net> ;;; Copyright © 2023 Bruno Victal <mirai@makinata.eu> ;;; Copyright © 2023 muradm <mail@muradm.net> +;;; Copyright © 2024 Nigko Yerden<nigko.yerden@gmail.com> ;;; ;;; This file is part of GNU Guix. ;;; @@ -159,6 +160,8 @@ (define-module (gnu services networking) tor-configuration-hidden-services tor-configuration-socks-socket-type tor-configuration-control-socket-path +tor-configuration-transport-plugin-path +tor-configuration-pluggable-transport tor-onion-service-configuration tor-onion-service-configuration? tor-onion-service-configuration-name @@ -955,7 +958,11 @@(define-record-type* <tor-configuration> (socks-socket-type tor-configuration-socks-socket-type ; 'tcp or 'unix (default 'tcp)) (control-socket? tor-configuration-control-socket-path - (default #f))) + (default #f)) + (transport-plugin tor-configuration-transport-plugin-path + (default #f)) + (pluggable-transport tor-configuration-pluggable-transport + (default "obfs4"))) (define %tor-accounts ;; User account and groups for Tor. @@ -988,7 +995,8 @@ (define-configuration/no-serialization tor-onion-service-configuration (define (tor-configuration->torrc config) "Return a 'torrc' file for CONFIG." (match-record config <tor-configuration> - (tor config-file hidden-services socks-socket-type control-socket?) + (tor config-file hidden-services socks-socket-type control-socket? +transport-plugin pluggable-transport) (computed-file "torrc" (with-imported-modules '((guix build utils)) @@ -1027,6 +1035,13 @@ (define (tor-configuration->torrc config) (cons name mapping))) hidden-services))+ (when #$transport-plugin + (format port "\ +UseBridges 1 +ClientTransportPlugin ~a exec ~a~%" + #$pluggable-transport + #$transport-plugin)) + (display "\ ### End of automatically generated lines.\n\n" port)Even if it had succeded though, I'm not sure if this is the best approach to it, since it would break guix system configuration,right? How would one know beforehand which binary to point to? One would first need to install the PT and look to its path on store and then link to it in a new configuration. And then this link would have to be manualy updated. Am I missing something here?Finally, next time, try to keep the issue to a single thread. I'm replying to #70332 and #70302 just for reference, but let's keep to #70341 going forward.Cheers!
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