The "full" feature is a catch-all for all features, _except_:
* Those that select a particular implementation (like
tor-llcrypto/with-openssl) or build flag (like "static")
* Those that are experimental or unstable (like "experimental-api")
* Those that are testing-only.
In reviewing !553 I noticed that the empty digest list error had to be
handled in two places. I filed #492 about the duplication.
In fact it turns out to have been quadruplication.
The new code also avoids cloning the underlying objects, instead
sorting a Vec of references.
The randomized tests in this crate take a lot of iterations to
converge, so they default to using a deterministic PRNG seed with
few iterations and higher tolerance, and they only randomize the
tests (with more iterations and tighter tolerances) when you
explicitly opt in to randomization.
(If you specify a seed explicitly, you're doing that to reproduce a
randomized case, so we use the same behavior.)
This only affects uses of thread_rng(), and affects them all more or
less indiscriminately. One test does not work with
ARTI_TEST_PRNG=deterministic; the next commit will fix it.
The new `testing_rng()` function is meant as a replacement for
thread_rng() for use in unit tests. By default, it uses a randomly
seeded RNG, but prints the seed before the test so that you can
reproduce any failures that occur. You can override this via the
environment to use a previous seed, or by using a deterministic
seed for all your tests.
Backend for #486.
I followed the following procedure to make these changes:
* I used maint/changed_crates to find out which crates had changed
since 0.3.0.
* I used grep and maint/list_crates to sort those crates in
topological (dependency) order.
* I looked through semver_status to find which crates were listed as
having semver-relevant changes (new APIs and breaking changes).
* I scanned through the git logs of the crates with no
semver-relevant changes listed to confirm that, indeed, they had
no changes. For those crates, I incremented their patch-level
version _without_ changing the version that other crates depend on.
* I scanned through the git logs of the crates with no
semver-relevant changes listed to confirm that, indeed, they had
no obvious breaking changes.
* I treated all crates that depend on `arti` and/or `arti-client` as
having breaking changes.
* I identified crates that depend on crates that have changed, even
if they have not changed themselves, and identified them as having
a non-breaking change.
* For all of the crates, I used `cargo set-version -p $CRATE --bump
$STATUS` (where `STATUS` is `patch` or `minor`) to update the
versions, and the depended-upon versions.
These crates had only clippy fixes that do not affect their
behavior:
tor-bytes
tor-cell
tor-events
tor-linkspec
tor-netdir
tor-socksproto
This crate only had the cargo-husky dependency removed, which
does not affect compatibility:
tor-llcrypto
Since these changes have no compatibility effects, it is not
necessary to bump the versions of these crates which other crates
depend on.
We support all of the following (in TOML notation):
```
user = "rose" # by name
user = 413 # by ID
user = false # no user
user = ":current" # A 'special' user.
user = { name: "rose" }
user = { id: 413 }
user = { special: ":none" }
user = { special: ":current" }
```
This is a general-purpose implementation of the ad-hoc approach
currently taken in (eg) crates/tor-proto/src/channel/reactor.rs,
with an API intended to defned against the more obvious mistakes.
This allows us to separate the two concerns: the channel reactor can
focus on handling channel cells and control messages and is over 2.5x
shorter.
The complexity of the manual sink implementation, and the machinery
needed to avoid having to suspend while holding an item, are dealt
with separately. That separate implemenation now has proper
documentation. (Tests are in the nest commit to avoid this one being
even more unwieldy.)
We use `extend` to define this as an extension trait. A competitor is
`ext` but in my personal projects I have found `extend` slightly
better.
Generally, change the paths that mention the crate name to go via a
module-level "use".
This involves adding tor-config as a direct dependency for a few
crates.
This is a benchmarking tool, and fs-mistrust doesn't like the
permissions in our CI. The env var ARTI_FS_DISABLE_PERMISSION_CHECKS
is (of course) specific to arti. Maybe it should be honoured here,
or this should be done via the config files.
But disabling this is fine for now.
A build script reaching into your .git/hooks/ and modifying them
nonconsensually was a bit of a horrifying concept, and also made it hard
to build arti with the feature disabled. Remove this crate, and replace
it with manual instructions on how to install the hooks in
CONTRIBUTING.md.
- The additional parameters passed to GetConsensusState are now passed
through all the states, and used as well.
- WriteNetDir doesn't have a now() or config() method any more, since
the states now get this from the runtime or the config parameters.
- This required modifying the tests to make a mocked runtime and custom
config directly, instead of using DirRcv for this purpose.
- Additionally, because we don't have to upgrade a weak reference for
DirState::dl_config(), that function no longer wraps its return value
in Result.
- (A bunch of the FIXMEs from the previous commit that introduced the
additional parameters have now been rectified as a result.)
Relay nicknames are always between 1 and 19 characters long, and
they're always ASCII: That means that storing them in a [u8;19] will
always be possible, and always use less resources than storing them
in a String.
Fortunately, the tinystr crate already helps us with this kind of
thing.
This is derived from the environment, not the configuration file: We
might not want to trust the configuration file until we've decided
whether we like its permissions.
For reference, the git source for this crate (and the others in its
workspace) currently lives in my personal github account (ijackson).
If this fork turns out to be long-lived and gains features and/or
users, it would be good to move it to a gitlab somewhere.
I have granted Nick crate ownership on the crates.io system.