There's no harm in doing this, since we'll try to take ownership of
the state soon as soon as we use it: We just want to try early, so
that we'll get it before we decide that we're using bridges.
Fixes bug #669; bug introduced by !889.
This makes a `pt_state` directory inside .local/share/arti (or the
local equivalent), right next to our existing `state` dir.
Ideally we would use a separate directory for each PT, but we have a
very fuzzy "what is a specific PT" notion.
Closes#667
If support is available at compile-time, then we construct a PtMgr
and register it with the ChanMgr. We keep a handle to it ourself so
that we can reconfigure it as needed.
Closes#659.
We now parse the `bridges.enabled` BoolOrAuto, and the
`bridges.bridges` list.
The `bridges.bridges` list is Vec<()> in the builder, and Vec<Void> in
the built config. Ie, it is simply a count, and vanishes in the built
config.
But this count triggers us to try to call build(), to try to parse
bridges, and to try to set and honour the enablement boolean.
The result is that the type system now ensures that if bridges are
disabled, but specified (either by listing them in the config, or
writing `enabled=true`), we inevitably try to insist that we have a
non-empty Vec<Void>, which is of course impossible.
There will be a test case too for those who think this too abstract a
way to guarantee this property :-).
Ticket #285 is closed and most of this is stable now we think.
(There are still a couple of stability warnings for specific types in
tor-config, which aren't exposed at the arti-client level.)
This brings the draft configuration mechanisms in tor-ptmgr in line with
the config in other crates, using builders. It also plumbs the config
type through into the main `arti-client` config, and adds some example
lines to `arti-example-config.toml`.
Having this done within circmgr was irregular - most of our other key
buildup functions are done in TorClient::create_inner.
It is also inconvenient, as it buries the guardmgr within the circmgr.
0.99.[012] have a bug https://github.com/JelteF/derive_more/issues/114
which makes the Deref derive for bridgedesc::StateGuard not work
and therefore breaks minimal-versions CI.
It seems simpler to require the newer version everywhere.
The feature we want is `#[doc = include_str!("README.md")]`, which is
stable since 1.54 and our MSRV is now 1.56.
This commit is precisely the result of the following Perl rune:
perl -i~ -0777 -pe 's{(^//!(?!.*\@\@).*\n)+}{#![doc = include_str!("../README.md")]\n}m' crates/*/src/lib.rs
Add ,ignore to ignore three examples that don't actually compile.
cargo readme would add these annotations to lib.rs, but the doc
include doesn't do stuff like that. pandoc seems to still render the
result just fine.