The new `hyper` tor-client example demonstrates integrating arti with the
popular Rust `hyper` HTTP library by implementing a custom Hyper "connector"
(a type that can initiate connections to HTTP servers) that proxies said
connections via the Tor network.
This will let callers use the tokio traits on these types too, if
they call `split()` on the DataStream.
(Tokio also has a `tokio::io::split()` method, but it requires a
lock whereas `DataStream::split()` doesn't.)
futures::io::AsyncRead (and Write) isn't the same thing as tokio::io::AsyncRead,
which is a somewhat annoying misfeature of the Rust async ecosystem (!).
To mitigate this somewhat for people trying to use the `DataStream` struct with
tokio, implement the tokio versions of the above traits using `tokio-util`'s
compat layer, if a crate feature (`tokio`) is enabled.
The three arguments TorClient::bootstrap requires by way of configuration
have been factored into a new TorClientConfig object.
This object gains two associated functions: one which uses `tor_config`'s
`CfgPath` machinery to generate sane defaults for the state and cache
directories, and one that accepts said directories in order to create a
config object with those inserted.
(this commit was inspired by trying to use arti as a library and being somewhat
overwhelmed by the amount of config stuff there was to do :p)
Previously we'd say that we were "waiting for the other process to
bootstrap" even if it was already bootstrapped: and we wouldn't
actually declare success when it was done.
The `get_relay` function was confusing, since it would return None if
the relay was present, but wasn't actually a guard. We only used it
in one place, and in that one place we used it wrong, leading to a
panic bug.
Fixes#193.
Thanks to the chrono update, we no longer include an
obsolete/vulnerable version of the `time` crate. Unfortunately, it
turns out that chrono has the same trouble as `time`: it, too, looks
at the environment via localtime_r, and the environment isn't
threadsafe.
One step forward, one step back. At least the underlying issue is
one that lots of people seem to care about; let's hope they come up
with a solution.