dash/src/test/DoS_tests.cpp

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// Copyright (c) 2011-2015 The Bitcoin Core developers
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// Distributed under the MIT software license, see the accompanying
// file COPYING or http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php.
// Unit tests for denial-of-service detection/prevention code
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#include "chainparams.h"
#include "keystore.h"
#include "net.h"
#include "net_processing.h"
#include "pow.h"
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#include "script/sign.h"
#include "serialize.h"
#include "util.h"
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#include "test/test_dash.h"
#include <stdint.h>
#include <boost/assign/list_of.hpp> // for 'map_list_of()'
#include <boost/date_time/posix_time/posix_time_types.hpp>
#include <boost/foreach.hpp>
#include <boost/test/unit_test.hpp>
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// Tests this internal-to-main.cpp method:
extern bool AddOrphanTx(const CTransaction& tx, NodeId peer);
extern void EraseOrphansFor(NodeId peer);
extern unsigned int LimitOrphanTxSize(unsigned int nMaxOrphans);
struct COrphanTx {
CTransaction tx;
NodeId fromPeer;
};
extern std::map<uint256, COrphanTx> mapOrphanTransactions;
extern std::map<uint256, std::set<uint256> > mapOrphanTransactionsByPrev;
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CService ip(uint32_t i)
{
struct in_addr s;
s.s_addr = i;
return CService(CNetAddr(s), Params().GetDefaultPort());
}
Backport Bitcoin PR#8085: p2p: Begin encapsulation (#1537) * net: move CBanDB and CAddrDB out of net.h/cpp This will eventually solve a circular dependency * net: Create CConnman to encapsulate p2p connections * net: Move socket binding into CConnman * net: move OpenNetworkConnection into CConnman * net: move ban and addrman functions into CConnman * net: Add oneshot functions to CConnman * net: move added node functions to CConnman * net: Add most functions needed for vNodes to CConnman * net: handle nodesignals in CConnman * net: Pass CConnection to wallet rather than using the global * net: Add rpc error for missing/disabled p2p functionality * net: Pass CConnman around as needed * gui: add NodeID to the peer table * net: create generic functor accessors and move vNodes to CConnman * net: move whitelist functions into CConnman * net: move nLastNodeId to CConnman * net: move nLocalHostNonce to CConnman This behavior seems to have been quite racy and broken. Move nLocalHostNonce into CNode, and check received nonces against all non-fully-connected nodes. If there's a match, assume we've connected to ourself. * net: move messageHandlerCondition to CConnman * net: move send/recv statistics to CConnman * net: move SendBufferSize/ReceiveFloodSize to CConnman * net: move nLocalServices/nRelevantServices to CConnman These are in-turn passed to CNode at connection time. This allows us to offer different services to different peers (or test the effects of doing so). * net: move semOutbound and semMasternodeOutbound to CConnman * net: SocketSendData returns written size * net: move max/max-outbound to CConnman * net: Pass best block known height into CConnman CConnman then passes the current best height into CNode at creation time. This way CConnman/CNode have no dependency on main for height, and the signals only move in one direction. This also helps to prevent identity leakage a tiny bit. Before this change, an attacker could theoretically make 2 connections on different interfaces. They would connect fully on one, and only establish the initial connection on the other. Once they receive a new block, they would relay it to your first connection, and immediately commence the version handshake on the second. Since the new block height is reflected immediately, they could attempt to learn whether the two connections were correlated. This is, of course, incredibly unlikely to work due to the small timings involved and receipt from other senders. But it doesn't hurt to lock-in nBestHeight at the time of connection, rather than letting the remote choose the time. * net: pass CClientUIInterface into CConnman * net: Drop StartNode/StopNode and use CConnman directly * net: Introduce CConnection::Options to avoid passing so many params * net: add nSendBufferMaxSize/nReceiveFloodSize to CConnection::Options * net: move vNodesDisconnected into CConnman * Made the ForEachNode* functions in src/net.cpp more pragmatic and self documenting * Convert ForEachNode* functions to take a templated function argument rather than a std::function to eliminate std::function overhead * net: move MAX_FEELER_CONNECTIONS into connman
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static NodeId id = 0;
BOOST_FIXTURE_TEST_SUITE(DoS_tests, TestingSetup)
BOOST_AUTO_TEST_CASE(DoS_banning)
{
Backport Bitcoin PR#8085: p2p: Begin encapsulation (#1537) * net: move CBanDB and CAddrDB out of net.h/cpp This will eventually solve a circular dependency * net: Create CConnman to encapsulate p2p connections * net: Move socket binding into CConnman * net: move OpenNetworkConnection into CConnman * net: move ban and addrman functions into CConnman * net: Add oneshot functions to CConnman * net: move added node functions to CConnman * net: Add most functions needed for vNodes to CConnman * net: handle nodesignals in CConnman * net: Pass CConnection to wallet rather than using the global * net: Add rpc error for missing/disabled p2p functionality * net: Pass CConnman around as needed * gui: add NodeID to the peer table * net: create generic functor accessors and move vNodes to CConnman * net: move whitelist functions into CConnman * net: move nLastNodeId to CConnman * net: move nLocalHostNonce to CConnman This behavior seems to have been quite racy and broken. Move nLocalHostNonce into CNode, and check received nonces against all non-fully-connected nodes. If there's a match, assume we've connected to ourself. * net: move messageHandlerCondition to CConnman * net: move send/recv statistics to CConnman * net: move SendBufferSize/ReceiveFloodSize to CConnman * net: move nLocalServices/nRelevantServices to CConnman These are in-turn passed to CNode at connection time. This allows us to offer different services to different peers (or test the effects of doing so). * net: move semOutbound and semMasternodeOutbound to CConnman * net: SocketSendData returns written size * net: move max/max-outbound to CConnman * net: Pass best block known height into CConnman CConnman then passes the current best height into CNode at creation time. This way CConnman/CNode have no dependency on main for height, and the signals only move in one direction. This also helps to prevent identity leakage a tiny bit. Before this change, an attacker could theoretically make 2 connections on different interfaces. They would connect fully on one, and only establish the initial connection on the other. Once they receive a new block, they would relay it to your first connection, and immediately commence the version handshake on the second. Since the new block height is reflected immediately, they could attempt to learn whether the two connections were correlated. This is, of course, incredibly unlikely to work due to the small timings involved and receipt from other senders. But it doesn't hurt to lock-in nBestHeight at the time of connection, rather than letting the remote choose the time. * net: pass CClientUIInterface into CConnman * net: Drop StartNode/StopNode and use CConnman directly * net: Introduce CConnection::Options to avoid passing so many params * net: add nSendBufferMaxSize/nReceiveFloodSize to CConnection::Options * net: move vNodesDisconnected into CConnman * Made the ForEachNode* functions in src/net.cpp more pragmatic and self documenting * Convert ForEachNode* functions to take a templated function argument rather than a std::function to eliminate std::function overhead * net: move MAX_FEELER_CONNECTIONS into connman
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connman->ClearBanned();
CAddress addr1(ip(0xa0b0c001), NODE_NONE);
Backport Bitcoin PR#8085: p2p: Begin encapsulation (#1537) * net: move CBanDB and CAddrDB out of net.h/cpp This will eventually solve a circular dependency * net: Create CConnman to encapsulate p2p connections * net: Move socket binding into CConnman * net: move OpenNetworkConnection into CConnman * net: move ban and addrman functions into CConnman * net: Add oneshot functions to CConnman * net: move added node functions to CConnman * net: Add most functions needed for vNodes to CConnman * net: handle nodesignals in CConnman * net: Pass CConnection to wallet rather than using the global * net: Add rpc error for missing/disabled p2p functionality * net: Pass CConnman around as needed * gui: add NodeID to the peer table * net: create generic functor accessors and move vNodes to CConnman * net: move whitelist functions into CConnman * net: move nLastNodeId to CConnman * net: move nLocalHostNonce to CConnman This behavior seems to have been quite racy and broken. Move nLocalHostNonce into CNode, and check received nonces against all non-fully-connected nodes. If there's a match, assume we've connected to ourself. * net: move messageHandlerCondition to CConnman * net: move send/recv statistics to CConnman * net: move SendBufferSize/ReceiveFloodSize to CConnman * net: move nLocalServices/nRelevantServices to CConnman These are in-turn passed to CNode at connection time. This allows us to offer different services to different peers (or test the effects of doing so). * net: move semOutbound and semMasternodeOutbound to CConnman * net: SocketSendData returns written size * net: move max/max-outbound to CConnman * net: Pass best block known height into CConnman CConnman then passes the current best height into CNode at creation time. This way CConnman/CNode have no dependency on main for height, and the signals only move in one direction. This also helps to prevent identity leakage a tiny bit. Before this change, an attacker could theoretically make 2 connections on different interfaces. They would connect fully on one, and only establish the initial connection on the other. Once they receive a new block, they would relay it to your first connection, and immediately commence the version handshake on the second. Since the new block height is reflected immediately, they could attempt to learn whether the two connections were correlated. This is, of course, incredibly unlikely to work due to the small timings involved and receipt from other senders. But it doesn't hurt to lock-in nBestHeight at the time of connection, rather than letting the remote choose the time. * net: pass CClientUIInterface into CConnman * net: Drop StartNode/StopNode and use CConnman directly * net: Introduce CConnection::Options to avoid passing so many params * net: add nSendBufferMaxSize/nReceiveFloodSize to CConnection::Options * net: move vNodesDisconnected into CConnman * Made the ForEachNode* functions in src/net.cpp more pragmatic and self documenting * Convert ForEachNode* functions to take a templated function argument rather than a std::function to eliminate std::function overhead * net: move MAX_FEELER_CONNECTIONS into connman
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CNode dummyNode1(id++, NODE_NETWORK, 0, INVALID_SOCKET, addr1, "", true);
Backport Bitcoin PR#8708: net: have CConnman handle message sending (#1553) * serialization: teach serializers variadics Also add a variadic CDataStream ctor for ease-of-use. * connman is in charge of pushing messages The changes here are dense and subtle, but hopefully all is more explicit than before. - CConnman is now in charge of sending data rather than the nodes themselves. This is necessary because many decisions need to be made with all nodes in mind, and a model that requires the nodes calling up to their manager quickly turns to spaghetti. - The per-node-serializer (ssSend) has been replaced with a (quasi-)const send-version. Since the send version for serialization can only change once per connection, we now explicitly tag messages with INIT_PROTO_VERSION if they are sent before the handshake. With this done, there's no need to lock for access to nSendVersion. Also, a new stream is used for each message, so there's no need to lock during the serialization process. - This takes care of accounting for optimistic sends, so the nOptimisticBytesWritten hack can be removed. - -dropmessagestest and -fuzzmessagestest have not been preserved, as I suspect they haven't been used in years. * net: switch all callers to connman for pushing messages Drop all of the old stuff. * drop the optimistic write counter hack This is now handled properly in realtime. * net: remove now-unused ssSend and Fuzz * net: construct CNodeStates in place * net: handle version push in InitializeNode
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dummyNode1.SetSendVersion(PROTOCOL_VERSION);
GetNodeSignals().InitializeNode(&dummyNode1, *connman);
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dummyNode1.nVersion = 1;
Misbehaving(dummyNode1.GetId(), 100); // Should get banned
Backport Bitcoin PR#8085: p2p: Begin encapsulation (#1537) * net: move CBanDB and CAddrDB out of net.h/cpp This will eventually solve a circular dependency * net: Create CConnman to encapsulate p2p connections * net: Move socket binding into CConnman * net: move OpenNetworkConnection into CConnman * net: move ban and addrman functions into CConnman * net: Add oneshot functions to CConnman * net: move added node functions to CConnman * net: Add most functions needed for vNodes to CConnman * net: handle nodesignals in CConnman * net: Pass CConnection to wallet rather than using the global * net: Add rpc error for missing/disabled p2p functionality * net: Pass CConnman around as needed * gui: add NodeID to the peer table * net: create generic functor accessors and move vNodes to CConnman * net: move whitelist functions into CConnman * net: move nLastNodeId to CConnman * net: move nLocalHostNonce to CConnman This behavior seems to have been quite racy and broken. Move nLocalHostNonce into CNode, and check received nonces against all non-fully-connected nodes. If there's a match, assume we've connected to ourself. * net: move messageHandlerCondition to CConnman * net: move send/recv statistics to CConnman * net: move SendBufferSize/ReceiveFloodSize to CConnman * net: move nLocalServices/nRelevantServices to CConnman These are in-turn passed to CNode at connection time. This allows us to offer different services to different peers (or test the effects of doing so). * net: move semOutbound and semMasternodeOutbound to CConnman * net: SocketSendData returns written size * net: move max/max-outbound to CConnman * net: Pass best block known height into CConnman CConnman then passes the current best height into CNode at creation time. This way CConnman/CNode have no dependency on main for height, and the signals only move in one direction. This also helps to prevent identity leakage a tiny bit. Before this change, an attacker could theoretically make 2 connections on different interfaces. They would connect fully on one, and only establish the initial connection on the other. Once they receive a new block, they would relay it to your first connection, and immediately commence the version handshake on the second. Since the new block height is reflected immediately, they could attempt to learn whether the two connections were correlated. This is, of course, incredibly unlikely to work due to the small timings involved and receipt from other senders. But it doesn't hurt to lock-in nBestHeight at the time of connection, rather than letting the remote choose the time. * net: pass CClientUIInterface into CConnman * net: Drop StartNode/StopNode and use CConnman directly * net: Introduce CConnection::Options to avoid passing so many params * net: add nSendBufferMaxSize/nReceiveFloodSize to CConnection::Options * net: move vNodesDisconnected into CConnman * Made the ForEachNode* functions in src/net.cpp more pragmatic and self documenting * Convert ForEachNode* functions to take a templated function argument rather than a std::function to eliminate std::function overhead * net: move MAX_FEELER_CONNECTIONS into connman
2017-07-21 11:35:19 +02:00
SendMessages(&dummyNode1, *connman);
BOOST_CHECK(connman->IsBanned(addr1));
BOOST_CHECK(!connman->IsBanned(ip(0xa0b0c001|0x0000ff00))); // Different IP, not banned
CAddress addr2(ip(0xa0b0c002), NODE_NONE);
Backport Bitcoin PR#8085: p2p: Begin encapsulation (#1537) * net: move CBanDB and CAddrDB out of net.h/cpp This will eventually solve a circular dependency * net: Create CConnman to encapsulate p2p connections * net: Move socket binding into CConnman * net: move OpenNetworkConnection into CConnman * net: move ban and addrman functions into CConnman * net: Add oneshot functions to CConnman * net: move added node functions to CConnman * net: Add most functions needed for vNodes to CConnman * net: handle nodesignals in CConnman * net: Pass CConnection to wallet rather than using the global * net: Add rpc error for missing/disabled p2p functionality * net: Pass CConnman around as needed * gui: add NodeID to the peer table * net: create generic functor accessors and move vNodes to CConnman * net: move whitelist functions into CConnman * net: move nLastNodeId to CConnman * net: move nLocalHostNonce to CConnman This behavior seems to have been quite racy and broken. Move nLocalHostNonce into CNode, and check received nonces against all non-fully-connected nodes. If there's a match, assume we've connected to ourself. * net: move messageHandlerCondition to CConnman * net: move send/recv statistics to CConnman * net: move SendBufferSize/ReceiveFloodSize to CConnman * net: move nLocalServices/nRelevantServices to CConnman These are in-turn passed to CNode at connection time. This allows us to offer different services to different peers (or test the effects of doing so). * net: move semOutbound and semMasternodeOutbound to CConnman * net: SocketSendData returns written size * net: move max/max-outbound to CConnman * net: Pass best block known height into CConnman CConnman then passes the current best height into CNode at creation time. This way CConnman/CNode have no dependency on main for height, and the signals only move in one direction. This also helps to prevent identity leakage a tiny bit. Before this change, an attacker could theoretically make 2 connections on different interfaces. They would connect fully on one, and only establish the initial connection on the other. Once they receive a new block, they would relay it to your first connection, and immediately commence the version handshake on the second. Since the new block height is reflected immediately, they could attempt to learn whether the two connections were correlated. This is, of course, incredibly unlikely to work due to the small timings involved and receipt from other senders. But it doesn't hurt to lock-in nBestHeight at the time of connection, rather than letting the remote choose the time. * net: pass CClientUIInterface into CConnman * net: Drop StartNode/StopNode and use CConnman directly * net: Introduce CConnection::Options to avoid passing so many params * net: add nSendBufferMaxSize/nReceiveFloodSize to CConnection::Options * net: move vNodesDisconnected into CConnman * Made the ForEachNode* functions in src/net.cpp more pragmatic and self documenting * Convert ForEachNode* functions to take a templated function argument rather than a std::function to eliminate std::function overhead * net: move MAX_FEELER_CONNECTIONS into connman
2017-07-21 11:35:19 +02:00
CNode dummyNode2(id++, NODE_NETWORK, 0, INVALID_SOCKET, addr2, "", true);
Backport Bitcoin PR#8708: net: have CConnman handle message sending (#1553) * serialization: teach serializers variadics Also add a variadic CDataStream ctor for ease-of-use. * connman is in charge of pushing messages The changes here are dense and subtle, but hopefully all is more explicit than before. - CConnman is now in charge of sending data rather than the nodes themselves. This is necessary because many decisions need to be made with all nodes in mind, and a model that requires the nodes calling up to their manager quickly turns to spaghetti. - The per-node-serializer (ssSend) has been replaced with a (quasi-)const send-version. Since the send version for serialization can only change once per connection, we now explicitly tag messages with INIT_PROTO_VERSION if they are sent before the handshake. With this done, there's no need to lock for access to nSendVersion. Also, a new stream is used for each message, so there's no need to lock during the serialization process. - This takes care of accounting for optimistic sends, so the nOptimisticBytesWritten hack can be removed. - -dropmessagestest and -fuzzmessagestest have not been preserved, as I suspect they haven't been used in years. * net: switch all callers to connman for pushing messages Drop all of the old stuff. * drop the optimistic write counter hack This is now handled properly in realtime. * net: remove now-unused ssSend and Fuzz * net: construct CNodeStates in place * net: handle version push in InitializeNode
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dummyNode2.SetSendVersion(PROTOCOL_VERSION);
GetNodeSignals().InitializeNode(&dummyNode2, *connman);
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dummyNode2.nVersion = 1;
Misbehaving(dummyNode2.GetId(), 50);
Backport Bitcoin PR#8085: p2p: Begin encapsulation (#1537) * net: move CBanDB and CAddrDB out of net.h/cpp This will eventually solve a circular dependency * net: Create CConnman to encapsulate p2p connections * net: Move socket binding into CConnman * net: move OpenNetworkConnection into CConnman * net: move ban and addrman functions into CConnman * net: Add oneshot functions to CConnman * net: move added node functions to CConnman * net: Add most functions needed for vNodes to CConnman * net: handle nodesignals in CConnman * net: Pass CConnection to wallet rather than using the global * net: Add rpc error for missing/disabled p2p functionality * net: Pass CConnman around as needed * gui: add NodeID to the peer table * net: create generic functor accessors and move vNodes to CConnman * net: move whitelist functions into CConnman * net: move nLastNodeId to CConnman * net: move nLocalHostNonce to CConnman This behavior seems to have been quite racy and broken. Move nLocalHostNonce into CNode, and check received nonces against all non-fully-connected nodes. If there's a match, assume we've connected to ourself. * net: move messageHandlerCondition to CConnman * net: move send/recv statistics to CConnman * net: move SendBufferSize/ReceiveFloodSize to CConnman * net: move nLocalServices/nRelevantServices to CConnman These are in-turn passed to CNode at connection time. This allows us to offer different services to different peers (or test the effects of doing so). * net: move semOutbound and semMasternodeOutbound to CConnman * net: SocketSendData returns written size * net: move max/max-outbound to CConnman * net: Pass best block known height into CConnman CConnman then passes the current best height into CNode at creation time. This way CConnman/CNode have no dependency on main for height, and the signals only move in one direction. This also helps to prevent identity leakage a tiny bit. Before this change, an attacker could theoretically make 2 connections on different interfaces. They would connect fully on one, and only establish the initial connection on the other. Once they receive a new block, they would relay it to your first connection, and immediately commence the version handshake on the second. Since the new block height is reflected immediately, they could attempt to learn whether the two connections were correlated. This is, of course, incredibly unlikely to work due to the small timings involved and receipt from other senders. But it doesn't hurt to lock-in nBestHeight at the time of connection, rather than letting the remote choose the time. * net: pass CClientUIInterface into CConnman * net: Drop StartNode/StopNode and use CConnman directly * net: Introduce CConnection::Options to avoid passing so many params * net: add nSendBufferMaxSize/nReceiveFloodSize to CConnection::Options * net: move vNodesDisconnected into CConnman * Made the ForEachNode* functions in src/net.cpp more pragmatic and self documenting * Convert ForEachNode* functions to take a templated function argument rather than a std::function to eliminate std::function overhead * net: move MAX_FEELER_CONNECTIONS into connman
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SendMessages(&dummyNode2, *connman);
BOOST_CHECK(!connman->IsBanned(addr2)); // 2 not banned yet...
BOOST_CHECK(connman->IsBanned(addr1)); // ... but 1 still should be
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Misbehaving(dummyNode2.GetId(), 50);
Backport Bitcoin PR#8085: p2p: Begin encapsulation (#1537) * net: move CBanDB and CAddrDB out of net.h/cpp This will eventually solve a circular dependency * net: Create CConnman to encapsulate p2p connections * net: Move socket binding into CConnman * net: move OpenNetworkConnection into CConnman * net: move ban and addrman functions into CConnman * net: Add oneshot functions to CConnman * net: move added node functions to CConnman * net: Add most functions needed for vNodes to CConnman * net: handle nodesignals in CConnman * net: Pass CConnection to wallet rather than using the global * net: Add rpc error for missing/disabled p2p functionality * net: Pass CConnman around as needed * gui: add NodeID to the peer table * net: create generic functor accessors and move vNodes to CConnman * net: move whitelist functions into CConnman * net: move nLastNodeId to CConnman * net: move nLocalHostNonce to CConnman This behavior seems to have been quite racy and broken. Move nLocalHostNonce into CNode, and check received nonces against all non-fully-connected nodes. If there's a match, assume we've connected to ourself. * net: move messageHandlerCondition to CConnman * net: move send/recv statistics to CConnman * net: move SendBufferSize/ReceiveFloodSize to CConnman * net: move nLocalServices/nRelevantServices to CConnman These are in-turn passed to CNode at connection time. This allows us to offer different services to different peers (or test the effects of doing so). * net: move semOutbound and semMasternodeOutbound to CConnman * net: SocketSendData returns written size * net: move max/max-outbound to CConnman * net: Pass best block known height into CConnman CConnman then passes the current best height into CNode at creation time. This way CConnman/CNode have no dependency on main for height, and the signals only move in one direction. This also helps to prevent identity leakage a tiny bit. Before this change, an attacker could theoretically make 2 connections on different interfaces. They would connect fully on one, and only establish the initial connection on the other. Once they receive a new block, they would relay it to your first connection, and immediately commence the version handshake on the second. Since the new block height is reflected immediately, they could attempt to learn whether the two connections were correlated. This is, of course, incredibly unlikely to work due to the small timings involved and receipt from other senders. But it doesn't hurt to lock-in nBestHeight at the time of connection, rather than letting the remote choose the time. * net: pass CClientUIInterface into CConnman * net: Drop StartNode/StopNode and use CConnman directly * net: Introduce CConnection::Options to avoid passing so many params * net: add nSendBufferMaxSize/nReceiveFloodSize to CConnection::Options * net: move vNodesDisconnected into CConnman * Made the ForEachNode* functions in src/net.cpp more pragmatic and self documenting * Convert ForEachNode* functions to take a templated function argument rather than a std::function to eliminate std::function overhead * net: move MAX_FEELER_CONNECTIONS into connman
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SendMessages(&dummyNode2, *connman);
BOOST_CHECK(connman->IsBanned(addr2));
}
BOOST_AUTO_TEST_CASE(DoS_banscore)
{
Backport Bitcoin PR#8085: p2p: Begin encapsulation (#1537) * net: move CBanDB and CAddrDB out of net.h/cpp This will eventually solve a circular dependency * net: Create CConnman to encapsulate p2p connections * net: Move socket binding into CConnman * net: move OpenNetworkConnection into CConnman * net: move ban and addrman functions into CConnman * net: Add oneshot functions to CConnman * net: move added node functions to CConnman * net: Add most functions needed for vNodes to CConnman * net: handle nodesignals in CConnman * net: Pass CConnection to wallet rather than using the global * net: Add rpc error for missing/disabled p2p functionality * net: Pass CConnman around as needed * gui: add NodeID to the peer table * net: create generic functor accessors and move vNodes to CConnman * net: move whitelist functions into CConnman * net: move nLastNodeId to CConnman * net: move nLocalHostNonce to CConnman This behavior seems to have been quite racy and broken. Move nLocalHostNonce into CNode, and check received nonces against all non-fully-connected nodes. If there's a match, assume we've connected to ourself. * net: move messageHandlerCondition to CConnman * net: move send/recv statistics to CConnman * net: move SendBufferSize/ReceiveFloodSize to CConnman * net: move nLocalServices/nRelevantServices to CConnman These are in-turn passed to CNode at connection time. This allows us to offer different services to different peers (or test the effects of doing so). * net: move semOutbound and semMasternodeOutbound to CConnman * net: SocketSendData returns written size * net: move max/max-outbound to CConnman * net: Pass best block known height into CConnman CConnman then passes the current best height into CNode at creation time. This way CConnman/CNode have no dependency on main for height, and the signals only move in one direction. This also helps to prevent identity leakage a tiny bit. Before this change, an attacker could theoretically make 2 connections on different interfaces. They would connect fully on one, and only establish the initial connection on the other. Once they receive a new block, they would relay it to your first connection, and immediately commence the version handshake on the second. Since the new block height is reflected immediately, they could attempt to learn whether the two connections were correlated. This is, of course, incredibly unlikely to work due to the small timings involved and receipt from other senders. But it doesn't hurt to lock-in nBestHeight at the time of connection, rather than letting the remote choose the time. * net: pass CClientUIInterface into CConnman * net: Drop StartNode/StopNode and use CConnman directly * net: Introduce CConnection::Options to avoid passing so many params * net: add nSendBufferMaxSize/nReceiveFloodSize to CConnection::Options * net: move vNodesDisconnected into CConnman * Made the ForEachNode* functions in src/net.cpp more pragmatic and self documenting * Convert ForEachNode* functions to take a templated function argument rather than a std::function to eliminate std::function overhead * net: move MAX_FEELER_CONNECTIONS into connman
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connman->ClearBanned();
mapArgs["-banscore"] = "111"; // because 11 is my favorite number
CAddress addr1(ip(0xa0b0c001), NODE_NONE);
Backport Bitcoin PR#8085: p2p: Begin encapsulation (#1537) * net: move CBanDB and CAddrDB out of net.h/cpp This will eventually solve a circular dependency * net: Create CConnman to encapsulate p2p connections * net: Move socket binding into CConnman * net: move OpenNetworkConnection into CConnman * net: move ban and addrman functions into CConnman * net: Add oneshot functions to CConnman * net: move added node functions to CConnman * net: Add most functions needed for vNodes to CConnman * net: handle nodesignals in CConnman * net: Pass CConnection to wallet rather than using the global * net: Add rpc error for missing/disabled p2p functionality * net: Pass CConnman around as needed * gui: add NodeID to the peer table * net: create generic functor accessors and move vNodes to CConnman * net: move whitelist functions into CConnman * net: move nLastNodeId to CConnman * net: move nLocalHostNonce to CConnman This behavior seems to have been quite racy and broken. Move nLocalHostNonce into CNode, and check received nonces against all non-fully-connected nodes. If there's a match, assume we've connected to ourself. * net: move messageHandlerCondition to CConnman * net: move send/recv statistics to CConnman * net: move SendBufferSize/ReceiveFloodSize to CConnman * net: move nLocalServices/nRelevantServices to CConnman These are in-turn passed to CNode at connection time. This allows us to offer different services to different peers (or test the effects of doing so). * net: move semOutbound and semMasternodeOutbound to CConnman * net: SocketSendData returns written size * net: move max/max-outbound to CConnman * net: Pass best block known height into CConnman CConnman then passes the current best height into CNode at creation time. This way CConnman/CNode have no dependency on main for height, and the signals only move in one direction. This also helps to prevent identity leakage a tiny bit. Before this change, an attacker could theoretically make 2 connections on different interfaces. They would connect fully on one, and only establish the initial connection on the other. Once they receive a new block, they would relay it to your first connection, and immediately commence the version handshake on the second. Since the new block height is reflected immediately, they could attempt to learn whether the two connections were correlated. This is, of course, incredibly unlikely to work due to the small timings involved and receipt from other senders. But it doesn't hurt to lock-in nBestHeight at the time of connection, rather than letting the remote choose the time. * net: pass CClientUIInterface into CConnman * net: Drop StartNode/StopNode and use CConnman directly * net: Introduce CConnection::Options to avoid passing so many params * net: add nSendBufferMaxSize/nReceiveFloodSize to CConnection::Options * net: move vNodesDisconnected into CConnman * Made the ForEachNode* functions in src/net.cpp more pragmatic and self documenting * Convert ForEachNode* functions to take a templated function argument rather than a std::function to eliminate std::function overhead * net: move MAX_FEELER_CONNECTIONS into connman
2017-07-21 11:35:19 +02:00
CNode dummyNode1(id++, NODE_NETWORK, 0, INVALID_SOCKET, addr1, "", true);
Backport Bitcoin PR#8708: net: have CConnman handle message sending (#1553) * serialization: teach serializers variadics Also add a variadic CDataStream ctor for ease-of-use. * connman is in charge of pushing messages The changes here are dense and subtle, but hopefully all is more explicit than before. - CConnman is now in charge of sending data rather than the nodes themselves. This is necessary because many decisions need to be made with all nodes in mind, and a model that requires the nodes calling up to their manager quickly turns to spaghetti. - The per-node-serializer (ssSend) has been replaced with a (quasi-)const send-version. Since the send version for serialization can only change once per connection, we now explicitly tag messages with INIT_PROTO_VERSION if they are sent before the handshake. With this done, there's no need to lock for access to nSendVersion. Also, a new stream is used for each message, so there's no need to lock during the serialization process. - This takes care of accounting for optimistic sends, so the nOptimisticBytesWritten hack can be removed. - -dropmessagestest and -fuzzmessagestest have not been preserved, as I suspect they haven't been used in years. * net: switch all callers to connman for pushing messages Drop all of the old stuff. * drop the optimistic write counter hack This is now handled properly in realtime. * net: remove now-unused ssSend and Fuzz * net: construct CNodeStates in place * net: handle version push in InitializeNode
2017-07-27 16:28:05 +02:00
dummyNode1.SetSendVersion(PROTOCOL_VERSION);
GetNodeSignals().InitializeNode(&dummyNode1, *connman);
2013-11-18 01:25:17 +01:00
dummyNode1.nVersion = 1;
Misbehaving(dummyNode1.GetId(), 100);
Backport Bitcoin PR#8085: p2p: Begin encapsulation (#1537) * net: move CBanDB and CAddrDB out of net.h/cpp This will eventually solve a circular dependency * net: Create CConnman to encapsulate p2p connections * net: Move socket binding into CConnman * net: move OpenNetworkConnection into CConnman * net: move ban and addrman functions into CConnman * net: Add oneshot functions to CConnman * net: move added node functions to CConnman * net: Add most functions needed for vNodes to CConnman * net: handle nodesignals in CConnman * net: Pass CConnection to wallet rather than using the global * net: Add rpc error for missing/disabled p2p functionality * net: Pass CConnman around as needed * gui: add NodeID to the peer table * net: create generic functor accessors and move vNodes to CConnman * net: move whitelist functions into CConnman * net: move nLastNodeId to CConnman * net: move nLocalHostNonce to CConnman This behavior seems to have been quite racy and broken. Move nLocalHostNonce into CNode, and check received nonces against all non-fully-connected nodes. If there's a match, assume we've connected to ourself. * net: move messageHandlerCondition to CConnman * net: move send/recv statistics to CConnman * net: move SendBufferSize/ReceiveFloodSize to CConnman * net: move nLocalServices/nRelevantServices to CConnman These are in-turn passed to CNode at connection time. This allows us to offer different services to different peers (or test the effects of doing so). * net: move semOutbound and semMasternodeOutbound to CConnman * net: SocketSendData returns written size * net: move max/max-outbound to CConnman * net: Pass best block known height into CConnman CConnman then passes the current best height into CNode at creation time. This way CConnman/CNode have no dependency on main for height, and the signals only move in one direction. This also helps to prevent identity leakage a tiny bit. Before this change, an attacker could theoretically make 2 connections on different interfaces. They would connect fully on one, and only establish the initial connection on the other. Once they receive a new block, they would relay it to your first connection, and immediately commence the version handshake on the second. Since the new block height is reflected immediately, they could attempt to learn whether the two connections were correlated. This is, of course, incredibly unlikely to work due to the small timings involved and receipt from other senders. But it doesn't hurt to lock-in nBestHeight at the time of connection, rather than letting the remote choose the time. * net: pass CClientUIInterface into CConnman * net: Drop StartNode/StopNode and use CConnman directly * net: Introduce CConnection::Options to avoid passing so many params * net: add nSendBufferMaxSize/nReceiveFloodSize to CConnection::Options * net: move vNodesDisconnected into CConnman * Made the ForEachNode* functions in src/net.cpp more pragmatic and self documenting * Convert ForEachNode* functions to take a templated function argument rather than a std::function to eliminate std::function overhead * net: move MAX_FEELER_CONNECTIONS into connman
2017-07-21 11:35:19 +02:00
SendMessages(&dummyNode1, *connman);
BOOST_CHECK(!connman->IsBanned(addr1));
2013-11-18 01:25:17 +01:00
Misbehaving(dummyNode1.GetId(), 10);
Backport Bitcoin PR#8085: p2p: Begin encapsulation (#1537) * net: move CBanDB and CAddrDB out of net.h/cpp This will eventually solve a circular dependency * net: Create CConnman to encapsulate p2p connections * net: Move socket binding into CConnman * net: move OpenNetworkConnection into CConnman * net: move ban and addrman functions into CConnman * net: Add oneshot functions to CConnman * net: move added node functions to CConnman * net: Add most functions needed for vNodes to CConnman * net: handle nodesignals in CConnman * net: Pass CConnection to wallet rather than using the global * net: Add rpc error for missing/disabled p2p functionality * net: Pass CConnman around as needed * gui: add NodeID to the peer table * net: create generic functor accessors and move vNodes to CConnman * net: move whitelist functions into CConnman * net: move nLastNodeId to CConnman * net: move nLocalHostNonce to CConnman This behavior seems to have been quite racy and broken. Move nLocalHostNonce into CNode, and check received nonces against all non-fully-connected nodes. If there's a match, assume we've connected to ourself. * net: move messageHandlerCondition to CConnman * net: move send/recv statistics to CConnman * net: move SendBufferSize/ReceiveFloodSize to CConnman * net: move nLocalServices/nRelevantServices to CConnman These are in-turn passed to CNode at connection time. This allows us to offer different services to different peers (or test the effects of doing so). * net: move semOutbound and semMasternodeOutbound to CConnman * net: SocketSendData returns written size * net: move max/max-outbound to CConnman * net: Pass best block known height into CConnman CConnman then passes the current best height into CNode at creation time. This way CConnman/CNode have no dependency on main for height, and the signals only move in one direction. This also helps to prevent identity leakage a tiny bit. Before this change, an attacker could theoretically make 2 connections on different interfaces. They would connect fully on one, and only establish the initial connection on the other. Once they receive a new block, they would relay it to your first connection, and immediately commence the version handshake on the second. Since the new block height is reflected immediately, they could attempt to learn whether the two connections were correlated. This is, of course, incredibly unlikely to work due to the small timings involved and receipt from other senders. But it doesn't hurt to lock-in nBestHeight at the time of connection, rather than letting the remote choose the time. * net: pass CClientUIInterface into CConnman * net: Drop StartNode/StopNode and use CConnman directly * net: Introduce CConnection::Options to avoid passing so many params * net: add nSendBufferMaxSize/nReceiveFloodSize to CConnection::Options * net: move vNodesDisconnected into CConnman * Made the ForEachNode* functions in src/net.cpp more pragmatic and self documenting * Convert ForEachNode* functions to take a templated function argument rather than a std::function to eliminate std::function overhead * net: move MAX_FEELER_CONNECTIONS into connman
2017-07-21 11:35:19 +02:00
SendMessages(&dummyNode1, *connman);
BOOST_CHECK(!connman->IsBanned(addr1));
2013-11-18 01:25:17 +01:00
Misbehaving(dummyNode1.GetId(), 1);
Backport Bitcoin PR#8085: p2p: Begin encapsulation (#1537) * net: move CBanDB and CAddrDB out of net.h/cpp This will eventually solve a circular dependency * net: Create CConnman to encapsulate p2p connections * net: Move socket binding into CConnman * net: move OpenNetworkConnection into CConnman * net: move ban and addrman functions into CConnman * net: Add oneshot functions to CConnman * net: move added node functions to CConnman * net: Add most functions needed for vNodes to CConnman * net: handle nodesignals in CConnman * net: Pass CConnection to wallet rather than using the global * net: Add rpc error for missing/disabled p2p functionality * net: Pass CConnman around as needed * gui: add NodeID to the peer table * net: create generic functor accessors and move vNodes to CConnman * net: move whitelist functions into CConnman * net: move nLastNodeId to CConnman * net: move nLocalHostNonce to CConnman This behavior seems to have been quite racy and broken. Move nLocalHostNonce into CNode, and check received nonces against all non-fully-connected nodes. If there's a match, assume we've connected to ourself. * net: move messageHandlerCondition to CConnman * net: move send/recv statistics to CConnman * net: move SendBufferSize/ReceiveFloodSize to CConnman * net: move nLocalServices/nRelevantServices to CConnman These are in-turn passed to CNode at connection time. This allows us to offer different services to different peers (or test the effects of doing so). * net: move semOutbound and semMasternodeOutbound to CConnman * net: SocketSendData returns written size * net: move max/max-outbound to CConnman * net: Pass best block known height into CConnman CConnman then passes the current best height into CNode at creation time. This way CConnman/CNode have no dependency on main for height, and the signals only move in one direction. This also helps to prevent identity leakage a tiny bit. Before this change, an attacker could theoretically make 2 connections on different interfaces. They would connect fully on one, and only establish the initial connection on the other. Once they receive a new block, they would relay it to your first connection, and immediately commence the version handshake on the second. Since the new block height is reflected immediately, they could attempt to learn whether the two connections were correlated. This is, of course, incredibly unlikely to work due to the small timings involved and receipt from other senders. But it doesn't hurt to lock-in nBestHeight at the time of connection, rather than letting the remote choose the time. * net: pass CClientUIInterface into CConnman * net: Drop StartNode/StopNode and use CConnman directly * net: Introduce CConnection::Options to avoid passing so many params * net: add nSendBufferMaxSize/nReceiveFloodSize to CConnection::Options * net: move vNodesDisconnected into CConnman * Made the ForEachNode* functions in src/net.cpp more pragmatic and self documenting * Convert ForEachNode* functions to take a templated function argument rather than a std::function to eliminate std::function overhead * net: move MAX_FEELER_CONNECTIONS into connman
2017-07-21 11:35:19 +02:00
SendMessages(&dummyNode1, *connman);
BOOST_CHECK(connman->IsBanned(addr1));
mapArgs.erase("-banscore");
}
BOOST_AUTO_TEST_CASE(DoS_bantime)
{
Backport Bitcoin PR#8085: p2p: Begin encapsulation (#1537) * net: move CBanDB and CAddrDB out of net.h/cpp This will eventually solve a circular dependency * net: Create CConnman to encapsulate p2p connections * net: Move socket binding into CConnman * net: move OpenNetworkConnection into CConnman * net: move ban and addrman functions into CConnman * net: Add oneshot functions to CConnman * net: move added node functions to CConnman * net: Add most functions needed for vNodes to CConnman * net: handle nodesignals in CConnman * net: Pass CConnection to wallet rather than using the global * net: Add rpc error for missing/disabled p2p functionality * net: Pass CConnman around as needed * gui: add NodeID to the peer table * net: create generic functor accessors and move vNodes to CConnman * net: move whitelist functions into CConnman * net: move nLastNodeId to CConnman * net: move nLocalHostNonce to CConnman This behavior seems to have been quite racy and broken. Move nLocalHostNonce into CNode, and check received nonces against all non-fully-connected nodes. If there's a match, assume we've connected to ourself. * net: move messageHandlerCondition to CConnman * net: move send/recv statistics to CConnman * net: move SendBufferSize/ReceiveFloodSize to CConnman * net: move nLocalServices/nRelevantServices to CConnman These are in-turn passed to CNode at connection time. This allows us to offer different services to different peers (or test the effects of doing so). * net: move semOutbound and semMasternodeOutbound to CConnman * net: SocketSendData returns written size * net: move max/max-outbound to CConnman * net: Pass best block known height into CConnman CConnman then passes the current best height into CNode at creation time. This way CConnman/CNode have no dependency on main for height, and the signals only move in one direction. This also helps to prevent identity leakage a tiny bit. Before this change, an attacker could theoretically make 2 connections on different interfaces. They would connect fully on one, and only establish the initial connection on the other. Once they receive a new block, they would relay it to your first connection, and immediately commence the version handshake on the second. Since the new block height is reflected immediately, they could attempt to learn whether the two connections were correlated. This is, of course, incredibly unlikely to work due to the small timings involved and receipt from other senders. But it doesn't hurt to lock-in nBestHeight at the time of connection, rather than letting the remote choose the time. * net: pass CClientUIInterface into CConnman * net: Drop StartNode/StopNode and use CConnman directly * net: Introduce CConnection::Options to avoid passing so many params * net: add nSendBufferMaxSize/nReceiveFloodSize to CConnection::Options * net: move vNodesDisconnected into CConnman * Made the ForEachNode* functions in src/net.cpp more pragmatic and self documenting * Convert ForEachNode* functions to take a templated function argument rather than a std::function to eliminate std::function overhead * net: move MAX_FEELER_CONNECTIONS into connman
2017-07-21 11:35:19 +02:00
connman->ClearBanned();
int64_t nStartTime = GetTime();
SetMockTime(nStartTime); // Overrides future calls to GetTime()
CAddress addr(ip(0xa0b0c001), NODE_NONE);
Backport Bitcoin PR#8085: p2p: Begin encapsulation (#1537) * net: move CBanDB and CAddrDB out of net.h/cpp This will eventually solve a circular dependency * net: Create CConnman to encapsulate p2p connections * net: Move socket binding into CConnman * net: move OpenNetworkConnection into CConnman * net: move ban and addrman functions into CConnman * net: Add oneshot functions to CConnman * net: move added node functions to CConnman * net: Add most functions needed for vNodes to CConnman * net: handle nodesignals in CConnman * net: Pass CConnection to wallet rather than using the global * net: Add rpc error for missing/disabled p2p functionality * net: Pass CConnman around as needed * gui: add NodeID to the peer table * net: create generic functor accessors and move vNodes to CConnman * net: move whitelist functions into CConnman * net: move nLastNodeId to CConnman * net: move nLocalHostNonce to CConnman This behavior seems to have been quite racy and broken. Move nLocalHostNonce into CNode, and check received nonces against all non-fully-connected nodes. If there's a match, assume we've connected to ourself. * net: move messageHandlerCondition to CConnman * net: move send/recv statistics to CConnman * net: move SendBufferSize/ReceiveFloodSize to CConnman * net: move nLocalServices/nRelevantServices to CConnman These are in-turn passed to CNode at connection time. This allows us to offer different services to different peers (or test the effects of doing so). * net: move semOutbound and semMasternodeOutbound to CConnman * net: SocketSendData returns written size * net: move max/max-outbound to CConnman * net: Pass best block known height into CConnman CConnman then passes the current best height into CNode at creation time. This way CConnman/CNode have no dependency on main for height, and the signals only move in one direction. This also helps to prevent identity leakage a tiny bit. Before this change, an attacker could theoretically make 2 connections on different interfaces. They would connect fully on one, and only establish the initial connection on the other. Once they receive a new block, they would relay it to your first connection, and immediately commence the version handshake on the second. Since the new block height is reflected immediately, they could attempt to learn whether the two connections were correlated. This is, of course, incredibly unlikely to work due to the small timings involved and receipt from other senders. But it doesn't hurt to lock-in nBestHeight at the time of connection, rather than letting the remote choose the time. * net: pass CClientUIInterface into CConnman * net: Drop StartNode/StopNode and use CConnman directly * net: Introduce CConnection::Options to avoid passing so many params * net: add nSendBufferMaxSize/nReceiveFloodSize to CConnection::Options * net: move vNodesDisconnected into CConnman * Made the ForEachNode* functions in src/net.cpp more pragmatic and self documenting * Convert ForEachNode* functions to take a templated function argument rather than a std::function to eliminate std::function overhead * net: move MAX_FEELER_CONNECTIONS into connman
2017-07-21 11:35:19 +02:00
CNode dummyNode(id++, NODE_NETWORK, 0, INVALID_SOCKET, addr, "", true);
Backport Bitcoin PR#8708: net: have CConnman handle message sending (#1553) * serialization: teach serializers variadics Also add a variadic CDataStream ctor for ease-of-use. * connman is in charge of pushing messages The changes here are dense and subtle, but hopefully all is more explicit than before. - CConnman is now in charge of sending data rather than the nodes themselves. This is necessary because many decisions need to be made with all nodes in mind, and a model that requires the nodes calling up to their manager quickly turns to spaghetti. - The per-node-serializer (ssSend) has been replaced with a (quasi-)const send-version. Since the send version for serialization can only change once per connection, we now explicitly tag messages with INIT_PROTO_VERSION if they are sent before the handshake. With this done, there's no need to lock for access to nSendVersion. Also, a new stream is used for each message, so there's no need to lock during the serialization process. - This takes care of accounting for optimistic sends, so the nOptimisticBytesWritten hack can be removed. - -dropmessagestest and -fuzzmessagestest have not been preserved, as I suspect they haven't been used in years. * net: switch all callers to connman for pushing messages Drop all of the old stuff. * drop the optimistic write counter hack This is now handled properly in realtime. * net: remove now-unused ssSend and Fuzz * net: construct CNodeStates in place * net: handle version push in InitializeNode
2017-07-27 16:28:05 +02:00
dummyNode.SetSendVersion(PROTOCOL_VERSION);
GetNodeSignals().InitializeNode(&dummyNode, *connman);
2013-11-18 01:25:17 +01:00
dummyNode.nVersion = 1;
2013-11-18 01:25:17 +01:00
Misbehaving(dummyNode.GetId(), 100);
Backport Bitcoin PR#8085: p2p: Begin encapsulation (#1537) * net: move CBanDB and CAddrDB out of net.h/cpp This will eventually solve a circular dependency * net: Create CConnman to encapsulate p2p connections * net: Move socket binding into CConnman * net: move OpenNetworkConnection into CConnman * net: move ban and addrman functions into CConnman * net: Add oneshot functions to CConnman * net: move added node functions to CConnman * net: Add most functions needed for vNodes to CConnman * net: handle nodesignals in CConnman * net: Pass CConnection to wallet rather than using the global * net: Add rpc error for missing/disabled p2p functionality * net: Pass CConnman around as needed * gui: add NodeID to the peer table * net: create generic functor accessors and move vNodes to CConnman * net: move whitelist functions into CConnman * net: move nLastNodeId to CConnman * net: move nLocalHostNonce to CConnman This behavior seems to have been quite racy and broken. Move nLocalHostNonce into CNode, and check received nonces against all non-fully-connected nodes. If there's a match, assume we've connected to ourself. * net: move messageHandlerCondition to CConnman * net: move send/recv statistics to CConnman * net: move SendBufferSize/ReceiveFloodSize to CConnman * net: move nLocalServices/nRelevantServices to CConnman These are in-turn passed to CNode at connection time. This allows us to offer different services to different peers (or test the effects of doing so). * net: move semOutbound and semMasternodeOutbound to CConnman * net: SocketSendData returns written size * net: move max/max-outbound to CConnman * net: Pass best block known height into CConnman CConnman then passes the current best height into CNode at creation time. This way CConnman/CNode have no dependency on main for height, and the signals only move in one direction. This also helps to prevent identity leakage a tiny bit. Before this change, an attacker could theoretically make 2 connections on different interfaces. They would connect fully on one, and only establish the initial connection on the other. Once they receive a new block, they would relay it to your first connection, and immediately commence the version handshake on the second. Since the new block height is reflected immediately, they could attempt to learn whether the two connections were correlated. This is, of course, incredibly unlikely to work due to the small timings involved and receipt from other senders. But it doesn't hurt to lock-in nBestHeight at the time of connection, rather than letting the remote choose the time. * net: pass CClientUIInterface into CConnman * net: Drop StartNode/StopNode and use CConnman directly * net: Introduce CConnection::Options to avoid passing so many params * net: add nSendBufferMaxSize/nReceiveFloodSize to CConnection::Options * net: move vNodesDisconnected into CConnman * Made the ForEachNode* functions in src/net.cpp more pragmatic and self documenting * Convert ForEachNode* functions to take a templated function argument rather than a std::function to eliminate std::function overhead * net: move MAX_FEELER_CONNECTIONS into connman
2017-07-21 11:35:19 +02:00
SendMessages(&dummyNode, *connman);
BOOST_CHECK(connman->IsBanned(addr));
SetMockTime(nStartTime+60*60);
Backport Bitcoin PR#8085: p2p: Begin encapsulation (#1537) * net: move CBanDB and CAddrDB out of net.h/cpp This will eventually solve a circular dependency * net: Create CConnman to encapsulate p2p connections * net: Move socket binding into CConnman * net: move OpenNetworkConnection into CConnman * net: move ban and addrman functions into CConnman * net: Add oneshot functions to CConnman * net: move added node functions to CConnman * net: Add most functions needed for vNodes to CConnman * net: handle nodesignals in CConnman * net: Pass CConnection to wallet rather than using the global * net: Add rpc error for missing/disabled p2p functionality * net: Pass CConnman around as needed * gui: add NodeID to the peer table * net: create generic functor accessors and move vNodes to CConnman * net: move whitelist functions into CConnman * net: move nLastNodeId to CConnman * net: move nLocalHostNonce to CConnman This behavior seems to have been quite racy and broken. Move nLocalHostNonce into CNode, and check received nonces against all non-fully-connected nodes. If there's a match, assume we've connected to ourself. * net: move messageHandlerCondition to CConnman * net: move send/recv statistics to CConnman * net: move SendBufferSize/ReceiveFloodSize to CConnman * net: move nLocalServices/nRelevantServices to CConnman These are in-turn passed to CNode at connection time. This allows us to offer different services to different peers (or test the effects of doing so). * net: move semOutbound and semMasternodeOutbound to CConnman * net: SocketSendData returns written size * net: move max/max-outbound to CConnman * net: Pass best block known height into CConnman CConnman then passes the current best height into CNode at creation time. This way CConnman/CNode have no dependency on main for height, and the signals only move in one direction. This also helps to prevent identity leakage a tiny bit. Before this change, an attacker could theoretically make 2 connections on different interfaces. They would connect fully on one, and only establish the initial connection on the other. Once they receive a new block, they would relay it to your first connection, and immediately commence the version handshake on the second. Since the new block height is reflected immediately, they could attempt to learn whether the two connections were correlated. This is, of course, incredibly unlikely to work due to the small timings involved and receipt from other senders. But it doesn't hurt to lock-in nBestHeight at the time of connection, rather than letting the remote choose the time. * net: pass CClientUIInterface into CConnman * net: Drop StartNode/StopNode and use CConnman directly * net: Introduce CConnection::Options to avoid passing so many params * net: add nSendBufferMaxSize/nReceiveFloodSize to CConnection::Options * net: move vNodesDisconnected into CConnman * Made the ForEachNode* functions in src/net.cpp more pragmatic and self documenting * Convert ForEachNode* functions to take a templated function argument rather than a std::function to eliminate std::function overhead * net: move MAX_FEELER_CONNECTIONS into connman
2017-07-21 11:35:19 +02:00
BOOST_CHECK(connman->IsBanned(addr));
SetMockTime(nStartTime+60*60*24+1);
Backport Bitcoin PR#8085: p2p: Begin encapsulation (#1537) * net: move CBanDB and CAddrDB out of net.h/cpp This will eventually solve a circular dependency * net: Create CConnman to encapsulate p2p connections * net: Move socket binding into CConnman * net: move OpenNetworkConnection into CConnman * net: move ban and addrman functions into CConnman * net: Add oneshot functions to CConnman * net: move added node functions to CConnman * net: Add most functions needed for vNodes to CConnman * net: handle nodesignals in CConnman * net: Pass CConnection to wallet rather than using the global * net: Add rpc error for missing/disabled p2p functionality * net: Pass CConnman around as needed * gui: add NodeID to the peer table * net: create generic functor accessors and move vNodes to CConnman * net: move whitelist functions into CConnman * net: move nLastNodeId to CConnman * net: move nLocalHostNonce to CConnman This behavior seems to have been quite racy and broken. Move nLocalHostNonce into CNode, and check received nonces against all non-fully-connected nodes. If there's a match, assume we've connected to ourself. * net: move messageHandlerCondition to CConnman * net: move send/recv statistics to CConnman * net: move SendBufferSize/ReceiveFloodSize to CConnman * net: move nLocalServices/nRelevantServices to CConnman These are in-turn passed to CNode at connection time. This allows us to offer different services to different peers (or test the effects of doing so). * net: move semOutbound and semMasternodeOutbound to CConnman * net: SocketSendData returns written size * net: move max/max-outbound to CConnman * net: Pass best block known height into CConnman CConnman then passes the current best height into CNode at creation time. This way CConnman/CNode have no dependency on main for height, and the signals only move in one direction. This also helps to prevent identity leakage a tiny bit. Before this change, an attacker could theoretically make 2 connections on different interfaces. They would connect fully on one, and only establish the initial connection on the other. Once they receive a new block, they would relay it to your first connection, and immediately commence the version handshake on the second. Since the new block height is reflected immediately, they could attempt to learn whether the two connections were correlated. This is, of course, incredibly unlikely to work due to the small timings involved and receipt from other senders. But it doesn't hurt to lock-in nBestHeight at the time of connection, rather than letting the remote choose the time. * net: pass CClientUIInterface into CConnman * net: Drop StartNode/StopNode and use CConnman directly * net: Introduce CConnection::Options to avoid passing so many params * net: add nSendBufferMaxSize/nReceiveFloodSize to CConnection::Options * net: move vNodesDisconnected into CConnman * Made the ForEachNode* functions in src/net.cpp more pragmatic and self documenting * Convert ForEachNode* functions to take a templated function argument rather than a std::function to eliminate std::function overhead * net: move MAX_FEELER_CONNECTIONS into connman
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BOOST_CHECK(!connman->IsBanned(addr));
}
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CTransaction RandomOrphan()
{
std::map<uint256, COrphanTx>::iterator it;
it = mapOrphanTransactions.lower_bound(GetRandHash());
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if (it == mapOrphanTransactions.end())
it = mapOrphanTransactions.begin();
return it->second.tx;
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}
BOOST_AUTO_TEST_CASE(DoS_mapOrphans)
{
CKey key;
key.MakeNewKey(true);
CBasicKeyStore keystore;
keystore.AddKey(key);
// 50 orphan transactions:
for (int i = 0; i < 50; i++)
{
CMutableTransaction tx;
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tx.vin.resize(1);
tx.vin[0].prevout.n = 0;
tx.vin[0].prevout.hash = GetRandHash();
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tx.vin[0].scriptSig << OP_1;
tx.vout.resize(1);
tx.vout[0].nValue = 1*CENT;
tx.vout[0].scriptPubKey = GetScriptForDestination(key.GetPubKey().GetID());
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AddOrphanTx(tx, i);
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}
// ... and 50 that depend on other orphans:
for (int i = 0; i < 50; i++)
{
CTransaction txPrev = RandomOrphan();
CMutableTransaction tx;
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tx.vin.resize(1);
tx.vin[0].prevout.n = 0;
tx.vin[0].prevout.hash = txPrev.GetHash();
tx.vout.resize(1);
tx.vout[0].nValue = 1*CENT;
tx.vout[0].scriptPubKey = GetScriptForDestination(key.GetPubKey().GetID());
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SignSignature(keystore, txPrev, tx, 0);
AddOrphanTx(tx, i);
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}
// This really-big orphan should be ignored:
for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++)
{
CTransaction txPrev = RandomOrphan();
CMutableTransaction tx;
tx.vout.resize(1);
tx.vout[0].nValue = 1*CENT;
tx.vout[0].scriptPubKey = GetScriptForDestination(key.GetPubKey().GetID());
tx.vin.resize(500);
for (unsigned int j = 0; j < tx.vin.size(); j++)
{
tx.vin[j].prevout.n = j;
tx.vin[j].prevout.hash = txPrev.GetHash();
}
SignSignature(keystore, txPrev, tx, 0);
// Re-use same signature for other inputs
// (they don't have to be valid for this test)
for (unsigned int j = 1; j < tx.vin.size(); j++)
tx.vin[j].scriptSig = tx.vin[0].scriptSig;
BOOST_CHECK(!AddOrphanTx(tx, i));
}
// Test EraseOrphansFor:
for (NodeId i = 0; i < 3; i++)
{
size_t sizeBefore = mapOrphanTransactions.size();
EraseOrphansFor(i);
BOOST_CHECK(mapOrphanTransactions.size() < sizeBefore);
}
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// Test LimitOrphanTxSize() function:
LimitOrphanTxSize(40);
BOOST_CHECK(mapOrphanTransactions.size() <= 40);
LimitOrphanTxSize(10);
BOOST_CHECK(mapOrphanTransactions.size() <= 10);
LimitOrphanTxSize(0);
BOOST_CHECK(mapOrphanTransactions.empty());
BOOST_CHECK(mapOrphanTransactionsByPrev.empty());
}
BOOST_AUTO_TEST_SUITE_END()