hi Gerard,

you can find the instructions via the link provided in the original email:

[2] https://2019.www.torproject.org/docs/debian.html.en

gr. Paul


On Thu, Jul 23, 2020 at 11:48 PM Dr Gerard Bulger <gerard@bulger.co.uk> wrote:
Where do we get daily builds?

-----Original Message-----
From: tor-relays <tor-relays-bounces@lists.torproject.org> On Behalf Of
David Goulet
Sent: 22 July 2020 20:55
To: tor-relays@lists.torproject.org
Subject: [tor-relays] Call for Testing - New Feature: Relay IPv6 Address
Discovery

Greetings everyone!

We've very recently merged upstream (tor.git) full IPv6 supports which
implies many many things. We are still finalizing the work but most of it is
in at the moment.

This is a call for help if anyone would like to test either git master[1] or
nightly builds[2] (only Debian) to test for us a specific feature.

The feature we would love for some of you to test is the IPv6 address
discovery. In short, with this new feature, specifying an ORPort without an
address will automatically bind tor to [::]:<port> and attempt to find the
IPv6 address by looking at (in this order):

  1. "Address" from torrc
  2. "ORPort address:port" from torrc
  3. Interface address. First public IPv6 is used.
  4. Local hostname, DNS AAAA query.

If all fails, the relay will simply never publish an IPv6 in the descriptor
but it will work properly with the IPv4 (still mandatory).

The other new thing is that now tor supports *two* "Address" statement which
can be a hostname or IPv4 or IPv6 now.

Thus this is now valid:

  Address 1.2.3.4
  Address [4242::4242]
  ORPort 9001

Your Tor will bind to 0.0.0.0:9001 and [::]:9001 but will publish the
1.2.3.4 for the IPv4 address and [4242::4242] for IPv6 in the descriptor
that is the address to use to reach your relay's ORPort.

Now, if you happen to have this configuration which I believe might be
common at the moment:

  ORPort 9001
  ORPort [4242::4242]:9001

The second ORPort which specifies an IPv6 address will supersede the "ORPort
9001" which uses [::] and thus you will bind on 0.0.0.0:9001 and
[4242::4242]:9001. You should get a notice log about this.

Thus the recommended configuration to avoid that log notice would be to bind
to specific addresses per family:

  ORPort <IPv4>:9001
  ORPort <IPv6>:9001

And of course, if you want your relay to _not_ listen on IPv6:

  ORPort 9001 IPv4Only

In your notice log, you will see which address is used to bind on the ORPort
and then you will see the reachability test succeed or not on the address
that tor either used from the configuration or auto discovered that is the
address you are supposedly reachable from.

Man page has NOT been updated yet, it will arrive once we stabilize the IPv6
feature and everything around it.

Please, do report (on this thread) _anything_ even slightly annoying about
this like logging or lack of logging and so on. This is a complex feature
and errors can be made thus any testing you can offer is extremely
appreciated.

Thanks!!
David

[1] https://gitweb.torproject.org/tor.git/
[2] https://2019.www.torproject.org/docs/debian.html.en

--
EeJVrrC/dHQXEXYB1ShOOZ4QuQ8PMnRY2XGq4BYsFq4=

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