# Copyright 2011-2017, Damian Johnson and The Tor Project
# See LICENSE for licensing information
"""
Supports communication with sockets speaking the Tor control protocol. This
allows us to send messages as basic strings, and receive responses as
:class:`~stem.response.ControlMessage` instances.
**This module only consists of low level components, and is not intended for
users.** See our `tutorials <../tutorials.html>`_ and `Control Module
<control.html>`_ if you're new to Stem and looking to get started.
With that aside, these can still be used for raw socket communication with
Tor...
::
import stem
import stem.connection
import stem.socket
if __name__ == '__main__':
try:
control_socket = stem.socket.ControlPort(port = 9051)
stem.connection.authenticate(control_socket)
except stem.SocketError as exc:
print 'Unable to connect to tor on port 9051: %s' % exc
sys.exit(1)
except stem.connection.AuthenticationFailure as exc:
print 'Unable to authenticate: %s' % exc
sys.exit(1)
print "Issuing 'GETINFO version' query...\\n"
control_socket.send('GETINFO version')
print control_socket.recv()
::
% python example.py
Issuing 'GETINFO version' query...
version=0.2.4.10-alpha-dev (git-8be6058d8f31e578)
OK
**Module Overview:**
::
ControlSocket - Socket wrapper that speaks the tor control protocol.
|- ControlPort - Control connection via a port.
| |- get_address - provides the ip address of our socket
| +- get_port - provides the port of our socket
|
|- ControlSocketFile - Control connection via a local file socket.
| +- get_socket_path - provides the path of the socket we connect to
|
|- send - sends a message to the socket
|- recv - receives a ControlMessage from the socket
|- is_alive - reports if the socket is known to be closed
|- is_localhost - returns if the socket is for the local system or not
|- connect - connects a new socket
|- close - shuts down the socket
+- __enter__ / __exit__ - manages socket connection
send_message - Writes a message to a control socket.
recv_message - Reads a ControlMessage from a control socket.
send_formatting - Performs the formatting expected from sent messages.
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import
import io
import re
import socket
import threading
import time
import stem.prereq
import stem.response
import stem.util.str_tools
from stem.util import log
MESSAGE_PREFIX = re.compile(b'^[a-zA-Z0-9]{3}[-+ ]')
ERROR_MSG = 'Error while receiving a control message (%s): %s'
# lines to limit our trace logging to, you can disable this by setting it to None
TRUNCATE_LOGS = 10
[docs]class ControlSocket(object):
"""
Wrapper for a socket connection that speaks the Tor control protocol. To the
better part this transparently handles the formatting for sending and
receiving complete messages. All methods are thread safe.
Callers should not instantiate this class directly, but rather use subclasses
which are expected to implement the **_make_socket()** method.
"""
def __init__(self):
self._socket, self._socket_file = None, None
self._is_alive = False
self._connection_time = 0.0 # time when we last connected or disconnected
# Tracks sending and receiving separately. This should be safe, and doing
# so prevents deadlock where we block writes because we're waiting to read
# a message that isn't coming.
self._send_lock = threading.RLock()
self._recv_lock = threading.RLock()
[docs] def send(self, message, raw = False):
"""
Formats and sends a message to the control socket. For more information see
the :func:`~stem.socket.send_message` function.
:param str message: message to be formatted and sent to the socket
:param bool raw: leaves the message formatting untouched, passing it to the socket as-is
:raises:
* :class:`stem.SocketError` if a problem arises in using the socket
* :class:`stem.SocketClosed` if the socket is known to be shut down
"""
with self._send_lock:
try:
if not self.is_alive():
raise stem.SocketClosed()
send_message(self._socket_file, message, raw)
except stem.SocketClosed:
# if send_message raises a SocketClosed then we should properly shut
# everything down
if self.is_alive():
self.close()
raise
[docs] def recv(self):
"""
Receives a message from the control socket, blocking until we've received
one. For more information see the :func:`~stem.socket.recv_message` function.
:returns: :class:`~stem.response.ControlMessage` for the message received
:raises:
* :class:`stem.ProtocolError` the content from the socket is malformed
* :class:`stem.SocketClosed` if the socket closes before we receive a complete message
"""
with self._recv_lock:
try:
# makes a temporary reference to the _socket_file because connect()
# and close() may set or unset it
socket_file = self._socket_file
if not socket_file:
raise stem.SocketClosed()
return recv_message(socket_file)
except stem.SocketClosed:
# If recv_message raises a SocketClosed then we should properly shut
# everything down. However, there's a couple cases where this will
# cause deadlock...
#
# * this socketClosed was *caused by* a close() call, which is joining
# on our thread
#
# * a send() call that's currently in flight is about to call close(),
# also attempting to join on us
#
# To resolve this we make a non-blocking call to acquire the send lock.
# If we get it then great, we can close safely. If not then one of the
# above are in progress and we leave the close to them.
if self.is_alive():
if self._send_lock.acquire(False):
self.close()
self._send_lock.release()
raise
[docs] def is_alive(self):
"""
Checks if the socket is known to be closed. We won't be aware if it is
until we either use it or have explicitily shut it down.
In practice a socket derived from a port knows about its disconnection
after a failed :func:`~stem.socket.ControlSocket.recv` call. Socket file
derived connections know after either a
:func:`~stem.socket.ControlSocket.send` or
:func:`~stem.socket.ControlSocket.recv`.
This means that to have reliable detection for when we're disconnected
you need to continually pull from the socket (which is part of what the
:class:`~stem.control.BaseController` does).
:returns: **bool** that's **True** if our socket is connected and **False** otherwise
"""
return self._is_alive
[docs] def is_localhost(self):
"""
Returns if the connection is for the local system or not.
:returns: **bool** that's **True** if the connection is for the local host and **False** otherwise
"""
return False
[docs] def connection_time(self):
"""
Provides the unix timestamp for when our socket was either connected or
disconnected. That is to say, the time we connected if we're currently
connected and the time we disconnected if we're not connected.
.. versionadded:: 1.3.0
:returns: **float** for when we last connected or disconnected, zero if
we've never connected
"""
return self._connection_time
[docs] def connect(self):
"""
Connects to a new socket, closing our previous one if we're already
attached.
:raises: :class:`stem.SocketError` if unable to make a socket
"""
with self._send_lock:
# Closes the socket if we're currently attached to one. Once we're no
# longer alive it'll be safe to acquire the recv lock because recv()
# calls no longer block (raising SocketClosed instead).
if self.is_alive():
self.close()
with self._recv_lock:
self._socket = self._make_socket()
self._socket_file = self._socket.makefile(mode = 'rwb')
self._is_alive = True
self._connection_time = time.time()
# It's possible for this to have a transient failure...
# SocketError: [Errno 4] Interrupted system call
#
# It's safe to retry, so give it another try if it fails.
try:
self._connect()
except stem.SocketError:
self._connect() # single retry
[docs] def close(self):
"""
Shuts down the socket. If it's already closed then this is a no-op.
"""
with self._send_lock:
# Function is idempotent with one exception: we notify _close() if this
# is causing our is_alive() state to change.
is_change = self.is_alive()
if self._socket:
# if we haven't yet established a connection then this raises an error
# socket.error: [Errno 107] Transport endpoint is not connected
try:
self._socket.shutdown(socket.SHUT_RDWR)
except socket.error:
pass
# Suppressing unexpected exceptions from close. For instance, if the
# socket's file has already been closed then with python 2.7 that raises
# with...
# error: [Errno 32] Broken pipe
try:
self._socket.close()
except:
pass
if self._socket_file:
try:
self._socket_file.close()
except:
pass
self._socket = None
self._socket_file = None
self._is_alive = False
self._connection_time = time.time()
if is_change:
self._close()
def _get_send_lock(self):
"""
The send lock is useful to classes that interact with us at a deep level
because it's used to lock :func:`stem.socket.ControlSocket.connect` /
:func:`stem.socket.ControlSocket.close`, and by extension our
:func:`stem.socket.ControlSocket.is_alive` state changes.
:returns: **threading.RLock** that governs sending messages to our socket
and state changes
"""
return self._send_lock
def __enter__(self):
return self
def __exit__(self, exit_type, value, traceback):
self.close()
def _connect(self):
"""
Connection callback that can be overwritten by subclasses and wrappers.
"""
pass
def _close(self):
"""
Disconnection callback that can be overwritten by subclasses and wrappers.
"""
pass
def _make_socket(self):
"""
Constructs and connects new socket. This is implemented by subclasses.
:returns: **socket.socket** for our configuration
:raises:
* :class:`stem.SocketError` if unable to make a socket
* **NotImplementedError** if not implemented by a subclass
"""
raise NotImplementedError('Unsupported Operation: this should be implemented by the ControlSocket subclass')
[docs]class ControlPort(ControlSocket):
"""
Control connection to tor. For more information see tor's ControlPort torrc
option.
"""
def __init__(self, address = '127.0.0.1', port = 9051, connect = True):
"""
ControlPort constructor.
:param str address: ip address of the controller
:param int port: port number of the controller
:param bool connect: connects to the socket if True, leaves it unconnected otherwise
:raises: :class:`stem.SocketError` if connect is **True** and we're
unable to establish a connection
"""
super(ControlPort, self).__init__()
self._control_addr = address
self._control_port = port
if connect:
self.connect()
[docs] def get_address(self):
"""
Provides the ip address our socket connects to.
:returns: str with the ip address of our socket
"""
return self._control_addr
[docs] def get_port(self):
"""
Provides the port our socket connects to.
:returns: int with the port of our socket
"""
return self._control_port
[docs] def is_localhost(self):
return self._control_addr == '127.0.0.1'
def _make_socket(self):
try:
control_socket = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
control_socket.connect((self._control_addr, self._control_port))
return control_socket
except socket.error as exc:
raise stem.SocketError(exc)
[docs]class ControlSocketFile(ControlSocket):
"""
Control connection to tor. For more information see tor's ControlSocket torrc
option.
"""
def __init__(self, path = '/var/run/tor/control', connect = True):
"""
ControlSocketFile constructor.
:param str socket_path: path where the control socket is located
:param bool connect: connects to the socket if True, leaves it unconnected otherwise
:raises: :class:`stem.SocketError` if connect is **True** and we're
unable to establish a connection
"""
super(ControlSocketFile, self).__init__()
self._socket_path = path
if connect:
self.connect()
[docs] def get_socket_path(self):
"""
Provides the path our socket connects to.
:returns: str with the path for our control socket
"""
return self._socket_path
[docs] def is_localhost(self):
return True
def _make_socket(self):
try:
control_socket = socket.socket(socket.AF_UNIX, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
control_socket.connect(self._socket_path)
return control_socket
except socket.error as exc:
raise stem.SocketError(exc)
[docs]def send_message(control_file, message, raw = False):
"""
Sends a message to the control socket, adding the expected formatting for
single verses multi-line messages. Neither message type should contain an
ending newline (if so it'll be treated as a multi-line message with a blank
line at the end). If the message doesn't contain a newline then it's sent
as...
::
<message>\\r\\n
and if it does contain newlines then it's split on ``\\n`` and sent as...
::
+<line 1>\\r\\n
<line 2>\\r\\n
<line 3>\\r\\n
.\\r\\n
:param file control_file: file derived from the control socket (see the
socket's makefile() method for more information)
:param str message: message to be sent on the control socket
:param bool raw: leaves the message formatting untouched, passing it to the
socket as-is
:raises:
* :class:`stem.SocketError` if a problem arises in using the socket
* :class:`stem.SocketClosed` if the socket is known to be shut down
"""
if not raw:
message = send_formatting(message)
try:
control_file.write(stem.util.str_tools._to_bytes(message))
control_file.flush()
if log.is_tracing():
log_message = message.replace('\r\n', '\n').rstrip()
msg_div = '\n' if '\n' in log_message else ' '
log.trace('Sent to tor:%s%s' % (msg_div, log_message))
except socket.error as exc:
log.info('Failed to send message: %s' % exc)
# When sending there doesn't seem to be a reliable method for
# distinguishing between failures from a disconnect verses other things.
# Just accounting for known disconnection responses.
if str(exc) == '[Errno 32] Broken pipe':
raise stem.SocketClosed(exc)
else:
raise stem.SocketError(exc)
except AttributeError:
# if the control_file has been closed then flush will receive:
# AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'sendall'
log.info('Failed to send message: file has been closed')
raise stem.SocketClosed('file has been closed')
[docs]def recv_message(control_file):
"""
Pulls from a control socket until we either have a complete message or
encounter a problem.
:param file control_file: file derived from the control socket (see the
socket's makefile() method for more information)
:returns: :class:`~stem.response.ControlMessage` read from the socket
:raises:
* :class:`stem.ProtocolError` the content from the socket is malformed
* :class:`stem.SocketClosed` if the socket closes before we receive
a complete message
"""
parsed_content, raw_content, first_line = None, None, True
while True:
try:
line = control_file.readline()
except AttributeError:
# if the control_file has been closed then we will receive:
# AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'recv'
log.info(ERROR_MSG % ('SocketClosed', 'socket file has been closed'))
raise stem.SocketClosed('socket file has been closed')
except (socket.error, ValueError) as exc:
# When disconnected we get...
#
# Python 2:
# socket.error: [Errno 107] Transport endpoint is not connected
#
# Python 3:
# ValueError: I/O operation on closed file.
log.info(ERROR_MSG % ('SocketClosed', 'received exception "%s"' % exc))
raise stem.SocketClosed(exc)
# Parses the tor control lines. These are of the form...
# <status code><divider><content>\r\n
if not line:
# if the socket is disconnected then the readline() method will provide
# empty content
log.info(ERROR_MSG % ('SocketClosed', 'empty socket content'))
raise stem.SocketClosed('Received empty socket content.')
elif not MESSAGE_PREFIX.match(line):
log.info(ERROR_MSG % ('ProtocolError', 'malformed status code/divider, "%s"' % log.escape(line)))
raise stem.ProtocolError('Badly formatted reply line: beginning is malformed')
elif not line.endswith(b'\r\n'):
log.info(ERROR_MSG % ('ProtocolError', 'no CRLF linebreak, "%s"' % log.escape(line)))
raise stem.ProtocolError('All lines should end with CRLF')
status_code, divider, content = line[:3], line[3:4], line[4:-2] # strip CRLF off content
if stem.prereq.is_python_3():
status_code = stem.util.str_tools._to_unicode(status_code)
divider = stem.util.str_tools._to_unicode(divider)
# Most controller responses are single lines, in which case we don't need
# so much overhead.
if first_line:
if divider == ' ':
_log_trace(line)
return stem.response.ControlMessage([(status_code, divider, content)], line)
else:
parsed_content, raw_content, first_line = [], io.BytesIO(), False
raw_content.write(line)
if divider == '-':
# mid-reply line, keep pulling for more content
parsed_content.append((status_code, divider, content))
elif divider == ' ':
# end of the message, return the message
parsed_content.append((status_code, divider, content))
_log_trace(raw_content.getvalue())
return stem.response.ControlMessage(parsed_content, raw_content.getvalue())
elif divider == '+':
# data entry, all of the following lines belong to the content until we
# get a line with just a period
content_block = io.BytesIO()
content_block.write(content)
while True:
try:
line = control_file.readline()
raw_content.write(line)
except socket.error as exc:
log.info(ERROR_MSG % ('SocketClosed', 'received an exception while mid-way through a data reply (exception: "%s", read content: "%s")' % (exc, log.escape(raw_content.getvalue()))))
raise stem.SocketClosed(exc)
if not line.endswith(b'\r\n'):
log.info(ERROR_MSG % ('ProtocolError', 'CRLF linebreaks missing from a data reply, "%s"' % log.escape(raw_content.getvalue())))
raise stem.ProtocolError('All lines should end with CRLF')
elif line == b'.\r\n':
break # data block termination
line = line[:-2] # strips off the CRLF
# lines starting with a period are escaped by a second period (as per
# section 2.4 of the control-spec)
if line.startswith(b'..'):
line = line[1:]
content_block.write(b'\n' + line)
# joins the content using a newline rather than CRLF separator (more
# conventional for multi-line string content outside the windows world)
parsed_content.append((status_code, divider, content_block.getvalue()))
else:
# this should never be reached due to the prefix regex, but might as well
# be safe...
log.warn(ERROR_MSG % ('ProtocolError', "\"%s\" isn't a recognized divider type" % divider))
raise stem.ProtocolError("Unrecognized divider type '%s': %s" % (divider, stem.util.str_tools._to_unicode(line)))
def _log_trace(response):
if not log.is_tracing():
return
log_message = stem.util.str_tools._to_unicode(response.replace(b'\r\n', b'\n').rstrip())
log_message_lines = log_message.split('\n')
if TRUNCATE_LOGS and len(log_message_lines) > TRUNCATE_LOGS:
log_message = '\n'.join(log_message_lines[:TRUNCATE_LOGS] + ['... %i more lines...' % (len(log_message_lines) - TRUNCATE_LOGS)])
if len(log_message_lines) > 2:
log.trace('Received from tor:\n%s' % log_message)
else:
log.trace('Received from tor: %s' % log_message.replace('\n', '\\n'))