Twisted-based Tor controller client, with state-tracking and configuration abstractions.
Project description
Full, built documentation at ReadTheDocs https://txtorcon.readthedocs.org
quick start
For the impatient, there are two quick ways to install this:
$ pip install txtorcon
or, if you checked out or downloaded the source:
$ python setup.py install
To avoid installing, you can just add the base of the source to your PYTHONPATH:
$ export PYTHONPATH=`pwd`:$PYTHONPATH
Then, you will want to explore the examples. Try “python examples/stream_circuit_logger.py” for instance.
overview
txtorcon is a Twisted-based asynchronous Tor control protocol implementation. Twisted is an event-driven networking engine written in Python and Tor is an onion-routing network designed to improve people’s privacy and anonymity on the Internet.
The main abstraction of this library is txtorcon.TorControlProtocol which presents an asynchronous API to speak the Tor client protocol in Python. txtorcon also provides abstractions to track and get updates about Tor’s state (txtorcon.TorState) and current configuration (including writing it to Tor or disk) in txtorcon.TorConfig, along with helpers to asynchronously launch slave instances of Tor including Twisted endpoint support.
NOTE: that this is currently a moving target still; if you’re going to depend on txtorcon as a controller library, it Very Highly Recommended that you follow the source at github (or via the hidden service). I fairly regularly push code to both.
txtorcon runs all tests cleanly on:
Debian stable (squeeze)
Debian testing (wheezy)
OS X 10.4 (naif)
OS X 10.8 (lukas lueg)
Fedora 18 (lukas lueg)
Reports from other OSes appreciated.
If instead you want a synchronous Python controller library, check out Stem at https://stem.torproject.org/
quick implementation overview
txtorcon also provides a class to track Tor’s current state – such as details about routers, circuits and streams – called txtorcon.TorState and an abstraction to the configuration values via txtorcon.TorConfig which provides attribute-style accessors to Tor’s state (including making changes). txtorcon.TorState provides txtorcon.Router, txtorcon.Circuit and txtorcon.Stream objects which implement a listener interface so client code may receive updates.
txtorcon uses trial for unit-tests and has 97% test-coverage – which is not to say I’ve covered all the cases, but nearly all of the code is at least exercised somehow by the unit tests.
$ make test **Ran 227 tests in 1.394s** $ make coverage ## ...deleted lots of output... covered: 1922 uncovered: 69 **97.81% test coverage**
Tor itself is not required to be running for any of the tests. There are no integration tests. ohcount claims around 2000 lines of code for the core bit; around 4000 including tests. About 37% comments in the not-test code.
dependencies
twisted: I am working against Twisted 11.1.0 on Debian with Python 2.7.2. Twisted 12 works fine as well.
GeoIP: provides location information for ip addresses; you will want to download GeoLite City from MaxMind or pay them for more accuracy. Or use tor-geoip, which makes this sort-of optional, in that we’ll query Tor for the if the GeoIP database doesn’t have an answer but I haven’t bothered removing the dependency yet..It also does ASN lookups if you installed that MaxMind database.
python-ipaddr: optional. Google’s IP address manipulation code.
Sphinx: Only if you want to build the documentation. In that case you’ll also need something called python-repoze.sphinx.autointerface (at least in Debian) to build the Interface-derived docs properly.
GraphViz is used in the tests (and to generate state-machine diagrams, if you like) but those tests are skipped if “dot” isn’t in your path
In any case, on a Debian wheezy, squeeze or Ubuntu system, this should work:
apt-get install python-setuptools python-twisted python-ipaddr python-geoip graphviz apt-get install python-sphinx python-repoze.sphinx.autointerface # for documentation
Using pip this would be:
pip install Twisted ipaddr pygeoip
documentation
It is likely that you will need to read at least some of control-spec.txt from the torspec git repository so you know what’s being abstracted by this library.
Run “make doc” to build the Sphinx documentation locally, or rely on ReadTheDocs https://txtorcon.readthedocs.org which builds each tagged release.
There is also a directory of examples/ scripts, which have inline documentation explaining their use. You may also use pydoc:
pydoc txtorcon.TorControlProtocol pydoc txtorcon.TorState pydoc txtorcon.TorConfig
…for the main classes. If you’re using TorState, you will also be interested in the support classes for it:
pydoc txtorcon.Circuit pydoc txtorcon.Stream pydoc txtorcon.Router pydoc txtorcon.AddrMap
There are also Zope interfaces for some things, if you wish to listen for events for your own purposes (the best example of the use of these being TorState itself):
txtorcon.ITorControlProtocol txtorcon.IStreamAttacher txtorcon.ICircuitListener txtorcon.IStreamListener
For launching Tor and Twisted integration, you will want to look at:
txtorcon.launch_tor (in torconfig.py) txtorcon.TCPHiddenServiceEndpoint (in torconfig.py) txtorcon.TorProtocolFactory (in torcontrolprotocol.py) txtorcon.build_tor_connection (in torstate.py) txtorcon.build_local_tor_connection (in torstate.py)
IStreamAttacher affects Tor’s behaviour, allowing one to customize how circuits for particular streams are selected. You can build your own circuits via ITorControlProtocol.build_circuit(). There is an example of this called custom_stream_attacher.py which builds (or uses) circuits exiting in the same country as the address to which the stream is connecting.
contact information
For novelty value, the Web site (with built documentation and so forth) can be viewed via Tor at https://timaq4ygg2iegci7.onion although the code itself is hosted via git:
torsocks git clone git://timaq4ygg2iegci7.onion/txtorcon.git
or:
git clone git://github.com/meejah/txtorcon.git
You may contact me via meejah at meejah dot ca with GPG key 128069A7 or see meejah.asc. It is often possible to contact me as meejah in #tor-dev on OFTC but be patient for replies (I do look at scrollback, so mention my nick).
More conventionally, you may get the code at GitHub and documentation via ReadTheDocs:
Please do use the GitHub issue-tracker to report bugs. Patches, pull-requests, comments and criticisms are all welcomed and appreciated. See TODO for notes on deficiencies, planned features, lunatic raving, etc.
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