Arti: reimplementing Tor in Rust
Arti is a project to produce an embeddable, production-quality implementation
of the Tor anonymity protocols in the
Rust programming language.
Links:
This is the README for the Arti project as a whole.
If you want find more practical information
you might want to check out these links:
-
The README for the
arti
binary crate, which includes instructions for how to run Arti with Tor Browser.
Why rewrite Tor in Rust?
Rust is more secure than C. Despite our efforts, it's all too simple to
mess up when using a language that does not enforce memory safety. We
estimate that at least half of our tracked security vulnerabilities would
have been impossible in Rust, and many of the others would have been very
unlikely.
Rust enables faster development than C. Because of Rust's expressiveness
and strong guarantees, we've found that we can be far more efficient and
confident writing code in Rust. We hope that in the long run this will
improve the pace of our software development.
Arti is more flexible than our C tor implementation. Unlike our C
tor
,
which was designed as SOCKS proxy originally, and whose integration features
were later "bolted on", Arti is designed from the ground up to work as a
modular, embeddable library that other applications can use.Arti is cleaner than our C tor implementation. Although we've tried to
develop C tor well, we've learned a lot since we started it back in 2002.
There are lots of places in the current C codebase where complicated
"spaghetti" relationships between different pieces of code make our software
needlessly hard to understand and improve.
<a name="status"></a>Current status
Arti can connect to the Tor network, bootstrap a
view of the Tor directory, and make anonymized connections over the network.
Now that Arti has reached version 1.0.0, we believe it is suitable for
actual use to anonymise connections.
There are a number of areas (especially at the lower layers) where APIs
(especially internal APIs) are not stable,
and are likely to change them.
Right now that includes the command line interface to the
arti
program.And of course it's still very new so there are likely to be bugs.
Building and using Arti
Arti can act as a SOCKS proxy that uses the Tor network.
We expect to be providing official binaries soon.
But, for now, you need to obtain a
Rust development environment,
and build it yourself.
To try it out, compile and run the
arti
binary using the below. It will open a
SOCKS proxy on port 9150.$ cargo run -p arti --release -- proxy
You can build a binary (but not run it) with:
$ cargo build -p arti --release
The result can be found as
target/release/arti
.⚠ Safety Note: if you are using the default build options,
the compiler will include filesystem path information in the
binary that it generates. If your path is sensitive (for example,
because it includes your username), you will want to take steps
to prevent this. See
doc/safer-build.md
for more information.If you run into any trouble building the program, please have a
look at the troubleshooting guide.
Hidden service (.onion service) client support
Arti has support for connecting to Onion Services aka Tor Hidden Services.
However, currently it is disabled by default.
This is because Arti currently lacks the
"vanguards" feature that Tor uses to prevent guard discovery attacks over time.
As such, you should probably stick with C Tor if you need to make a large
number of onion service connections, or if you are using the Tor protocol
in a way that lets an attacker control how many onion services connections that you make -
for example, when using Arti's SOCKS support from a web browser such as Tor Browser.
We plan to improve the security, and will then enable
.onion
connections by default.In the meantime, if you would like to try it out,
you can
enable it on the command line (
cargo run -p arti -- -o address_filter.allow_onion_addrs=true proxy
).
or
edit your config file (set allow_onion_addrs = true
in the section [address_filter]
)Then you can make a connection to a
.onion
service, via Arti.
For example, to try it out from the command line:target/release/arti -o address_filter.allow_onion_addrs=true proxy # and in another window: curl --socks5-hostname localhost:9150 https://duckduckgogg42xjoc72x3sjasowoarfbgcmvfimaftt6twagswzczad.onion/ | head | cat -v
Custom compile-time options
Arti has a number of configurable
Cargo features
that, among other things, can affect which asynchronous runtime to use.
See in the
Arti crate-level docs
for details.
Using Arti as a library
The
arti
command line utility is built on top of the
arti_client
library (and its dependencies).That library's API will allow you to
make connections over the Tor network,
and obtain streams/sinks usable from async Rust.
We make fairly frequent semver bumps the Arti library API,
and to our lower-level crates.
However, in practice, we don't often make disruptive changes
that aren't easy to sort out in a dependency.
When using Arti as a library, you should be prepared to make regular updates,
bumping your versions requirement, not just
cargo update
.
cargo upgrade
can help with this.See our version update and API compatibility policy
for more details.
Minimum supported Rust Version
Our current Minimum Supported Rust Version (MSRV) is 1.70.
When increasing this MSRV, we won't require any Rust version released in the
last six months. (That is, we'll only require Rust versions released at least
six months ago.)
We will not increase MSRV on PATCH releases, though our dependencies might.
We won't increase MSRV just because we can: we'll only do so when we have a
reason. (We don't guarantee that you'll agree with our reasoning; only that
it will exist.)
Helping out
Have a look at our contributor guidelines.
Roadmap
Thanks to a generous grant from
Zcash Open Major Grants (ZOMG), we're able to devote
some significant time to Arti in the years 2021-2022. Here is our rough
set of plans for what we hope to deliver when.
The goal times below are complete imagination, based on broad assumptions about
developer availability. Please don't take them too seriously until we can
get our project manager to sign off on them.
-
Arti 0.0.1: Minimal Secure Client (Goal: end of October 2021??)
- Target audience: developers
- Guard support
- Stream Isolation
- High test coverage
- Draft APIs for basic usage
- Code cleanups
- and more...
-
Arti 0.1.0: Okay for experimental embedding (Goal: Mid March, 2022??)
- Target audience: beta testers
- Performance: preemptive circuit construction
- Performance: circuit build timeout inference
- API support for embedding
- API support for status reporting
- Correct timeout behavior
- and more...
-
Arti 1.0.0: Initial stable release (Goal: Mid September, 2022??)
- Target audience: initial users
- Stable API (mostly)
- Stable CLI
- Stable configuration format
- Automatic detection and response of more kinds of network problems
- At least as secure as C Tor
- Client performance similar to C Tor
- More performance work
- and more...
-
Arti 1.1.0: Anti-censorship features (Goal: End of October, 2022?)
- Target audience: censored users
- Bridges
- Pluggable transports
- and more...?
-
Arti ~1.2.0: Onion service support (Goal: End of 2023)
- Client support (for connecting to onion services)
- Service support (for running onion services)
- Full security features (for production-ready quality)
-
Arti ~2.0.0: Feature parity with C tor as a client (Goal: Mid 2024)
-
Arti ?.?.?: Relay support
<a name="reporting-bugs"></a> How can I report bugs?
When you find bugs, please report them
on our bugtracker. If you
don't already have an account there, you can either
request an account or
report a bug anonymously.
How can I help out?
See
CONTRIBUTING.md
for a few ideas for how to get
started.License
This code is licensed under either of
at your option.
However, some optional parts are licensed under the GNU Lesser General
Public License, version 3.0,
as indicated in the
Cargo.toml
.
This applies to crates/equix
and crates/hashx
.
See LGPL-and-rust.md
for discussion of issues concerning redistributing binaries
containing these crates.Contribution
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally
submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0
license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or
conditions.
(The above notice, or something like it, seems to be pretty standard in Rust projects, so I'm using it here too. This instance of it is copied from the RustCrypto project's README.md file.)