``` Filename: 139-conditional-consensus-download.txt Title: Download consensus documents only when it will be trusted Author: Peter Palfrader Created: 2008-04-13 Status: Closed Implemented-In: 0.2.1.x Overview: Servers only provide consensus documents to clients when it is known that the client will trust it. Motivation: When clients[1] want a new network status consensus they request it from a Tor server using the URL path /tor/status-vote/current/consensus. Then after downloading the client checks if this consensus can be trusted. Whether the client trusts the consensus depends on the authorities that the client trusts and how many of those authorities signed the consensus document. If the client cannot trust the consensus document it is disregarded and a new download is tried at a later time. Several hundred kilobytes of server bandwidth were wasted by this single client's request. With hundreds of thousands of clients this will have undesirable consequences when the list of authorities has changed so much that a large number of established clients no longer can trust any consensus document formed. Objective: The objective of this proposal is to make clients not download consensuses they will not trust. Proposal: The list of authorities that are trusted by a client are encoded in the URL they send to the directory server when requesting a consensus document. The directory server then only sends back the consensus when more than half of the authorities listed in the request have signed the consensus. If it is known that the consensus will not be trusted a 404 error code is sent back to the client. This proposal does not require directory caches to keep more than one consensus document. This proposal also does not require authorities to verify the signature on the consensus document of authorities they do not recognize. The new URL scheme to download a consensus is /tor/status-vote/current/consensus/ where F is a list of fingerprints, sorted in ascending order, and concatenated using a + sign. Fingerprints are uppercase hexadecimal encodings of the authority identity key's digest. Servers should also accept requests that use lower case or mixed case hexadecimal encodings. A .z URL for compressed versions of the consensus will be provided similarly to existing resources and is the URL that usually should be used by clients. Migration: The old location of the consensus should continue to work indefinitely. Not only is it used by old clients, but it is a useful resource for automated tools that do not particularly care which authorities have signed the consensus. Authorities that are known to the client a priori by being shipped with the Tor code are assumed to handle this format. When downloading a consensus document from caches that do not support this new format they fall back to the old download location. Caches support the new format starting with Tor version 0.2.1.1-alpha. Anonymity Implications: By supplying the list of authorities a client trusts to the directory server we leak information (like likely version of Tor client) to the directory server. In the current system we also leak that we are very old - by re-downloading the consensus over and over again, but only when we are so old that we no longer can trust the consensus. Footnotes: 1. For the purpose of this proposal a client can be any Tor instance that downloads a consensus document. This includes relays, directory caches as well as end users. ```