Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Brian Warner
47007273ec rewrite Tor support (py2 only)
The new TorManager adds --launch-tor and --tor-control-port= arguments
(requiring the user to explicitly request a new Tor process, if that's what
they want). The default (when --tor is enabled) looks for a control port in
the usual places (/var/run/tor/control, localhost:9051, localhost:9151), then
falls back to hoping there's a SOCKS port in the usual
place (localhost:9050). (closes #64)

The ssh utilities should now accept the same tor arguments as ordinary
send/receive commands. There are now full tests for TorManager, and basic
tests for how send/receive use it. (closes #97)

Note that Tor is only supported on python2.7 for now, since txsocksx (and
therefore txtorcon) doesn't work on py3. You need to do "pip install
magic-wormhole[tor]" to get Tor support, and that will get you an inscrutable
error on py3 (referencing vcversioner, "install_requires must be a string or
list of strings", and "int object not iterable").

To run tests, you must install with the [dev] extra (to get "mock" and other
libraries). Our setup.py only includes "txtorcon" in the [dev] extra when on
py2, not on py3. Unit tests tolerate the lack of txtorcon (they mock out
everything txtorcon would provide), so they should provide the same coverage
on both py2 and py3.
2017-01-15 22:39:03 -05:00
Brian Warner
d057b91371 xfer_util: work on py2+py3
wormhole.send takes bytes, but the utility functions take strings. So
encode the JSON blob before sending, and decode it on the way back out.
2016-08-15 17:35:34 -07:00
meejah
069b76485b Add 'wormhole ssh-add' and 'wormhole ssh-send' commands 2016-08-14 19:59:20 -06:00