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- #!/usr/bin/env bash
- #
- # GNU/Linux does not really require something like RelativeLink.c
- # However, we do want to have the same look and feel with similar features.
- #
- # Copyright 2017 The Tor Project. See LICENSE for licensing information.
- complain_dialog_title="Tor Browser"
- # First, make sure DISPLAY is set. If it isn't, we're hosed; scream
- # at stderr and die.
- if [ "x$DISPLAY" = "x" ]; then
- echo "$complain_dialog_title must be run within the X Window System." >&2
- echo "Exiting." >&2
- exit 1
- fi
- # Second, make sure this script wasn't started as 'sh start-tor-browser' or
- # similar.
- if [ "x$BASH" = "x" ]; then
- echo "$complain_dialog_title should be started as './start-tor-browser'"
- echo "Exiting." >&2
- exit 1;
- fi
- # Do not (try to) connect to the session manager
- unset SESSION_MANAGER
- # Complain about an error, by any means necessary.
- # Usage: complain message
- # message must not begin with a dash.
- complain () {
- # Trim leading newlines, to avoid breaking formatting in some dialogs.
- complain_message="`echo "$1" | sed '/./,$!d'`"
- # If we're being run in debug/verbose mode, complain to stderr.
- if [ "$show_output" -eq 1 ]; then
- echo "$complain_message" >&2
- return
- fi
- # Otherwise, we're being run by a GUI program of some sort;
- # try to pop up a message in the GUI in the nicest way
- # possible.
- #
- # In mksh, non-existent commands return 127; I'll assume all
- # other shells set the same exit code if they can't run a
- # command. (xmessage returns 1 if the user clicks the WM
- # close button, so we do need to look at the exact exit code,
- # not just assume the command failed to display a message if
- # it returns non-zero.)
- # First, try zenity.
- zenity --error \
- --title="$complain_dialog_title" \
- --text="$complain_message"
- if [ "$?" -ne 127 ]; then
- return
- fi
- # Try kdialog.
- kdialog --title "$complain_dialog_title" \
- --error "$complain_message"
- if [ "$?" -ne 127 ]; then
- return
- fi
- # Try xmessage.
- xmessage -title "$complain_dialog_title" \
- -center \
- -buttons OK \
- -default OK \
- -xrm '*message.scrollVertical: Never' \
- "$complain_message"
- if [ "$?" -ne 127 ]; then
- return
- fi
- # Try gxmessage. This one isn't installed by default on
- # Debian with the default GNOME installation, so it seems to
- # be the least likely program to have available, but it might
- # be used by one of the 'lightweight' Gtk-based desktop
- # environments.
- gxmessage -title "$complain_dialog_title" \
- -center \
- -buttons GTK_STOCK_OK \
- -default OK \
- "$complain_message"
- if [ "$?" -ne 127 ]; then
- return
- fi
- }
- if [ "`id -u`" -eq 0 ]; then
- complain "The Tor Browser Bundle should not be run as root. Exiting."
- exit 1
- fi
- if test -r /proc/cpuinfo && ! grep -q '^flags\s*:.* sse2' /proc/cpuinfo; then
- complain "Tor Browser requires a CPU with SSE2 support. Exiting."
- exit 1
- fi
- tbb_usage () {
- printf "\nTor Browser Script Options\n"
- printf " --verbose Display Tor and Firefox output in the terminal\n"
- printf " --log [file] Record Tor and Firefox output in file (default: tor-browser.log)\n"
- printf " --detach Detach from terminal and run Tor Browser in the background.\n"
- printf " --register-app Register Tor Browser as a desktop app for this user\n"
- printf " --unregister-app Unregister Tor Browser as a desktop app for this user\n"
- }
- log_output=0
- show_output=0
- detach=0
- show_usage=0
- register_desktop_app=0
- logfile=/dev/null
- while :
- do
- case "$1" in
- --detach)
- detach=1
- shift
- ;;
- -v | --verbose | -d | --debug)
- show_output=1
- verbose_arg="$2"
- shift
- ;;
- -h | "-?" | --help | -help)
- show_usage=1
- show_output=1
- shift
- ;;
- -l | --log)
- if [ -z "$2" -o "${2:0:1}" == "-" ]; then
- printf "Logging Tor Browser debug information to tor-browser.log\n"
- logfile="../tor-browser.log"
- elif [ "${2:0:1}" == "/" -o "${2:0:1}" == "~" ]; then
- printf "Logging Tor Browser debug information to %s\n" "$2"
- logfile="$2"
- shift
- else
- printf "Logging Tor Browser debug information to %s\n" "$2"
- logfile="../$2"
- shift
- fi
- log_output=1
- shift
- ;;
- --register-app)
- register_desktop_app=1
- show_output=1
- shift
- ;;
- --unregister-app)
- register_desktop_app=-1
- show_output=1
- shift
- ;;
- *) # No more options
- break
- ;;
- esac
- done
- # We can't detach and show output at the same time..
- if [ "$show_output" -eq 1 -a "$detach" -eq 1 ]; then
- detach=0
- fi
- if [ "$show_output" -eq 0 ]; then
- # If the user hasn't requested 'debug mode' or --help, close stdout and stderr,
- # to keep Firefox and the stuff loaded by/for it (including the
- # system's shared-library loader) from printing messages to
- # $HOME/.xsession-errors or other files. (Users wouldn't have seen
- # messages there anyway.)
- exec > "$logfile"
- exec 2> "$logfile"
- fi
- # If XAUTHORITY is unset, set it to its default value of $HOME/.Xauthority
- # before we change HOME below. (See xauth(1) and #1945.) XDM and KDM rely
- # on applications using this default value.
- if [ -z "$XAUTHORITY" ]; then
- XAUTHORITY=~/.Xauthority
- export XAUTHORITY
- fi
- # If this script is being run through a symlink, we need to know where
- # in the filesystem the script itself is, not where the symlink is.
- myname="$0"
- if [ -L "$myname" ]; then
- # XXX readlink is not POSIX, but is present in GNU coreutils
- # and on FreeBSD. Unfortunately, the -f option (which follows
- # a whole chain of symlinks until it reaches a non-symlink
- # path name) is a GNUism, so we have to have a fallback for
- # FreeBSD. Fortunately, FreeBSD has realpath instead;
- # unfortunately, that's also non-POSIX and is not present in
- # GNU coreutils.
- #
- # If this launcher were a C program, we could just use the
- # realpath function, which *is* POSIX. Too bad POSIX didn't
- # make that function accessible to shell scripts.
- # If realpath is available, use it; it Does The Right Thing.
- possibly_my_real_name="`realpath "$myname" 2>/dev/null`"
- if [ "$?" -eq 0 ]; then
- myname="$possibly_my_real_name"
- else
- # realpath is not available; hopefully readlink -f works.
- myname="`readlink -f "$myname" 2>/dev/null`"
- if [ "$?" -ne 0 ]; then
- # Ugh.
- complain "start-tor-browser cannot be run using a symlink on this operating system."
- fi
- fi
- fi
- # Try to be agnostic to where we're being started from, chdir to where
- # the script is.
- mydir="`dirname "$myname"`"
- test -d "$mydir" && cd "$mydir"
- # If ${PWD} results in a zero length string, we can try something else...
- if [ ! "${PWD}" ]; then
- # "hacking around some braindamage"
- PWD="`pwd`"
- surveysays="This system has a messed up shell.\n"
- fi
- # This is a fix for an ibus issue on some Linux systems. See #9353 for more
- # details. The symlink needs to be created before we change HOME.
- if [ ! -d ".config/ibus" ]; then
- mkdir -p .config/ibus
- ln -nsf ~/.config/ibus/bus .config/ibus
- fi
- # Fix up .desktop Icon and Exec Paths, and update the .desktop file from the
- # canonical version if it was changed by the updater.
- cp start-tor-browser.desktop ../
- sed -i -e "s,^Name=.*,Name=Tor Browser,g" ../start-tor-browser.desktop
- sed -i -e "s,^Icon=.*,Icon=$PWD/browser/chrome/icons/default/default128.png,g" ../start-tor-browser.desktop
- sed -i -e "s,^Exec=.*,Exec=sh -c '\"$PWD/start-tor-browser\" --detach || ([ ! -x \"$PWD/start-tor-browser\" ] \&\& \"\$(dirname \"\$*\")\"/Browser/start-tor-browser --detach)' dummy %k,g" ../start-tor-browser.desktop
- if [ "$register_desktop_app" -eq 1 ]; then
- mkdir -p "$HOME/.local/share/applications/"
- cp ../start-tor-browser.desktop "$HOME/.local/share/applications/"
- update-desktop-database "$HOME/.local/share/applications/"
- printf "Tor Browser has been registered as a desktop app for this user in ~/.local/share/applications/\n"
- exit 0
- fi
- if [ "$register_desktop_app" -eq -1 ]; then
- if [ -e "$HOME/.local/share/applications/start-tor-browser.desktop" ]; then
- rm -f "$HOME/.local/share/applications/start-tor-browser.desktop"
- update-desktop-database "$HOME/.local/share/applications/"
- printf "Tor Browser has been removed as a user desktop app (from ~/.local/share/applications/)\n"
- else
- printf "Tor Browser does not appear to be a desktop app (not present in ~/.local/share/applications/)\n"
- fi
- exit 0
- fi
- HOME="${PWD}"
- export HOME
- SYSARCHITECTURE=$(getconf LONG_BIT)
- TORARCHITECTURE=$(expr "$(file TorBrowser/Tor/tor)" : '.*ELF \([[:digit:]]*\)')
- if [ $SYSARCHITECTURE -ne $TORARCHITECTURE ]; then
- complain "Wrong architecture? 32-bit vs. 64-bit."
- exit 1
- fi
- [% IF c("var/asan") -%]
- # We need to disable LSan which is enabled by default now. Otherwise we'll get
- # a crash during shutdown: https://bugs.torproject.org/10599#comment:59
- ASAN_OPTIONS="detect_leaks=0"
- export ASAN_OPTIONS
- [% END -%]
- function setControlPortPasswd() {
- local ctrlPasswd=$1
- if test -z "$ctrlPasswd" -o "$ctrlPasswd" = $'\"secret\"' ; then
- unset TOR_CONTROL_PASSWD
- return
- fi
- if test "${ctrlPasswd:0:1}" = $'\"'; then # First 2 chars were '"
- printf "Using system Tor process.\n"
- export TOR_CONTROL_PASSWD
- else
- complain "There seems to have been a quoting problem with your \
- TOR_CONTROL_PASSWD environment variable."
- echo "The Tor ControlPort password should be given inside double"
- echo "quotes, inside single quotes. That is, if the ControlPort"
- echo 'password is “secret” (without curly quotes) then we must'
- echo "start this script after setting the environment variable"
- echo "exactly like this:"
- echo
- echo " \$ TOR_CONTROL_PASSWD='\"secret\"' $myname"
- fi
- }
- # Using a system-installed Tor process with Tor Browser:
- # ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- # The Tor ControlPort password should be given inside double quotes, inside
- # single quotes, i.e. if the ControlPort password is “secret” (without
- # curly quotes) then we must set the environment variable *exactly* like
- # this:
- #
- # TOR_CONTROL_PASSWD='"secret"'
- #
- # Yes, the variable MUST be double-quoted, then single-quoted, exactly as
- # shown. This is used by TorButton and Tor Launcher to authenticate to Tor's
- # ControlPort, and is necessary for using TB with a system-installed Tor.
- #
- # Additionally, if using a system-installed Tor, the following about:config
- # options should be set (values in <> mean they are the value taken from your
- # torrc):
- #
- # SETTING NAME VALUE
- # network.security.ports.banned [...],<SocksPort>,<ControlPort>
- # network.proxy.socks 127.0.0.1
- # network.proxy.socks_port <SocksPort>
- # extensions.torbutton.inserted_button true
- # extensions.torbutton.launch_warning false
- # extensions.torbutton.loglevel 2
- # extensions.torbutton.logmethod 0
- # extensions.torlauncher.control_port <ControlPort>
- # extensions.torlauncher.loglevel 2
- # extensions.torlauncher.logmethod 0
- # extensions.torlauncher.prompt_at_startup false
- # extensions.torlauncher.start_tor false
- #
- # where the '[...]' in the banned_ports option means "leave anything that was
- # already in the preference alone, just append the things specified after it".
- # Either set `TOR_CONTROL_PASSWD` before running ./start-tor-browser, or put
- # your password in the following line where the word “secret” is:
- setControlPortPasswd ${TOR_CONTROL_PASSWD:='"secret"'}
- # Set up custom bundled fonts. See fonts-conf(5).
- export FONTCONFIG_PATH="${HOME}/TorBrowser/Data/fontconfig"
- export FONTCONFIG_FILE="fonts.conf"
- # Avoid overwriting user's dconf values. Fixes #27903.
- export GSETTINGS_BACKEND=memory
- cd "${HOME}"
- # We pass all additional command-line arguments we get to Firefox.
- #
- # The --class parameter was added to fix bug 11102.
- if [ "$show_usage" -eq 1 ]; then
- # Display Firefox help, then our help
- TOR_CONTROL_PASSWD=${TOR_CONTROL_PASSWD} ./firefox --class "Tor Browser" \
- -profile TorBrowser/Data/Browser/profile.default --help 2>/dev/null
- tbb_usage
- elif [ "$detach" -eq 1 ] ; then
- TOR_CONTROL_PASSWD=${TOR_CONTROL_PASSWD} ./firefox --class "Tor Browser" \
- -profile TorBrowser/Data/Browser/profile.default "${@}" > "$logfile" 2>&1 </dev/null &
- disown "$!"
- elif [ "$log_output" -eq 1 -a "$show_output" -eq 1 ]; then
- TOR_CONTROL_PASSWD=${TOR_CONTROL_PASSWD} ./firefox --class "Tor Browser" \
- -profile TorBrowser/Data/Browser/profile.default "${@}" 2>&1 </dev/null | \
- tee "$logfile"
- elif [ "$show_output" -eq 1 ]; then
- TOR_CONTROL_PASSWD=${TOR_CONTROL_PASSWD} ./firefox --class "Tor Browser" \
- -profile TorBrowser/Data/Browser/profile.default "${@}" < /dev/null
- else
- TOR_CONTROL_PASSWD=${TOR_CONTROL_PASSWD} ./firefox --class "Tor Browser" \
- -profile TorBrowser/Data/Browser/profile.default "${@}" > "$logfile" 2>&1 </dev/null
- fi
- exit $?
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