Pull-mode httpClient + drainer + parallel RPCs against the same peer deteriorated after ~10s with `DecryptionError`. Two bugs combined: - `OutboundQueue.enqueue` woke `drain` waiters with a `since=0` snapshot, replaying already-processed events into `Shade.acceptTransferEnvelope` → `manager.decrypt` twice. The duplicate consumed an already-used skipped key and corrupted the Double Ratchet receive chain. - `ratchetDecrypt` then propagated the corruption: a same-DH message behind the chain with no cached skipped key fell through to `kdfChainKey` on the ahead state and rewound `chain.counter`, permanently desyncing the chain. Fix `OutboundQueue` to honor each waiter's `since`, and harden `ratchetDecrypt` so any future duplicate fails cleanly without mutating state. Adds regression coverage at all three layers. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
61 lines
2.8 KiB
TypeScript
61 lines
2.8 KiB
TypeScript
import { describe, expect, test } from 'bun:test';
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import { OutboundQueue } from '../src/index.js';
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/**
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* Regression coverage for the long-poll waiter `since` cursor.
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*
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* The bug being guarded against: when `enqueue` woke a pending
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* `drain` waiter, it used a `since=0` snapshot and replayed every
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* event that had ever been queued — including the ones the waiter
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* had already processed in a previous poll. Downstream the queue
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* fed `Shade.acceptTransferEnvelope`, so the duplicate replay
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* dispatched the same envelope into `manager.decrypt` twice. The
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* second decrypt consumed an already-used skipped key, fell into
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* the stale-counter branch of `ratchetDecrypt`, and corrupted the
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* Double Ratchet receive chain — surfacing as
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* `DecryptionError: wrong key or tampered data` on every
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* subsequent message.
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*/
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describe('OutboundQueue — waiter since cursor', () => {
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test('mid-poll enqueue must not replay events the waiter already saw', async () => {
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const queue = new OutboundQueue({ idleEvictionMs: 0 });
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const peer = 'alice';
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const e1 = queue.enqueue(peer, { kind: 'envelope', bytes: new Uint8Array([1]) });
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const e2 = queue.enqueue(peer, { kind: 'envelope', bytes: new Uint8Array([2]) });
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// First poll drains both events (no blocking — they're already there).
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const first = await queue.drain(peer, 0, 0);
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expect(first.map((e) => e.id)).toEqual([e1.id, e2.id]);
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// Now the waiter polls past the last seen id. It blocks because
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// there are no events newer than `since`. Concurrently a fresh
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// event gets enqueued — that's the path the bug fired on.
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const blockMs = 5_000;
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const polling = queue.drain(peer, e2.id, blockMs);
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// Yield so `drain` actually parks on the waiter list before we
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// race the enqueue against it.
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await Promise.resolve();
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const e3 = queue.enqueue(peer, { kind: 'envelope', bytes: new Uint8Array([3]) });
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const woken = await polling;
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// Pre-fix: would resolve with [e1, e2, e3] (a `since=0` snapshot
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// drained verbatim). Post-fix: only the events newer than the
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// waiter's recorded `since` come through.
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expect(woken.map((e) => e.id)).toEqual([e3.id]);
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});
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test('parked waiter at the head still gets the new event when others have polled past it', async () => {
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const queue = new OutboundQueue({ idleEvictionMs: 0 });
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const peer = 'alice';
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const e1 = queue.enqueue(peer, { kind: 'envelope', bytes: new Uint8Array([1]) });
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// A waiter that parks past the head — there are no events newer
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// than e1.id, so it has to block.
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const polling = queue.drain(peer, e1.id, 5_000);
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await Promise.resolve();
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const e2 = queue.enqueue(peer, { kind: 'envelope', bytes: new Uint8Array([2]) });
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const woken = await polling;
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expect(woken.map((e) => e.id)).toEqual([e2.id]);
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});
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});
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