Tor provides a function to resolve a relay's IP address into a country code by taking advantage of a (heavily outdated) GeoIP database shipped with it.
We should consequently use libloc for doing this, since it can be confusing if those results differ from active connections in the connection tracking CGI (where we _use_ libloc) and such tasks are why we invented libloc in the first place. :-)
Signed-off-by: Peter Müller peter.mueller@ipfire.org --- html/cgi-bin/tor.cgi | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/html/cgi-bin/tor.cgi b/html/cgi-bin/tor.cgi index 7447bd791..14bfcfe90 100644 --- a/html/cgi-bin/tor.cgi +++ b/html/cgi-bin/tor.cgi @@ -912,7 +912,7 @@ sub TorNodeDescription() { $node->{'address'} = $3; $node->{'port'} = $4;
- my $country_code = &TorGetInfo($tor, "ip-to-country/$node->{'address'}"); + my $country_code = &Location::Functions::lookup_country_code($db_handle, $node->{'address'}); $node->{'country_code'} = $country_code;
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