95ad70ab65 test: Default initialize `should_freeze` to `true` (Hennadii Stepanov)
cea50521fe refactor: Drop no longer used `swap` member functions (Hennadii Stepanov)
a87fb6bee5 clang-tidy: Fix modernize-use-default-member-init in `CScriptCheck` (Hennadii Stepanov)
b4bed5c1f9 refactor: Drop no longer used `CScriptCheck()` default constructor (Hennadii Stepanov)
d8427cc28e refactor: Use move semantics in `CCheckQueue::Loop` (Hennadii Stepanov)
9a0b524139 clang-tidy, test: Fix bugprone-use-after-move in `Correct_Queue_range()` (Hennadii Stepanov)
04831fee6d refactor: Make move semantics explicit for callers (Hennadii Stepanov)
6c2d5972f3 refactor: Use move semantics in `CCheckQueue::Add` (Hennadii Stepanov)
0682003214 test, refactor: Avoid `CScriptCheck::swap` in `transaction_tests` (Hennadii Stepanov)
15209d97c6 consensus, refactor: Avoid `CScriptCheck::swap` in `CheckInputScripts` (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
This PR makes code more succinct and readable by using move semantics.
ACKs for top commit:
martinus:
re-ACK 95ad70ab65
achow101:
ACK 95ad70ab65
TheCharlatan:
re-ACK 95ad70ab65
MarcoFalke:
re-ACK 95ad70ab65🚥
Tree-SHA512: adda760891b12d252dc9b823fe7c41eed660364b6fb1a69f17607d7a31eb0bbb82a80d154a7acfaa241b5de37d42a293c2b6e059f26a8e92d88d3a87c99768fb
2c3a90f663 log: on new valid header (James O'Beirne)
e5ce857634 log: net: new header over cmpctblock (James O'Beirne)
Pull request description:
Alternate to #27276.
Devs were [suprised to realize](https://twitter.com/jamesob/status/1637237917201383425) last night that we don't have definitive logging for when a given header was first received.
This logs to the main stream when new headers are received outside of IBD, as well as when headers come in over cmpctblocks. The rationale of not hiding these under log categories is that they may be useful to have widely available when debugging strange network activity, and the marginal volume is modest.
ACKs for top commit:
dergoegge:
Code review ACK 2c3a90f663
achow101:
ACK 2c3a90f663
Sjors:
tACK 2c3a90f663
josibake:
ACK 2c3a90f663
Tree-SHA512: 49fdcbe07799c8adc24143d7e5054a0c93fef120d2e9d5fddbd3b119550d895e2985be6ac10dd1825ea23a6fa5479c1b76d5518c136fbd983fa76c0d39dc354f
4b7aec2951 Add mempool tracepoints (virtu)
Pull request description:
This PR adds multiple mempool tracepoints.
| tracepoint | description |
| ------------- | ------------- |
| `mempool:added` | Is called when a transaction enters the mempool |
| `mempool:removed` | ... when a transaction is removed from the mempool |
| `mempool:replaced` | ... when a transaction is replaced in the mempool |
| `mempool:rejected` | ... when a transaction is rejected from entering the mempool |
The tracepoints are further documented in `docs/tracing.md`. Usage is demonstrated in the example script `contrib/tracing/mempool_monitor.py`. Interface tests are provided in `test/functional/interface_usdt_mempool.py`.
The rationale for passing the removal reason as a string instead of numerically is that the benefits of not having to maintain a redundant enum-string mapping seem to outweigh the small cost of string generation. The reject reason is passed as string as well, although in this instance the string does not have to be generated but is readily available.
ACKs for top commit:
0xB10C:
ACK 4b7aec2951
achow101:
ACK 4b7aec2951
Tree-SHA512: 6deb3ba2d1a061292fb9b0f885f7a5c4d11b109b838102d8a8f4828cd68f5cd03fa3fc64adc6fdf54a08a1eaccce261b0aa90c2b8c33cd5fd3828c8f74978958
Tracepoints for added, removed, replaced, and rejected transactions.
The removal reason is passed as string instead of a numeric value, since
the benefits of not having to maintain a redundant enum-string mapping
seem to outweigh the small cost of string generation. The reject reason
is passed as string as well, although here the string does not have to
be generated but is readily available.
So far, tracepoint PRs typically included two demo scripts: a naive
bpftrace script to show raw tracepoint data and a bcc script for a more
refined view. However, as some of the ongoing changes to bpftrace
introduce a certain degree of unreliability (running some of the
existing bpftrace scripts was not possible with standard kernels and
bpftrace packages on latest stable Ubuntu, Debian, and NixOS), this PR
includes only a single bcc script that fuses the functionality of former
bpftrace and bcc scripts.
b3e78dc91d refactor: Don't use global chainparams in chainstatemanager method (TheCharlatan)
382b692a50 Split non/kernel chainparams (Carl Dong)
edabbc78a3 Add factory functions for Main/Test/Sig/Reg chainparams (Carl Dong)
d938098398 Remove UpdateVersionBitsParameters (Carl Dong)
84b85786f0 Decouple RegTestChainParams from ArgsManager (Carl Dong)
76cd4e7c96 Decouple SigNetChainParams from ArgsManager (Carl Dong)
Pull request description:
This pull request is part of the `libbitcoinkernel` project https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/24303https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/projects/18 and more specifically its "Step 2: Decouple most non-consensus code from libbitcoinkernel". dongcarl is the original author of this patchset, these commits were taken from https://github.com/dongcarl/bitcoin/tree/2022-03-libbitcoinkernel-chainparams-args-only.
#### Context
The bitcoin kernel library currently relies on code containing user configurations through the `ArgsManager`. This is not optimal, since as a stand-alone library it should not rely on bitcoind's argument parsing logic. Instead, its interfaces should accept control and options structs that control the kernel library's desired configuration.
Similar work towards decoupling the `ArgsManager` from the kernel has been done in
https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/25290, https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/25487, https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/25527 and https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/25862.
#### Changes
By moving the `CChainParams` class definition into the kernel and giving it new factory functions `CChainParams::{RegTest,SigNet,Main,TestNet}`it can be constructed without an `ArgsManager` reference, unlike the current factory function `CreateChainParams`.
The first few commits remove uses of `ArgsManager` within `CChainParams`. Then the `CChainParams` definition is moved to a new file in the `kernel/` subdirectory.
ACKs for top commit:
MarcoFalke:
re-ACK b3e78dc91d🛁
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK b3e78dc91d. Only changes since last review were recent review suggestions.
ajtowns:
ACK b3e78dc91d
Tree-SHA512: 3835aca1d3e3c75cc3303dd584bab3a77e58f6c678724a5e359fe4b0e17e0763a00931ee6191f516b9fde50496f59cc691f0709c0254206db3863bbf7ab2cacd
The chainstatemanager m_options.chainparams member variable gets its
value from the global chainparams in init.cpp. This allows
validation.cpp to only include the the kernel chainparams file.
Moves chainparams code not using the ArgsManager to the kernel.
Subsequently use the kernel chainparams header now where possible in
order to further decouple chainparams call sites from gArgs.
fa1b4e5c32 Use steady clock in FlushStateToDisk (MarcoFalke)
1111e2f8b4 Use steady clock in SeedStrengthen and FindBestImplementation (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
There may be a theoretical deadlock for the duration of the offset when the system clock is adjusted into a past time while executing `SeedStrengthen`.
Fix this by using steady clock.
Do the same in `FindBestImplementation`, which shouldn't be affected, because it discards outlier measurements. However, doing the same there for consistency seems fine.
Do the same in `FlushStateToDisk`, which should make the flushes more steady, if the system clock is adjusted by a large offset.
ACKs for top commit:
john-moffett:
ACK fa1b4e5c32
willcl-ark:
ACK fa1b4e5c3
Tree-SHA512: cc625e796b186accd53222bd64eb57d0512bc7e588312d254349b542bbc5e5daac348ff2b3b3f7dc5ae0bbbae2ec11fdbf3022cf2164211633765a4b0108e83e
2b373fe49d docs: update assumeutxo.md (James O'Beirne)
87a1108c81 test: add snapshot completion unittests (James O'Beirne)
d70919a88f refactor: make MempoolMutex() public (James O'Beirne)
7300ced9de log: add LoadBlockIndex() message for assumedvalid blocks (James O'Beirne)
d96c59cc5c validation: add ChainMan logic for completing UTXO snapshot validation (James O'Beirne)
f2a4f3376f move-only-ish: init: factor out chainstate initialization (James O'Beirne)
637a90b973 add Chainstate::HasCoinsViews() (James O'Beirne)
c29f26b47b validation: add CChainState::m_disabled and ChainMan::isUsable (James O'Beirne)
5ee22cdafd add ChainstateManager.GetSnapshot{BaseHeight,BaseBlock}() (James O'Beirne)
Pull request description:
This is part of the [assumeutxo project](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/projects/11) (parent PR: https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/15606)
Part two of replacing https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/24232.
---
When a user activates a snapshot, the serialized UTXO set data is used to create an "assumed-valid" chainstate, which becomes active in an attempt to get the node to network tip as quickly as possible. Simultaneously in the background, the already-existing chainstate continues "conventional" IBD to both accumulate full block data and serve as a belt-and-suspenders to validate the assumed-valid chainstate.
Once the background chainstate's tip reaches the base block of the snapshot used, we set `m_stop_use` on that chainstate and immediately take the hash of its UTXO set; we verify that this matches the assumeutxo value in the source code. Note that while we ultimately want to remove this background chainstate, we don't do so until the following initialization process, when we again check the UTXO set hash of the background chainstate, and if it continues to match, we remove the (now unnecessary) background chainstate, and move the (previously) assumed-valid chainstate into its place. We then reinitialize the chainstate in the normal way.
As noted in previous comments, we could do the filesystem operations "inline" immediately when the background validation completes, but that's basically just an optimization that saves disk space until the next restart. It didn't strike me as worth the risk of moving chainstate data around on disk during runtime of the node, though maybe my concerns are overblown.
The final result of this completion process is a fully-validated chain, where the only evidence that the user synced using assumeutxo is the existence of a `base_blockhash` file in the `chainstate` directory.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK 2b373fe49d
Tree-SHA512: a204e1d6e6932dd83c799af3606b01a9faf893f04e9ee1a36d63f2f1ccfa9118bdc1c107d86976aa0312814267e6a42074bf3e2bf1dead4b2513efc6d955e13d
Trigger completion when a background validation chainstate reaches the
same height as a UTXO snapshot, and handle cleaning up the chainstate
on subsequent startup.
75db62ba4c refactor: Move calculation logic out from `CheckSequenceLocksAtTip()` (Hennadii Stepanov)
3bc434f459 refactor: Add `CalculateLockPointsAtTip()` function (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
This PR is follow up for bitcoin/bitcoin#22677 and bitcoin/bitcoin#23683.
On master (013daed9ac) it is not obvious that `CheckSequenceLocksAtTip()` function can modify its `LockPoints* lp` parameter which leads to https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/22677#discussion_r762040101.
This PR:
- separates the lockpoint calculate logic from `CheckSequenceLocksAtTip()` function into a new `CalculateLockPointsAtTip()` one
- cleans up the `CheckSequenceLocksAtTip()` function interface
- makes code easier to reason about (hopefully)
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK 75db62ba4c
stickies-v:
re-ACK 75db62b
Tree-SHA512: 072c3fd9cd1e1b0e0bfc8960a67b01c80a9f16d6778f374b6944ade03a020415ce8b8ab2593b0f5e787059c8cf90af798290b4c826785d41955092f6e12e7486
3141eab9c6 test: add functional test for ScanAndUnlinkAlreadyPrunedFiles (Andrew Toth)
e252909e56 test: add unit test for ScanAndUnlinkAlreadyPrunedFiles (Andrew Toth)
77557dda4a prune: scan and unlink already pruned block files on startup (Andrew Toth)
Pull request description:
There are a few cases where we can mark a block and undo file as pruned in our block index, but not actually remove the files from disk.
1. If we call `FindFilesToPrune` or `FindFilesToPruneManual` and crash before `UnlinkPrunedFiles`.
2. If on Windows there is an open file handle to the file somewhere else when calling `fs::remove` in `UnlinkPrunedFiles` (https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/filesystem/remove, https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/fileapi/nf-fileapi-deletefilew#remarks). This could be from another process, or if we are calling `ReadBlockFromDisk`/`ReadRawBlockFromDisk` without having a lock on `cs_main` (which has been allowed since ccd8ef65f9).
This PR mitigates this by scanning all pruned block files on startup after `LoadBlockIndexDB` and unlinking them again.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK 3141eab9c6
pablomartin4btc:
re-ACK with added functional test 3141eab9c6.
furszy:
Code review ACK 3141eab9
theStack:
Code-review ACK 3141eab9c6
Tree-SHA512: 6c73bc57838ad1b7e5d441af3c4d6bf4c61c4382e2b86485e57fbb74a61240710c0ceeceb8b4834e610ecfa3175c6955c81ea4b2285fee11ca6383f472979d8d
0af16e7134 doc: add release note for #25574 (Martin Zumsande)
57ef2a4812 validation: report if pruning prevents completion of verification (Martin Zumsande)
0c7785bb25 init, validation: Improve handling if VerifyDB() fails due to insufficient dbcache (Martin Zumsande)
d6f781f1cf validation: return VerifyDBResult::INTERRUPTED if verification was interrupted (Martin Zumsande)
6360b5302d validation: Change return value of VerifyDB to enum type (Martin Zumsande)
Pull request description:
`VerifyDB()` can fail to complete due to insufficient dbcache at the level 3 checks. This PR improves the error handling in this case in the following ways:
- The rpc `-verifychain` now returns false if the check can't be completed due to insufficient cache
- During init, we only log a warning if the default values for `-checkblocks` and `-checklevel` are taken and the check doesn't complete. However, if the user actively specifies one of these args, we return with an InitError if we can't complete the check.
This PR also changes `-verifychain` RPC to return `false` if the verification didn't finish due to missing block data (pruning) or due to being interrupted by the node being shutdown.
Previously, this PR also included a fix for a possible assert during verification - this was done in #27009 (now merged).
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK 0af16e7134
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK 0af16e7134. Only small suggested changes since the last review, like renaming some of the enum values. I did leave more suggestions, but they are not very important and could be followups
john-moffett:
ACK 0af16e7134
MarcoFalke:
lgtm re-ACK 0af16e7134 🎚
Tree-SHA512: 84b4f767cf9bfbafef362312757c9bf765b41ae3977f4ece840e40c52a2266b1457832df0cdf70440be0aac2168d9b58fc817238630b0b6812f3836ca950bc0e
and remove m_snapshot_validated. This state can now be inferred by the
number of isUsable chainstates.
m_disabled is used to signal that a chainstate should no longer be used
by validation logic; it is used as a sentinel when background validation
completes or if the snapshot chainstate is found to be invalid.
isUsable is a convenience method that incorporates m_disabled.
The rpc command verifychain now fails if the dbcache was not sufficient
to complete the verification at the specified level and depth.
In the same situation, the VerifyDB check during Init will now fail (and lead to
an early shutdown) if the user has explicitly specified -checkblocks or
-checklevel but the check couldn't be executed because of the limited
cache. If the user didn't change any of the two and is using the defaults, log a warning
but don't prevent the node from starting up.
This does not change behavior. It is in preparation for
special handling of the case where VerifyDB doesn't finish
for various reasons, but doesn't fail.
Add CoinsViewOptions struct to remove ArgsManager uses from txdb.
To reduce size of this commit, this moves references to gArgs variable out of
txdb.cpp to calling code in validation.cpp. But these moves are temporary. The
gArgs references in validation.cpp are moved out to calling code in init.cpp in
later commits.
This commit does not change behavior.
The previous behavior, skipping some L3 DisconnectBlock calls,
but still attempting to reconnect these blocks at L4, makes
ConnectBlock assert.
The variable skipped_l3_checks is introduced because even with an
insufficient cache for the L3 checks, the L1/L2 checks in the same
loop should still be completed.
Fixes #25563.
282019cd3d refactor: add kernel/cs_main.* (fanquake)
Pull request description:
One place to find / include `cs_main`.
No more:
> // Actually declared in validation.cpp; can't include because of circular dependency.
> extern RecursiveMutex cs_main;
Ultimately, no more need to include `validation.h` (which also includes (heavy/boost filled) `txmempool.h`) everywhere for `cs_main`. See #26087 for another example of why that is useful.
ACKs for top commit:
ajtowns:
ACK 282019cd3d
Tree-SHA512: 142835b794873e7a09c3246d6101843ae81ec0c6295e6873130c98a2abfa5f7282748d0f1a37237a779cc71c3bc0a75d03b20313ef5398c83d4814215cbc8287
This makes the interface more predictable and useful. The caller
understands one or more transactions failed, and can learn what happened
with each transaction. We already have this information, so we might as
well return it.
It doesn't make sense to do this for other PackageValidationResult
values because:
- PCKG_RESULT_UNSET: this means everything succeeded, so the individual
failures are no longer accurate.
- PCKG_MEMPOOL_ERROR: something went wrong with the mempool logic;
transaction failures might not be meaningful.
- PCKG_POLICY: this means something was wrong with the package as a
whole. The caller should use the PackageValidationState to find the
error, rather than looking at individual MempoolAcceptResults.
This value creates an extremely confusing interface as its existence is
dependent upon implementation details (whether something was submitted
on its own, etc). MempoolAcceptResult::m_effective_feerate is much more
helpful, as it always exists for submitted transactions.
Bug: not setting package_state means package_state.IsValid() == true and
the caller does not know that this failed.
We won't be validating this transaction again, so it makes sense to return this
failure to the caller.
Rename package_state to package_state_quit_early to make it more clear
what this variable is used for and what its scope is.
Co-authored-by: Greg Sanders <gsanders87@gmail.com>
47c4b1f52a mempool: log/halt when CalculateMemPoolAncestors fails unexpectedly (stickies-v)
5481f65849 mempool: add AssumeCalculateMemPoolAncestors helper function (stickies-v)
f911bdfff9 mempool: use util::Result for CalculateMemPoolAncestors (stickies-v)
66e028f739 mempool: use util::Result for CalculateAncestorsAndCheckLimits (stickies-v)
Pull request description:
Upon reviewing the documentation for `CTxMemPool::CalculateMemPoolAncestors`, I noticed `setAncestors` was meant to be an `out` parameter but actually is an `in,out` parameter, as can be observed by adding `assert(setAncestors.empty());` as the first line in the function and running `make check`. This PR fixes this unexpected behaviour and introduces refactoring improvements to make intents and effects of the code more clear.
## Unexpected behaviour
This behaviour occurs only in the package acceptance path, currently only triggered by `testmempoolaccept` and `submitpackage` RPCs.
In `MemPoolAccept::AcceptMultipleTransactions()`, we first call `PreChecks()` and then `SubmitPackage()` with the same `Workspace ws` reference. `PreChecks` leaves `ws.m_ancestors` in a potentially non-empty state, before it is passed on to `MemPoolAccept::SubmitPackage`. `SubmitPackage` is the only place where `setAncestors` isn't guaranteed to be empty before calling `CalculateMemPoolAncestors`. The most straightforward fix is to just forcefully clear `setAncestors` at the beginning of CalculateMemPoolAncestors, which is done in the first bugfix commit.
## Improvements
### Return value instead of out-parameters
This PR updates the function signatures for `CTxMemPool::CalculateMemPoolAncestors` and `CTxMemPool::CalculateAncestorsAndCheckLimits` to use a `util::Result` return type and eliminate both the `setAncestors` `in,out`-parameter as well as the error string. It simplifies the code and makes the intent and effects more explicit.
### Observability
There are 7 instances where we currently call `CalculateMemPoolAncestors` without actually checking if the function succeeded because we assume that it can't fail, such as in [miner.cpp](69b10212ea/src/node/miner.cpp (L399)). This PR adds a new wrapper `AssumeCalculateMemPoolAncestors` function that logs such unexpected failures, or in case of debug builds even halts the program. It's not crucial to the objective, more of an observability improvement that seems sensible to add on here.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK 47c4b1f52a
w0xlt:
ACK 47c4b1f52a
glozow:
ACK 47c4b1f52a
furszy:
light code review ACK 47c4b1f5
aureleoules:
ACK 47c4b1f52a
Tree-SHA512: d908dad00d1a5645eb865c4877cc0bae74b9cd3332a3641eb4a285431aef119f9fc78172d38b55c592168a73dae83242e6af3348815f7b37cbe2d448a3a58648
b2aa9e8528 Add release note for MIN_STANDARD_TX_NONWITNESS_SIZE relaxation (Greg Sanders)
8c5b3646b5 Relax MIN_STANDARD_TX_NONWITNESS_SIZE to 65 non-witness bytes (Greg Sanders)
Pull request description:
Since the original fix was set to be a "reasonable" transaction to reduce allocations and the true motivation later revealed, it makes sense to relax this check to something more principled.
There are more exotic transaction patterns that could take advantage of a relaxed requirement, such as 1 input, 1 output OP_RETURN to burn a utxo to fees for CPFP purposes when change isn't practical.
Two changes could be accomplished:
1) Anything not 64 bytes could be allowed
2) Anything above 64 bytes could be allowed
In the Great Consensus Cleanup, suggestion (2)
was proposed as a consensus change, and is the simpler of the two suggestions. It would not allow an "empty" OP_RETURN but would reduce the required padding from 22 bytes to 5.
The functional test is also modified to test the actual case
we care about: 64 bytes
Related mailing list discussions here:
https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2022-October/020995.html
And a couple years earlier:
https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2020-May/017883.html
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
reACK b2aa9e8528
glozow:
reACK b2aa9e8528
pablomartin4btc:
re-ACK b2aa9e8528
jonatack:
ACK b2aa9e8528 with some suggestions
Tree-SHA512: c1ec1af9ddcf31b2272209a4f1ee0c5607399f8172e5a1dfd4604cf98bfb933810dd9369a5917ad122add003327c9fcf6ee26995de3aca41d5c42dba527991ad
Since the original fix was set to be a "reasonable" transaction
to reduce allocations and the true motivation later revealed,
it makes sense to relax this check to something more principled.
There are more exotic transaction patterns that could take advantage
of a relaxed requirement, such as 1 input, 1 output OP_RETURN to burn
a utxo to fees for CPFP purposes when change isn't practical.
Two changes could be accomplished:
1) Anything not 64 bytes could be allowed
2) Anything above 64 bytes could be allowed
In the Great Consensus Cleanup, suggestion (2) was the route taken.
It would not allow an "empty" OP_RETURN
but would reduce the required padding from 22 bytes to 5.
The functional test is also modified to test the actual case
we care about: 64 bytes