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19 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Anthony Towns
1e9684f39f mempool_entry: add mempool entry sequence number 2023-08-03 13:42:45 +10:00
TheCharlatan
d168458d1f
scripted-diff: Remove unused chainparamsbase includes
This is a follow-up to previous commits moving the chain constants out
of chainparamsbase.

The script removes the chainparamsbase header in all files where it is
included, but not used. This is done by filtering against all defined
symbols of the header as well as its respective .cpp file.

The kernel chainparams now no longer relies on chainparamsbase.

-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
sed -i '/#include <chainparamsbase.h>/d' $( git grep -l 'chainparamsbase.h' | xargs grep -L 'CBaseChainParams\|CreateBaseChainParams\|SetupChainParamsBaseOptions\|BaseParams\|SelectBaseParams\|chainparamsbase.cpp' )
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
2023-05-09 15:49:19 +02:00
TheCharlatan
ba8fc7d788
refactor: Replace string chain name constants with ChainTypes
This commit effectively moves the definition of these constants
out of the chainparamsbase to their own file.

Using the ChainType enums provides better type safety compared to
passing around strings.

The commit is part of an ongoing effort to decouple the libbitcoinkernel
library from the ArgsManager and other functionality that should not be
part of the kernel library.
2023-05-09 15:49:14 +02:00
fanquake
282019cd3d
refactor: add kernel/cs_main.*
Co-authored-by: Anthony Towns <aj@erisian.com.au>
2023-01-05 09:05:14 +00:00
Hennadii Stepanov
306ccd4927
scripted-diff: Bump copyright headers
-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
./contrib/devtools/copyright_header.py update ./
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-

Commits of previous years:
- 2021: f47dda2c58
- 2020: fa0074e2d8
- 2019: aaaaad6ac9
2022-12-24 23:49:50 +00:00
Hennadii Stepanov
38941a703e
refactor: Move txmempool_entry.h --> kernel/mempool_entry.h 2022-11-30 10:37:57 +00:00
glozow
d0b1f613c2
Merge bitcoin/bitcoin#17786: refactor: Nuke policy/fees->mempool circular dependencies
c8dc0e3eaa refactor: Inline `CTxMemPoolEntry` class's functions (Hennadii Stepanov)
75bbe594e5 refactor: Move `CTxMemPoolEntry` class to its own module (Hennadii Stepanov)

Pull request description:

  This PR:
  - gets rid of the `policy/fees` -> `txmempool` -> `policy/fees` circular dependency
  - is an alternative to #13949, which nukes only one circular dependency

ACKs for top commit:
  ryanofsky:
    Code review ACK c8dc0e3eaa. Just include and whitespace changes since last review, and there's a moveonly commit now so it's very easy to review
  theStack:
    Code-review ACK c8dc0e3eaa
  glozow:
    utACK c8dc0e3eaa, agree these changes are an improvement.

Tree-SHA512: 36ece824e6ed3ab1a1e198b30a906c8ac12de24545f840eb046958a17315ac9260c7de26e11e2fbab7208adc3d74918db7a7e389444130f8810548ca2e81af41
2022-11-18 17:04:49 -08:00
Hennadii Stepanov
75bbe594e5
refactor: Move CTxMemPoolEntry class to its own module
This change nukes the policy/fees->mempool circular dependency.

Easy to review using `diff --color-moved=dimmed-zebra`.
2022-11-16 20:16:07 +00:00
furszy
3da7cd2a76
bench: explicitly make all current benchmarks "high" priority
no-functional changes. Only have set the priority level explicitly
on every BENCHMARK macro call.
2022-10-20 10:21:04 -03:00
Carl Dong
d273e53b6e bench/rpc_mempool: Create ChainTestingSetup, use its CTxMemPool
This is correct because:

- The ChainTestingSetup is constructed before the call to bench.run(...)
- All the runs are performed on the same mempool
2022-06-15 17:28:55 -04:00
fanquake
37a16ffd70
refactor: fix clang-tidy named args usage 2022-04-04 09:01:19 +01:00
MarcoFalke
fa2a5f301a
rpc: Move mempool RPCs to new file
Can be reviewed with:
--color-moved=dimmed-zebra --color-moved-ws=ignore-all-space
2022-03-11 17:46:58 +01:00
Hennadii Stepanov
f47dda2c58
scripted-diff: Bump copyright headers
-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
./contrib/devtools/copyright_header.py update ./
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-

Commits of previous years:
* 2020: fa0074e2d8
* 2019: aaaaad6ac9
2021-12-30 19:36:57 +02:00
MarcoFalke
fac49470ca
doc: Fix incorrect C++ named args 2021-11-17 09:25:14 +01:00
MarcoFalke
fa0074e2d8
scripted-diff: Bump copyright headers
-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
./contrib/devtools/copyright_header.py update ./
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
2020-12-31 09:45:41 +01:00
Martin Ankerl
78c312c983 Replace current benchmarking framework with nanobench
This replaces the current benchmarking framework with nanobench [1], an
MIT licensed single-header benchmarking library, of which I am the
autor. This has in my opinion several advantages, especially on Linux:

* fast: Running all benchmarks takes ~6 seconds instead of 4m13s on
  an Intel i7-8700 CPU @ 3.20GHz.

* accurate: I ran e.g. the benchmark for SipHash_32b 10 times and
  calculate standard deviation / mean = coefficient of variation:

  * 0.57% CV for old benchmarking framework
  * 0.20% CV for nanobench

  So the benchmark results with nanobench seem to vary less than with
  the old framework.

* It automatically determines runtime based on clock precision, no need
  to specify number of evaluations.

* measure instructions, cycles, branches, instructions per cycle,
  branch misses (only Linux, when performance counters are available)

* output in markdown table format.

* Warn about unstable environment (frequency scaling, turbo, ...)

* For better profiling, it is possible to set the environment variable
  NANOBENCH_ENDLESS to force endless running of a particular benchmark
  without the need to recompile. This makes it to e.g. run "perf top"
  and look at hotspots.

Here is an example copy & pasted from the terminal output:

|             ns/byte |              byte/s |    err% |        ins/byte |        cyc/byte |    IPC |       bra/byte |   miss% |     total | benchmark
|--------------------:|--------------------:|--------:|----------------:|----------------:|-------:|---------------:|--------:|----------:|:----------
|                2.52 |      396,529,415.94 |    0.6% |           25.42 |            8.02 |  3.169 |           0.06 |    0.0% |      0.03 | `bench/crypto_hash.cpp RIPEMD160`
|                1.87 |      535,161,444.83 |    0.3% |           21.36 |            5.95 |  3.589 |           0.06 |    0.0% |      0.02 | `bench/crypto_hash.cpp SHA1`
|                3.22 |      310,344,174.79 |    1.1% |           36.80 |           10.22 |  3.601 |           0.09 |    0.0% |      0.04 | `bench/crypto_hash.cpp SHA256`
|                2.01 |      496,375,796.23 |    0.0% |           18.72 |            6.43 |  2.911 |           0.01 |    1.0% |      0.00 | `bench/crypto_hash.cpp SHA256D64_1024`
|                7.23 |      138,263,519.35 |    0.1% |           82.66 |           23.11 |  3.577 |           1.63 |    0.1% |      0.00 | `bench/crypto_hash.cpp SHA256_32b`
|                3.04 |      328,780,166.40 |    0.3% |           35.82 |            9.69 |  3.696 |           0.03 |    0.0% |      0.03 | `bench/crypto_hash.cpp SHA512`

[1] https://github.com/martinus/nanobench

* Adds support for asymptotes

  This adds support to calculate asymptotic complexity of a benchmark.
  This is similar to #17375, but currently only one asymptote is
  supported, and I have added support in the benchmark `ComplexMemPool`
  as an example.

  Usage is e.g. like this:

  ```
  ./bench_bitcoin -filter=ComplexMemPool -asymptote=25,50,100,200,400,600,800
  ```

  This runs the benchmark `ComplexMemPool` several times but with
  different complexityN settings. The benchmark can extract that number
  and use it accordingly. Here, it's used for `childTxs`. The output is
  this:

  | complexityN |               ns/op |                op/s |    err% |          ins/op |          cyc/op |    IPC |     total | benchmark
  |------------:|--------------------:|--------------------:|--------:|----------------:|----------------:|-------:|----------:|:----------
  |          25 |        1,064,241.00 |              939.64 |    1.4% |    3,960,279.00 |    2,829,708.00 |  1.400 |      0.01 | `ComplexMemPool`
  |          50 |        1,579,530.00 |              633.10 |    1.0% |    6,231,810.00 |    4,412,674.00 |  1.412 |      0.02 | `ComplexMemPool`
  |         100 |        4,022,774.00 |              248.58 |    0.6% |   16,544,406.00 |   11,889,535.00 |  1.392 |      0.04 | `ComplexMemPool`
  |         200 |       15,390,986.00 |               64.97 |    0.2% |   63,904,254.00 |   47,731,705.00 |  1.339 |      0.17 | `ComplexMemPool`
  |         400 |       69,394,711.00 |               14.41 |    0.1% |  272,602,461.00 |  219,014,691.00 |  1.245 |      0.76 | `ComplexMemPool`
  |         600 |      168,977,165.00 |                5.92 |    0.1% |  639,108,082.00 |  535,316,887.00 |  1.194 |      1.86 | `ComplexMemPool`
  |         800 |      310,109,077.00 |                3.22 |    0.1% |1,149,134,246.00 |  984,620,812.00 |  1.167 |      3.41 | `ComplexMemPool`

  |   coefficient |   err% | complexity
  |--------------:|-------:|------------
  |   4.78486e-07 |   4.5% | O(n^2)
  |   6.38557e-10 |  21.7% | O(n^3)
  |   3.42338e-05 |  38.0% | O(n log n)
  |   0.000313914 |  46.9% | O(n)
  |     0.0129823 | 114.4% | O(log n)
  |     0.0815055 | 133.8% | O(1)

  The best fitting curve is O(n^2), so the algorithm seems to scale
  quadratic with `childTxs` in the range 25 to 800.
2020-06-13 12:24:18 +02:00
practicalswift
084e17cebd Remove unused includes 2019-10-15 22:56:43 +00:00
practicalswift
eca9767673 Make reasoning about dependencies easier by not including unused dependencies 2019-06-02 17:15:23 +02:00
MarcoFalke
fa38535130
bench: Benchmark MempoolToJSON 2019-02-25 10:13:23 -05:00