It is the equivalent of multi() but for Tapscript, using CHECKSIGADD
instead of CHECKMULTISIG.
It shares the same properties as multi() but for 'n', since a threshold
multi_a() may have an empty vector as the top element of its
satisfaction. It could also have the 'o' property when it only has a
single key, but in this case a 'pk()' is always preferable anyways.
We are going to introduce Tapscript support in Miniscript, for which
some of Miniscript rules and properties change (new or modified
fragments, different typing rules, different resources consumption, ..).
It's true that for any public key there'll be a signature check in a
valid Miniscript. The code would previously, when computing the size of
a satisfaction, account for the signature when it sees a public key
push. Instead, account for it when it is required (ie when encountering
the `c:` wrapper). This has two benefits:
- Allows to accurately compute the net effect of a fragment on the stack
size. This is necessary to track the size of the stack during the
execution of a Script.
- It also just makes more sense, making the code more accessible to
future contributors.
b442580ed2 gui: remove legacy wallet creation (furszy)
Pull request description:
Fixes #763
Preventing users from creating a legacy wallet prior to its deprecation in the upcoming releases.
Note:
This is still available using the `createwallet` RPC command.
Future Note:
Would be nice to re-write this modal as a wizard. And improve the design.
<details><summary> Pre-Changes Screenshot </summary>
<img width="611" alt="Screenshot 2023-10-06 at 11 30 14" src="https://github.com/bitcoin-core/gui/assets/5377650/ca10c97d-46e8-4aed-82da-068f2afbe25c">
</details>
<details><summary> Post-Changes Screenshot </summary>
<img width="729" alt="Screenshot 2023-10-06 at 11 32 58" src="https://github.com/bitcoin-core/gui/assets/5377650/f6bdcb57-646a-43d8-86a7-476e3cca683f">
</details>
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK b442580ed2
hebasto:
re-ACK b442580ed2
pablomartin4btc:
tACK b442580ed2
Tree-SHA512: f5d26ffbb0962648b9edf273b325e89425a318e136df26a26acb21b88730fd7d6499c68a705680539dc1b40862fbf413a1e0c8572436a0cfc665e2d08a3cf97d
5b878be742 [doc] add release note for submitpackage (glozow)
7a9bb2a2a5 [rpc] allow submitpackage to be called outside of regtest (glozow)
5b9087a9a7 [rpc] require package to be a tree in submitpackage (glozow)
e32ba1599c [txpackages] IsChildWithParentsTree() (glozow)
b4f28cc345 [doc] parent pay for child in aggregate CheckFeeRate (glozow)
Pull request description:
Permit (restricted topology) submitpackage RPC outside of regtest. Suggested in https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/26933#issuecomment-1510851570
This RPC should be safe but still experimental - interface may change, not all features (e.g. package RBF) are implemented, etc. If a miner wants to expose this to people, they can effectively use "package relay" before the p2p changes are implemented. However, please note **this is not package relay**; transactions submitted this way will not relay to other nodes if the feerates are below their mempool min fee. Users should put this behind some kind of rate limit or permissions.
ACKs for top commit:
instagibbs:
ACK 5b878be742
achow101:
ACK 5b878be742
dergoegge:
Code review ACK 5b878be742
ajtowns:
ACK 5b878be742
ariard:
Code Review ACK 5b878be742. Though didn’t manually test the PR.
Tree-SHA512: 610365c0b2ffcccd55dedd1151879c82de1027e3319712bcb11d54f2467afaae4d05dca5f4b25f03354c80845fef538d3938b958174dda8b14c10670537a6524
fa071aeb61 wallet: No BDB creation, unless -deprecatedrpc=create_bdb (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
With BDB being removed soon, it seems confusing and harmful to allow users to create fresh BDB wallets going forward, as it would load them with an additional burden of having to migrate them soon after.
Also, it would be good to allow for one release for test (and external) scripts to adapt.
Fix all issues by introducing the `-deprecatedrpc=create_bdb` setting.
ACKs for top commit:
Sjors:
tACK fa071aeb61
achow101:
ACK fa071aeb61
furszy:
utACK fa071aeb
Tree-SHA512: 37a4c3e4ba659e0ebe2382e71d9c80e42a895d9ad743f5dda7c110fbbb7d2a36f46769982552a9ac0c3a57203379ef164be97aa8033eb7674d6b4da030ba8f9b
a9ef702a87 assumeutxo: change getchainstates RPC to return a list of chainstates (Ryan Ofsky)
Pull request description:
Current `getchainstates` RPC returns "normal" and "snapshot" fields which are not ideal because it requires new "normal" and "snapshot" terms to be defined, and the definitions are not really consistent with internal code. (In the RPC interface, the "snapshot" chainstate becomes the "normal" chainstate after it is validated, while in internal code there is no "normal chainstate" and the "snapshot chainstate" is still called that temporarily after it is validated).
The current `getchainstates` RPC is also awkward to use if you to want information about the most-work chainstate, because you have to look at the "snapshot" field if it exists, and otherwise fall back to the "normal" field.
Fix these issues by having `getchainstates` just return a flat list of chainstates ordered by work, and adding a new chainstate "validated" field alongside the existing "snapshot_blockhash" field so it is explicit if a chainstate was originally loaded from a snapshot, and whether the snapshot has been validated.
This change was motivated by comment thread in https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/28562#discussion_r1344154808
ACKs for top commit:
Sjors:
re-ACK a9ef702a87
jamesob:
re-ACK a9ef702
achow101:
ACK a9ef702a87
Tree-SHA512: b364e2e96675fb7beaaee60c4dff4b69e6bc2d8a30dea1ba094265633d1cddf9dbf1c5ce20c07d6e23222cf1e92a195acf6227e4901f3962e81a1e53a43490aa
c1e6c542af descriptors: disallow hybrid public keys (Pieter Wuille)
Pull request description:
Fixes #28511
The descriptor documentation (`doc/descriptors.md`) and [BIP380](https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0380.mediawiki) explicitly require that hex-encoded public keys start with 02 or 03 (compressed) or 04 (uncompressed). However, the current parsing/inference code permit 06 and 07 (hybrid) encoding as well. Fix this.
ACKs for top commit:
darosior:
ACK c1e6c542af
achow101:
ACK c1e6c542af
Tree-SHA512: 23b674fb420619b2536d12da10008bb87cf7bc0333ec59e618c0d02c3574b468cc71248475ece37f76658d743ef51e68566948e903bca79fda5f7d75416fea4d
Current getchainstates RPC returns "normal" and "snapshot" fields which are not
ideal because it requires new "normal" and "snapshot" terms to be defined, and
the definitions are not really consistent with internal code. (In the RPC
interface, the "snapshot" chainstate becomes the "normal" chainstate after it
is validated, while in internal code there is no "normal chainstate" and the
"snapshot chainstate" is still called that temporarily after it is validated).
The current getchainstatees RPC is also awkward to use if you to want
information about the most-work chainstate because you have to look at the
"snapshot" field if it exists, and otherwise fall back to the "normal" field.
Fix these issues by having getchainstates just return a flat list of
chainstates ordered by work, and adding new chainstate "validated" field
alongside the existing "snapshot_blockhash" so it is explicit if a chainstate
was originally loaded from a snapshot, and whether the snapshot has been
validated.
3d420d8f28 Add instructions for headerssync-params.py to release-process.md (Pieter Wuille)
53d7d35b58 Update parameters in headerssync.cpp (Pieter Wuille)
7899402cff Add headerssync-params.py script to the repository (Pieter Wuille)
Pull request description:
Builds upon #25946, as it incorporates changes based on the selected values there.
This adds the headerssync tuning parameters optimization script from https://gist.github.com/sipa/016ae445c132cdf65a2791534dfb7ae1 to the repository, updates the parameters based on its output, and adds release process instructions for doing this update in the future.
A few considerations:
* It would be a bit cleaner to have these parameters be part of `CChainParams`, but due to the nature of the approach, it really only applies to chains with unforgeable proof-of-work, which we really can only reasonably expect from mainnet, so I think it's fine to keep them local to `headerssync.cpp`. Keeping them as compile-time evaluatable constants also has a (likely negligible) performance impact (avoiding runtime modulo operations).
* If we want to make sure the chainparams and headerssync params don't go out of date, it could be possible to run the script in CI, and and possibly even have the parameters be generated automatically at build time. I think that's overkill for how unfrequently these need to change, and running the script has non-trivial cost (~minutes in the normal python interpreter).
* A viable alternative is just leaving this out-of-repo entirely, and just do ad-hoc updating from time to time. Having it in the repo and release notes does make sure it's not forgotten, though adds a cost to contributors/maintainers who follow the process.
ACKs for top commit:
ajtowns:
reACK 3d420d8f28
Tree-SHA512: 03188301c20423c72c1cbd008ccce89b93e2898edcbeecc561b2928a0d64e9a829ab0744dc3b017c23de8b02f3c107ae31e694302d3931f4dc3540e184de1963
ba2e5bfc67 net: raise V1_PREFIX_LEN from 12 to 16 (Pieter Wuille)
Pull request description:
A "version" message in the V1 protocol starts with a fixed 16 bytes:
* The 4-byte network magic
* The 12-byte command string: "version" plus 5 0x00 bytes
The current code detects incoming V1 connections by just looking at the first 12 bytes (matching an [earlier version](https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/pull/1496) of BIP324), but 16 bytes is more precise. This isn't an observable difference right now, as a 12 byte prefix ought to be negligible already, but it may become observable with future extensions to the protocol, so make the code match the specification.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK ba2e5bfc67
theStack:
re-ACK ba2e5bfc67
mzumsande:
Code review ACK ba2e5bfc67
Tree-SHA512: 64876b03613bd1c5dda82f4ca1b367014365f9ae4cfa30f45c5758a563c68cbea81a98d02ba616c264674c204517aac8b7de94da10f32e77b56267a43710c651
d27b9a2248 test: fix feature_init.py file perturbation (Martin Zumsande)
ad66ca1e47 init: abort loading of blockindex in case of missing height. (Martin Zumsande)
Pull request description:
When the block index database is non-contiguous due to file corruption (i.e. it contains indexes of height `x-1` and `x+1`, but not `x`), bitcoind can currently crash with an assert in `BuildSkip()` / `GetAncestor()` during `BlockManager::LoadBlockIndex()`:
```
bitcoind: chain.cpp:112: const CBlockIndex* CBlockIndex::GetAncestor(int) const: Assertion `pindexWalk->pprev' failed.
```
This PR changes it such that we instead return an `InitError` to the user.
I stumbled upon this because I noticed that the file perturbation in `feature_init.py` wasn't working as intended, which is fixed in the second commit:
* Opening the file twice in one `with` statement would lead to `tf_read` being empty, so the test wouldn't perturb anything but replace the file with a new one. Fixed by first opening for read, then for write.
* We need to restore the previous state after perturbations, so that only the current perturbation is active and not a mix of the current and previous ones.
* I also added `checkblocks=200` to the startup parameters so that corruption in earlier blocks of `blk00000.dat` is detected during init verification and not ignored.
After fixing `feature_init.py` like that I'd run into the `assert` mentioned above (so running the testfix from the second commit without the first one is a way to reproduce it).
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK d27b9a2248
furszy:
Code ACK d27b9a224
fjahr:
Code review ACK d27b9a2248
Tree-SHA512: 2e54da6030c5813c86bd58f816401e090bb43c5b834764a5e3c0e55dbfe09e423f88042cab823db3742088204b274d4ad2abf58a3832a4b18328b11a30bf7094
The descriptor documentation (doc/descriptors.md) and BIP380 explicitly
require that hex-encoded public keys start with 02 or 03 (compressed) or
04 (uncompressed). However, the current parsing/inference code permit 06
and 07 (hybrid) encoding as well. Fix this.
A "version" message in the V1 protocol starts with a fixed 16 bytes:
* The 4-byte network magic
* The 12-byte zero-padded command "version" plus 5 0x00 bytes
The current code detects incoming V1 connections by just looking at the
first 12 bytes (matching an earlier version of BIP324), but 16 bytes is
more precise. This isn't an observable difference right now, as a 12 byte
prefix ought to be negligible already, but it may become observable with
future extensions to the protocol, so make the code match the
specification.
68f23f57d7 http: bugfix: track closed connection (stickies-v)
084d037231 http: log connection instead of request count (stickies-v)
41f9027813 http: refactor: use encapsulated HTTPRequestTracker (stickies-v)
Pull request description:
#26742 significantly increased the http server shutdown speed, but also introduced a bug (#27722 - see https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/27722#issuecomment-1559453982 for steps to reproduce on master) that causes http server shutdown to halt in case of a remote client disconnection. This happens because `evhttp_request_set_on_complete_cb` is never called and thus the request is never removed from `g_requests`.
This PR fixes that bug, and improves robustness of the code by encapsulating the request tracking logic. Earlier approaches (#27909, #27245, #19434) attempted to resolve this but [imo are fundamentally unsafe](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/27909#discussion_r1265614783) because of differences in lifetime between an `evhttp_request` and `evhttp_connection`.
We don't need to keep track of open requests or connections, we just [need to ensure](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/19420#issue-648067169) that there are no active requests on server shutdown. Because a connection can have multiple requests, and a request can be completed in various ways (the request actually being handled, or the client performing a remote disconnect), keeping a counter per connection seems like the approach with the least overhead to me.
Fixes #27722
ACKs for top commit:
vasild:
ACK 68f23f57d7
theStack:
ACK 68f23f57d7
Tree-SHA512: dfa711ff55ec75ba44d73e9e6fac16b0be25cf3c20868c2145a844a7878ad9fc6998d9ff62d72f3a210bfa411ef03d3757b73d68a7c22926e874c421e51444d6
352d5eb2a9 test: getrawaddrman RPC (0xb10c)
da384a286b rpc: getrawaddrman for addrman entries (0xb10c)
Pull request description:
Inspired by `getaddrmaninfo` (#27511), this adds a hidden/test-only `getrawaddrman` RPC. The RPC returns information on all addresses in the address manager new and tried tables. Addrman table contents can be used in tests and during development.
The RPC result encodes the `bucket` and `position`, the internal location of addresses in the tables, in the address object's string key. This allows users to choose to consume or to ignore the location information. If the internals of the address manager implementation change, the location encoding might change too.
```
getrawaddrman
EXPERIMENTAL warning: this call may be changed in future releases.
Returns information on all address manager entries for the new and tried tables.
Result:
{ (json object)
"table" : { (json object) buckets with addresses in the address manager table ( new, tried )
"bucket/position" : { (json object) the location in the address manager table (<bucket>/<position>)
"address" : "str", (string) The address of the node
"port" : n, (numeric) The port number of the node
"network" : "str", (string) The network (ipv4, ipv6, onion, i2p, cjdns) of the address
"services" : n, (numeric) The services offered by the node
"time" : xxx, (numeric) The UNIX epoch time when the node was last seen
"source" : "str", (string) The address that relayed the address to us
"source_network" : "str" (string) The network (ipv4, ipv6, onion, i2p, cjdns) of the source address
},
...
},
...
}
Examples:
> bitcoin-cli getrawaddrman
> curl --user myusername --data-binary '{"jsonrpc": "1.0", "id": "curltest", "method": "getrawaddrman", "params": []}' -H 'content-type: text/plain;' http://127.0.0.1:8332/
```
ACKs for top commit:
willcl-ark:
reACK 352d5eb2a9
amitiuttarwar:
reACK 352d5eb2a9
stratospher:
reACK 352d5eb.
achow101:
ACK 352d5eb2a9
Tree-SHA512: cc462666b5c709617c66b0e3e9a17c4c81e9e295f91bdd9572492d1cb6466fc9b6d48ee805ebe82f9f16010798370effe5c8f4db15065b8c7c0d8637675d615e
7df4508369 test: improve sock_tests/move_assignment (Vasil Dimov)
5086a99b84 net: remove Sock default constructor, it's not necessary (Vasil Dimov)
7829272f78 net: remove now unnecessary Sock::Get() (Vasil Dimov)
944b21b70a net: don't check if the socket is valid in ConnectSocketDirectly() (Vasil Dimov)
aeac68d036 net: don't check if the socket is valid in GetBindAddress() (Vasil Dimov)
5ac1a51ee5 i2p: avoid using Sock::Get() for checking for a valid socket (Vasil Dimov)
Pull request description:
_This is a piece of #21878, chopped off to ease review._
Peeking at the underlying socket file descriptor of `Sock` and checkig if it is `INVALID_SOCKET` is bad encapsulation and stands in the way of testing/mocking/fuzzing.
Instead use an empty `unique_ptr` to denote that there is no valid socket where appropriate or outright remove such checks where they are not necessary.
The default constructor `Sock::Sock()` is unnecessary now after recent changes, thus remove it.
ACKs for top commit:
ajtowns:
ACK 7df4508369
jonatack:
ACK 7df4508369
Tree-SHA512: 9742aeeeabe8690530bf74caa6ba296787028c52f4a3342afd193b05dbbb1f6645935c33ba0a5230199a09af01c666bd3c7fb16b48692a0d185356ea59a8ddbf
bae209e387 gui: macOS, make appMenuBar part of the main app window (furszy)
e14cc8fc69 gui: macOS, do not process dock icon actions during shutdown (furszy)
Pull request description:
As the 'QMenuBar' is created without a parent window in MacOS, the app crashes when the user presses the shutdown button and, right after it, triggers any action in the menu bar.
This happens because the QMenuBar is manually deleted in the BitcoinGUI destructor but the events attached to it children actions are not disconnected, so QActions events such us the 'QMenu::aboutToShow' could try to access null pointers.
Instead of guarding every single QAction pointer inside the QMenu::aboutToShow slot, or manually disconnecting all registered events in the destructor, we can check if a shutdown was requested and discard the event.
The 'node' field is a ref whose memory is held by the main application class, so it is safe to use here. Events are disconnected prior destructing the main application object.
Furthermore, the 'MacDockIconHandler::dockIconClicked' signal can make the app crash during shutdown for the very same reason. The 'show()' call triggers the 'QApplication::focusWindowChanged' event, which is connected to the 'minimize_action' QAction, which is also part of the app menu bar, which could no longer exist.
Another cause of crashes stems from the shortcuts provided by the `appMenuBar` submenus during shutdown. For instance, executing actions like opening the information dialog (command + I) or the console dialog (command + T) lead to access null pointers. The second commit addresses and resolves these issues.
Basically, in the present setup, we create a parentless `appMenuBar` whose submenus `QActions` are connected to `qApp` events (the app's global instance). However, at the `BitcoinGUI` destructor, we manually destruct this object without properly disconnecting the events. This leaves `qApp` events, such as `focusWindowChanged`, tied to submenus' `QAction` pointers, which causes the application to crash when it attempts to access them.
Important Note:
This happened to me few times. The worst consequence was an inconsistent chain state during IBD. Which triggered a full "replay blocks" process on the next startup. Which was painfully slow.
ACKs for top commit:
RandyMcMillan:
utACK bae209e
hebasto:
ACK bae209e387.
Tree-SHA512: 432e19c5f7e02c3165b7e7bd7f96f2a902bae5b5e439c2594db1c69d74ab6e0d4509d90f02db8c076f616e567e6a07492ede416ef651b5f749637398291b92fd
It is possible that the client disconnects before the request is
handled. In those cases, evhttp_request_set_on_complete_cb is never
called, which means that on shutdown the server we'll keep waiting
endlessly.
By adding evhttp_connection_set_closecb, libevent automatically
cleans up those dead connections at latest when we shutdown, and
depending on the libevent version already at the moment of remote
client disconnect. In both cases, the bug is fixed.
Introduces and uses a HTTPRequestTracker class to keep track of
how many HTTP requests are currently active, so we don't stop the
server before they're all handled.
This has two purposes:
1. In a next commit, allows us to untrack all requests associated
with a connection without running into lifetime issues of the
connection living longer than the request
(see https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/27909#discussion_r1265614783)
2. Improve encapsulation by making the mutex and cv internal members,
and exposing just the WaitUntilEmpty() method that can be safely
used.
When an outbound v2 connection is disconnected without receiving anything, but at
least 24 bytes of our pubkey were sent out (enough to constitute an invalid v1
header), add them to a queue of reconnections to be tried.
The reconnections are in a queue rather than performed immediately, because we should
not block the socket handler thread with connection creation (a blocking operation
that can take multiple seconds).