b3efb48673 protocol: make message types constexpr (Vasil Dimov)
2fa9de06c2 net: make the list of known message types a compile time constant (Vasil Dimov)
Pull request description:
Turn the `std::vector` to `std::array` because it is cheaper and allows us to have the number of the messages as a compile time constant: `ALL_NET_MESSAGE_TYPES.size()` which can be used in future code to build other `std::array`s with that size.
---
This change is part of https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/29418 but it makes sense on its own and would be good to have it, regardless of the fate of https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/29418. Also, if this is merged, that would reduce the size of https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/29418, thus the current standalone PR.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK b3efb48673
jonatack:
ACK b3efb48673
maflcko:
utACK b3efb48673🎊
willcl-ark:
ACK b3efb48673
Tree-SHA512: 6d3860c138c64514ebab13d97ea67893e2d346dfac30a48c3d9bc769a1970407375ea4170afdb522411ced306a14a9af4eede99e964d1fb1ea3efff5d5eb57af
8d491ae9ec serialization: Add ParamsStream GetStream() method (Ryan Ofsky)
951203bcc4 net: Simplify ParamsStream usage (Ryan Ofsky)
e6794e475c serialization: Accept multiple parameters in ParamsStream constructor (Ryan Ofsky)
cb28849a88 serialization: Reverse ParamsStream constructor order (Ryan Ofsky)
83436d14f0 serialization: Drop unnecessary ParamsStream references (Ryan Ofsky)
84502b755b serialization: Drop references to GetVersion/GetType (Ryan Ofsky)
f3a2b52376 serialization: Support for multiple parameters (Ryan Ofsky)
Pull request description:
Currently it is only possible to attach one serialization parameter to a stream at a time. For example, it is not possible to set a parameter controlling the transaction format and a parameter controlling the address format at the same time because one parameter will override the other.
This limitation is inconvenient for multiprocess code since it is not possible to create just one type of stream and serialize any object to it. Instead it is necessary to create different streams for different object types, which requires extra boilerplate and makes using the new parameter fields a lot more awkward than the older version and type fields.
Fix this problem by allowing an unlimited number of serialization stream parameters to be set, and allowing them to be requested by type. Later parameters will still override earlier parameters, but only if they have the same type.
For an example of different ways multiple parameters can be set, see the new [`with_params_multi`](40f505583f/src/test/serialize_tests.cpp (L394-L410)) unit test.
This change requires replacing the `stream.GetParams()` method with a `stream.GetParams<T>()` method in order for serialization code to retrieve the desired parameters. The change is more verbose, but probably a good thing for readability because previously it could be difficult to know what type the `GetParams()` method would return, and now it is more obvious.
---
This PR is part of the [process separation project](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/28722).
ACKs for top commit:
maflcko:
ACK 8d491ae9ec🔵
sipa:
utACK 8d491ae9ec
TheCharlatan:
ACK 8d491ae9ec
Tree-SHA512: 40b7041ee01c0372b1f86f7fd6f3b6af56ef24a6383f91ffcedd04d388e63407006457bf7ed056b0e37b4dec9ffd5ca006cb8192e488ea2c64678567e38d4647
Turn the `std::vector` to `std::array` because it is cheaper and
allows us to have the number of the messages as a compile time
constant: `ALL_NET_MESSAGE_TYPES.size()` which can be used in
future code to build other `std::array`s with that size.
No behavior change. Just an intermediate refactoring.
By relocating the peer desirable services flags into the peer
manager, we allow the connections acceptance process to handle
post-IBD potential stalling scenarios.
In the follow-up commit(s), the desirable service flags will be
dynamically adjusted to detect post-IBD stalling scenarios (such
as a +48-hour inactive node that must prefer full node connections
instead of limited peer connections because they cannot provide
historical blocks). Additionally, this encapsulation enable us
to customize the connections decision-making process based on
new user's configurations in the future.
This commit makes a minimal change to the ParamsStream class to let it retrieve
multiple parameters. Followup commits after this commit clean up code using
ParamsStream and make it easier to set multiple parameters.
Currently it is only possible to attach one serialization parameter to a stream
at a time. For example, it is not possible to set a parameter controlling the
transaction format and a parameter controlling the address format at the same
time because one parameter will override the other.
This limitation is inconvenient for multiprocess code since it is not possible
to create just one type of stream and serialize any object to it. Instead it is
necessary to create different streams for different object types, which
requires extra boilerplate and makes using the new parameter fields a lot more
awkward than the older version and type fields.
Fix this problem by allowing an unlimited number of serialization stream
parameters to be set, and allowing them to be requested by type. Later
parameters will still override earlier parameters, but only if they have the
same type.
This change requires replacing the stream.GetParams() method with a
stream.GetParams<T>() method in order for serialization code to retrieve the
desired parameters. This change is more verbose, but probably a good thing for
readability because previously it could be difficult to know what type the
GetParams() method would return, and now it is more obvious.
The protocol.h file contains many non-consensus related definitions and
should thus not be part of the libbitcoinkernel. This commit makes
protocol.h no longer a required include for users of the
libbitcoinkernel.
This commit is part of the libbitcoinkernel project, namely its stage 1
step 3: Decouple most non-consensus headers from libbitcoinkernel.
Co-Authored-By: Cory Fields <cory-nospam-@coryfields.com>
This also cleans up the addrman (de)serialization code paths to only
allow `Disk` serialization. Some unit tests previously forced a
`Network` serialization, which does not make sense, because Bitcoin Core
in production will always `Disk` serialize.
This cleanup idea was suggested by Pieter Wuille and implemented by Anthony
Towns.
Co-authored-by: Pieter Wuille <pieter@wuille.net>
Co-authored-by: Anthony Towns <aj@erisian.com.au>
If we're connecting to the peer which might support
transaction reconciliation, we announce we want to reconcile
with them.
We store the reconciliation salt so that when the peer
responds with their salt, we are able to compute the
full reconciliation salt.
This behavior is enabled with a CLI flag.
Assigning TIME_INIT to nTime was needed to fully re-initialize a dirty
object where the deserialization might skip nTime.
See https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/19020/files#r427620111
Now that the without-nTime logic is removed in commit
dbcb5742c4 and commit
e08770bed1, the logic here can be removed
as well.
Also, remove confusing and redundant preprocessor code.
Also, remove no longer needed version.h include, which was needed for
INIT_PROTO_VERSION.
Historically, the VERSION message contains an "addrMe" and an "addrYou". As
these are sent before version negotiation is complete, the protocol version is
INIT_PROTO_VERSION (209), and in that protocol, CAddress is serialized without
nTime.
This is in fact the only situation left where a CAddress is (de)serialized
without nTime. As it's such a simple structure (CService for ip/port + uint64_t
for nServices), just inline that structure in the few places where it occurs,
and remove the logic for dealing with missing nTime from CAddress.
Before this commit, CAddress disk serialization was messy. It stored
CLIENT_VERSION in the first 4 bytes, optionally OR'ed with ADDRV2_FORMAT.
- All bits except ADDRV2_FORMAT were ignored, making it hard to use for actual
future format changes.
- ADDRV2_FORMAT determines whether or not nServices is serialized in LE64
format or in CompactSize format.
- Whether or not the embedded CService is serialized in V1 or V2 format is
determined by the stream's version having ADDRV2_FORMAT (as opposed to the
nServices encoding, which is determined by the disk version).
To improve the situation, this commit introduces the following disk
serialization format, compatible with earlier versions, but better defined for
future changes:
- The first 4 bytes store a format version number. Its low 19 bits are ignored
(as it historically stored the CLIENT_VERSION), but its high 13 bits specify
the serialization exactly:
- 0x00000000: LE64 encoding for nServices, V1 encoding for CService
- 0x20000000: CompactSize encoding for nServices, V2 encoding for CService
- Any other value triggers an unsupported format error on deserialization,
and can be used for future format changes.
- The ADDRV2_FORMAT flag in the stream's version does not impact the actual
serialization format; it only determines whether V2 encoding is permitted;
whether it's actually enabled depends solely on the disk version number.
Operationally the changes to the deserializer are:
- Failure when the stored format version number is unexpected.
- The embedded CService's format is determined by the stored format version
number rather than the stream's version number.
These do no introduce incompatibilities, as no code versions exist that write
any value other than 0 or 0x20000000 in the top 13 bits, and no code paths
where the stream's version differs from the stored version.
Introduce a new message `sendaddrv2` to signal support for ADDRv2.
Send the new message immediately after sending the `VERACK` message.
Add support for receiving and parsing ADDRv2 messages.
Send ADDRv2 messages (instead of ADDR) to a peer if he has
advertised support for it.
Co-authored-by: Carl Dong <contact@carldong.me>
Change the serialization of `CAddrMan` to serialize its addresses
in ADDRv2/BIP155 format by default. Introduce a new `CAddrMan` format
version (3).
Add support for ADDRv2 format in `CAddress` (un)serialization.
Co-authored-by: Carl Dong <contact@carldong.me>
This moves header size and netmagic checking out of net_processing and
into net. This check now runs in ReadHeader, so that net can exit early
out of receiving bytes from the peer. IsValid is now slimmed down, so
it no longer needs a MessageStartChars& parameter.
Additionally this removes the rest of the m_valid_* members from
CNetMessage.
This commit removes the single-parameter contructor of CMessageHeader
and replaces it with a default constructor.
The single parameter contructor isn't used anywhere except for tests.
There is no reason to initialize a CMessageHeader with a particular
messagestart. This messagestart should always be replaced when
deserializing an actual message header so that we can run checks on it.
The default constructor initializes it to zero, just like the command
and checksum.
This also removes a parameter of a V1TransportDeserializer constructor,
as it was only used for this purpose.
fixes issue #19678 UBSan implicit-integer-sign-change
Credit to Eugene (Crypt-iQ) for finding and reporting the issue
and to Vasil Dimov (vasild) for the original suggestion
4792cad88c doc: comment out and add annotation to unused MSG_FILTERED_WITNESS_BLOCK (Adam Jonas)
Pull request description:
Commenting out and adding a note to unused `MSG_FILTERED_WITNESS_BLOCK` [defined in BIP144](https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0144.mediawiki#relay).
There was an attempt to make use of this in https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/10350, but it was closed due to lack of support. (h/t sdaftuar for pointing to the PR and jnewbery for the idea)
ACKs for top commit:
jnewbery:
Obvious ACK 4792cad88c
theStack:
ACK 4792cad88c📜
MarcoFalke:
cr ACK 4792cad88c good to keep it around in a comment to avoid accidental future re-assignment
practicalswift:
ACK 4792cad88c
Tree-SHA512: 22327ddded643ae50fdb529e4529a9b464f74e90620d0d2079a11070eaa8afe8363f6e14cca52f3bec2c9f87ee13e318edc6c5193761c94b8ae77be353a8da1f
767073fb96 Shrink CAddress from 48 to 40 bytes on x64 (Vasil Dimov)
Pull request description:
`CAddress` inherits `CService` which is 28 bytes (on 64 bit machines).
`CAddress` then adds two member variables - one that requires 4 byte
alignment (`nTime`) and one that requires 8 byte alignment
(`nServices`).
Declare the smaller one first so that it fits in bytes 29..32.
On 32 bit machines this change has no effect and `CAddress` remains 40
bytes.
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
ACK 767073fb96
theStack:
ACK 767073fb96
Tree-SHA512: 73d6a4fcfa2687b4076950801871252e369510ecf09f820576dbeca9ee3ee94d14672e7d5596cb45fedd9e4b973dd0716a2ea3f13fc3058b4b697d036a7c9db0
f5c003d3ea [test] Add test for NODE_COMPACT_FILTER. (Jim Posen)
132b30d9c8 [net] Signal NODE_COMPACT_FILTERS if we're serving compact filters. (Jim Posen)
b3fbc94d4f Apply cfilters review fixups (John Newbery)
Pull request description:
If -peerblockfilters is configured, signal the `NODE_COMPACT_FILTERS` service bit to indicate that we are able to serve compact block filters, headers and checkpoints.
ACKs for top commit:
MarcoFalke:
re-review and Concept ACK f5c003d3ea
fjahr:
Code review ACK f5c003d3ea
clarkmoody:
Concept ACK f5c003d3ea
ariard:
Concept and Code Review ACK f5c003d
jonatack:
ACK f5c003d3e
Tree-SHA512: 34d1c153530a0e55d09046fe548c9dc37344b5d6d50e00af1b4e1de1e7b49de770fca8471346a17c151de9fe164776296bb3dd5af331977f0c3ef1e6fc906f85
`CAddress` inherits `CService` which is 28 bytes (on 64 bit machines).
`CAddress` then adds two member variables - one that requires 4 byte
alignment (`nTime`) and one that requires 8 byte alignment
(`nServices`).
Declare the smaller one first so that it fits in bytes 29..32.
On 32 bit machines this change has no effect and `CAddress` remains 40
bytes.
This adds a field to CNodeState that tracks whether to relay transactions with
that peer via wtxid, instead of txid. As of this commit the field will always
be false, but in a later commit we will add a way to negotiate turning this on
via p2p messages exchanged with the peer.
If -peerblockfilters is configured, signal the NODE_COMPACT_FILTERS service
bit to indicate that we are able to serve compact block filters, headers
and checkpoints.