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.
Makes the test more minimal. We're just trying to test that our package
sanitization logic is correct. Now that this code lives in its own
function (rather than inside of AcceptMultipleTransactions), there's no
need to call ProcessNewPackage to test this.