8789dc8f31 doc: Add note to getblockfrompeer on missing undo data (Fabian Jahr)
4a1975008b rpc: Make pruneheight also reflect undo data presence (Fabian Jahr)
96b4facc91 refactor, blockstorage: Generalize GetFirstStoredBlock (Fabian Jahr)
Pull request description:
The function `GetFirstStoredBlock()` helps us find the first block for which we have data. So far this function only looked for a block with `BLOCK_HAVE_DATA`. However, this doesn't mean that we also have the undo data of that block, and undo data might be required for what a user would like to do with those blocks. One example of how this might happen is if some blocks were fetched using the `getblockfrompeer` RPC. Blocks fetched from a peer will have data but no undo data.
The first commit here allows `GetFirstStoredBlock()` to check for undo data as well by passing a parameter. This alone is useful for #29553 and I would use it there.
In the second commit I am applying the undo check to the RPCs that report `pruneheight` to the user. I find this much more intuitive because I think the user expects to be able to do all operations on blocks up until the `pruneheight` but that is not the case if undo data is missing. I personally ran into this once before and now again when testing for assumeutxo when I had used `getblockfrompeer`. The following commit adds test coverage for this change of behavior.
The last commit adds a note in the docs of `getblockfrompeer` that undo data will not be available.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK 8789dc8f31
furszy:
Code review ACK 8789dc8f31.
stickies-v:
ACK 8789dc8f31
Tree-SHA512: 90ae8bdd07a496ade579aa25240609c61c9ed173ad38d30533f6c631fe674e5a41727478ade69ca4b71a571ad94c9da4b33ebba6b5d8821109313c2de3bdfb3d
GetFirstStoredBlock is generalized to check for any data status with a
status mask that needs to be passed as a parameter. To reflect this the
function is also renamed to GetFirstBlock.
Co-authored-by: stickies-v <stickies-v@protonmail.com>
There are no changes to behavior. Changes in this commit are all additions, and
are easiest to review using "git diff -U0 --word-diff-regex=." options.
Motivation for this change is to keep util functions with really generic names
like "Split" and "Join" out of the global namespace so it is easier to see
where these functions are defined, and so they don't interfere with function
overloading, especially since the util library is a dependency of the kernel
library and intended to be used with external code.
All functions assume that the pointer is never null, so pass by
reference, to avoid accidental segfaults at runtime, or at least make
them more obvious.
Also, remove unused c-style casts in touched lines.
Also, add CHECK_NONFATAL checks, to turn segfault crashes into an
recoverable runtime error with debug information.
-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
s() { contrib/devtools/copyright_header.py insert "$1"; }
s build_msvc/bitcoin_config.h
s build_msvc/msvc-autogen.py
s build_msvc/testconsensus/testconsensus.cpp
s contrib/devtools/circular-dependencies.py
s contrib/devtools/gen-manpages.sh
s contrib/filter-lcov.py
s contrib/gitian-build.py
s contrib/install_db4.sh
s src/crypto/sha256_avx2.cpp
s src/crypto/sha256_sse41.cpp
s src/fs.cpp
s src/qt/test/addressbooktests.cpp
s src/qt/test/addressbooktests.h
s src/qt/test/util.cpp
s src/qt/test/util.h
s src/qt/test/wallettests.cpp
s src/qt/test/wallettests.h
s src/test/blockchain_tests.cpp
s test/functional/combine_logs.py
s test/lint/lint-locale-dependence.sh
sed -i '1G' test/lint/lint-shebang.sh
s test/lint/lint-shebang.sh
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
This removes the need to include rpc/blockchain.cpp in order to put
GetDifficulty under test. GetDifficulty was called in two ways:
* with a guaranteed non-null blockindex
* with no argument
Change the latter case to be provided chainActive.Tip() explicitly.
blockchain.cpp has low unit test coverage. This commit is intended
to start improving its code coverage to reasonable levels. One or more
follow up commits will complete the task that this commit is starting
(though the usefulness of this commit is not dependent upon later
commits).
Note that these tests were not written based upon a specification of how
GetDifficulty *should* work, but rather how it actually *does* work. As
a result, if there are any bugs in the current GetDifficulty
implementation, these unit tests serve to lock them in rather than
expose them.
-- Why has blockchain.cpp been modified if this is a unit testing change?
Since the existing GetDifficulty function relies on a global variable,
chainActive, it was not suitable for unit testing purposes. Both the
existing GetDifficulty function and the unit tests now call through to
a new, more modular version of GetDifficulty that can work on any chain,
not just chainActive.
-- Why does blockchain_tests.cpp directly include blockchain.cpp instead
of blockchain.h?
While the new GetDifficulty function's signature is arguably better than
the old one's, it still isn't great, and doesn't seem to warrant inclusion
as part of the blockchain.h API, especially since only test code is
directly using it. If a better way of exposing the new GetDifficulty
function to unit tests exists, please mention it and the commit will be
updated accordingly.
-- Why is the test fixture named blockchain_difficulty_tests rather than
blockchain_tests?
The Bitcoin Core policy for naming unit test files is to match the the
file under test ("blockchain" becomes "blockchain_tests"). While this
commit complies with that, blockchain.cpp is a massive file, such that
having all of the unit tests in one file will tend towards disorder.
Since there will be a lot more tests added to this file, the intention
is to divide up different types of tests into different test fixtures
within the same file.