Keep mentions of v3 in debug strings to help people who might not know
that TRUC is applied when version=3.
Also keep variable names in tests, as it is less verbose to keep v3 and v2.
f1478c0545 mempool: move LoadMempool/DumpMempool to node (Cory Fields)
6d242ff1e9 kernel: remove mempool_persist.cpp (Cory Fields)
Pull request description:
DumpMempool/LoadMempool are not necessary for the kernel.
Noticed while working on instantiated logging.
I suppose these could have been left in on purpose, but I'm assuming it was probably just an oversight.
ACKs for top commit:
TheCharlatan:
Re-ACK f1478c0545
glozow:
ACK f1478c0545
stickies-v:
ACK f1478c0545
Tree-SHA512: 5825da0cf2e67470524eb6ebe397eb90755a368469a25f184df99ab935b3eb6d89eb802b41a6c3661e869bba3bbfa8ba9d95281bc75ebbf790ec5d9d1f79c66f
There are only a few call sites of these throughout the codebase, so
move the functionality into FastRandomContext, and rewrite all call sites.
This requires the callers to explicit construct FastRandomContext objects,
which do add to the verbosity, but also make potentially apparent locations
where the code can be improved by reusing a FastRandomContext object (see
further commit).
The existing code uses GetRand(nMax), with a default value for nMax, where nMax is the
range of values (not the maximum!) that the output is allowed to take. This will always
miss the last possible value (e.g. GetRand<uint32_t>() will never return 0xffffffff).
Fix this, by moving the functionality largely in RandomMixin, and also adding a
separate RandomMixin::rand function, which returns a value in the entire (non-negative)
range of an integer.
The existing code provides two randomness mechanisms for test purposes:
- g_insecure_rand_ctx (with its wrappers InsecureRand*), which during tests is
initialized using either zeros (SeedRand::ZEROS), or using environment-provided
randomness (SeedRand::SEED).
- g_mock_deterministic_tests, which controls some (but not all) of the normal
randomness output if set, but then makes it extremely predictable (identical
output repeatedly).
Replace this with a single mechanism, which retains the SeedRand modes to control
all randomness. There is a new internal deterministic PRNG inside the random
module, which is used in GetRandBytes() when in test mode, and which is also used
to initialize g_insecure_rand_ctx. This means that during tests, all random numbers
are made deterministic. There is one exception, GetStrongRandBytes(), which even
in test mode still uses the normal PRNG state.
This probably opens the door to removing a lot of the ad-hoc "deterministic" mode
functions littered through the codebase (by simply running relevant tests in
SeedRand::ZEROS mode), but this isn't done yet.
Convert XoRoShiRo128PlusPlus into a full RandomMixin-based RNG class,
providing all utility functionality that FastRandomContext has. In doing so,
it is renamed to InsecureRandomContext, highlighting its non-cryptographic
nature.
To do this, a fillrand fallback is added to RandomMixin (where it is used by
InsecureRandomContext), but FastRandomContext still uses its own fillrand.
In many cases, it is known at compile time how many bits are requested from
randbits. Provide a variant of randbits that accepts this number as a template,
to make sure the compiler can make use of this knowledge. This is used immediately
in rand32() and randbool(), and a few further call sites.
The previous randbits code would, when requesting more randomness than available
in its random bits buffer, discard the remaining entropy and generate new.
Benchmarks show that it's usually better to first consume the existing randomness
and only then generate new ones. This adds some complexity to randbits, but it
doesn't weigh up against the reduced need to generate more randomness.
55eea003af test: Make blockencodings_tests deterministic (AngusP)
4c99301220 test: Add ReceiveWithExtraTransactions Compact Block receive test. (AngusP)
4621e7cc8f test: refactor: Rename extra_txn to const empty_extra_txn as it is empty in all test cases (AngusP)
Pull request description:
This test uses the `extra_txn` (`vExtraTxnForCompact`) vector of optional orphan/conflicted/etc. transactions to provide transactions to a PartiallyDownloadedBlock that are not otherwise present in the mempool, and check that they are used.
This also covers a former nullptr deref bug that was fixed in #29752 (bf031a517c) where the `extra_txn` vec/circular-buffer was null-initialized and not yet filled when dereferenced in `PartiallyDownloadedBlock::InitData`.
ACKs for top commit:
marcofleon:
Code review ACK 55eea003af. I ran the `blockencodings` unit test and no issues with the new test case.
dergoegge:
Code review ACK 55eea003af
glozow:
ACK 55eea003af
Tree-SHA512: d7909c212bb069e1f6184b26390a5000dcc5f2b18e49b86cceccb9f1ec4f874dd43bc9bc92abd4207c71dd78112ba58400042c230c42e93afe55ba51b943262c
4d81b4de33 fuzz: FuzzedSock::Recv() don't lose bytes from MSG_PEEK read (Vasil Dimov)
b51d75ea97 fuzz: simplify FuzzedSock::m_peek_data (Vasil Dimov)
Pull request description:
Problem:
If `FuzzedSock::Recv(N, MSG_PEEK)` is called then `N` bytes would be
retrieved from the fuzz provider, saved in `m_peek_data` and returned
to the caller (ok).
If after this `FuzzedSock::Recv(M, 0)` is called where `M < N`
then the first `M` bytes from `m_peek_data` would be returned
to the caller (ok), but the remaining `N - M` bytes in `m_peek_data`
would be discarded/lost (not ok). They must be returned by a subsequent
`Recv()`.
To resolve this, only remove the head `N` bytes from `m_peek_data`.
---
This is a followup to https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/30211, more specifically:
https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/30211#discussion_r1633199919https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/30211#discussion_r1633216366
ACKs for top commit:
marcofleon:
ACK 4d81b4de33. Tested this with the I2P fuzz target and there's no loss in coverage. I think overall this is an improvement in the robustness of `Recv` in `FuzzedSock`.
dergoegge:
Code review ACK 4d81b4de33
brunoerg:
utACK 4d81b4de33
Tree-SHA512: 73b5cb396784652447874998850e45899e8cba49dcd2cc96b2d1f63be78e48201ab88a76cf1c3cb880abac57af07f2c65d673a1021ee1a577d0496c3a4b0c5dd
a9716c53f0 rpc: call IsInitialBlockDownload via miner interface (Sjors Provoost)
dda0b0834f rpc: minize getTipHash() calls in gbt (Sjors Provoost)
7b4d3249ce rpc: call processNewBlock via miner interface (Sjors Provoost)
9e228351e7 rpc: getTransactionsUpdated via miner interface (Sjors Provoost)
64ebb0f971 Always pass options to BlockAssembler constructor (Sjors Provoost)
4bf2e361da rpc: call CreateNewBlock via miner interface (Sjors Provoost)
404b01c436 rpc: getblocktemplate getTipHash() via Miner interface (Sjors Provoost)
d8a3496b5a rpc: call TestBlockValidity via miner interface (Sjors Provoost)
8ecb681678 Introduce Mining interface (Sjors Provoost)
Pull request description:
Introduce a `Mining` interface for the `getblocktemplate`, `generateblock` and other mining RPCs to use now, and for Stratum v2 to use later.
Suggested here: https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/29346#issuecomment-2108528652
The selection of methods added to the interface is mostly based on what the Template Provider in #29432 uses. It could be expanded further so that `rpc/mining.cpp` no longer needs `EnsureMemPool` and `EnsureChainman`.
This PR should be a pure refactor.
ACKs for top commit:
tdb3:
re ACK a9716c53f0
itornaza:
Code review and std-tests ACK a9716c53f0
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK a9716c53f0 with one minor suggestion in case you update. Only changes since last review were other small changes to the interface.
Tree-SHA512: cf97f87d6e9ed89da3835a0730da3b24a7b14c8605ea221149103a5915e79598cf082a95f2bc88e33f1c450e3d4aad88aed1163a29195acca88bcace055af724
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>
1245d1388b netbase: extend CreateSock() to support creating arbitrary sockets (Vasil Dimov)
Pull request description:
Allow the callers of `CreateSock()` to pass all 3 arguments to the `socket(2)` syscall. This makes it possible to create sockets of any domain/type/protocol. In addition to extending arguments, some extra safety checks were put in place.
The need for this came up during the discussion in https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/30043#discussion_r1618837102
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK 1245d1388b
tdb3:
re ACK 1245d1388b
theStack:
re-ACK 1245d1388b
Tree-SHA512: cc86b56121293ac98959aed0ed77812d20702ed7029b5a043586f46e74295779c5354bb0d5f9e80be6c29e535df980d34c1dbf609064fb7ea3e5ca0f0ed54d6b
6eecba475e net_processing: make MaybePunishNodeFor{Block,Tx} return void (Pieter Wuille)
ae60d485da net_processing: remove Misbehavior score and increments (Pieter Wuille)
6457c31197 net_processing: make all Misbehaving increments = 100 (Pieter Wuille)
5120ab1478 net_processing: drop 8 headers threshold for incoming BIP130 (Pieter Wuille)
944c54290d net_processing: drop Misbehavior for unconnecting headers (Pieter Wuille)
9f66ac7cf1 net_processing: do not treat non-connecting headers as response (Pieter Wuille)
Pull request description:
So far, discouragement of peers triggers when their misbehavior score exceeds 100 points. Most types of misbehavior increment the score by 100, triggering immediate discouragement, but some types do not. This PR makes all increments equal to either 100 (meaning any misbehavior will immediately cause disconnection and discouragement) or 0 (making the behavior effectively unconditionally allowed), and then removes the logic for score accumulation.
This simplifies the code a bit, but also makes protocol expectations clearer: if a peer misbehaves, they get disconnected. There is no good reason why certain types of protocol violations should be permitted 4 times (howmuch=20) or 9 times (howmuch=10), while many others are never allowed. Furthermore, the distinction between these looks arbitrary.
The specific types of misbehavior that are changed to 100 are:
* Sending us a `block` which does not connect to our header tree (which necessarily must have been unsollicited). [used to be score 10]
* Sending us a `headers` with a non-continuous headers sequence. [used to be score 20]
* Sending us more than 1000 addresses in a single `addr` or `addrv2` message [used to be score 20]
* Sending us more than 50000 invs in a single `inv` message [used to be score 20]
* Sending us more than 2000 headers in a single `headers` message [used to be score 20]
The specific types of misbehavior that are changed to 0 are:
* Sending us 10 (*) separate BIP130 headers announcements that do not connect to our block tree [used to be score 20]
* Sending us more than 8 headers in a single `headers` message (which thus does not get treated as a BIP130 announcement) that does not connect to our block tree. [used to be score 10]
I believe that none of these behaviors are unavoidable, except for the one marked (*) which can in theory happen still due to interaction between BIP130 and variations in system clocks (the max 2 hour in the future rule). This one has been removed entirely. In order to remove the impact of the bug it was designed to deal with, without relying on misbehavior, a separate improvement is included that makes `getheaders`-tracking more accurate.
In another unrelated improvement, this also gets rid of the 8 header limit heuristic to determine whether an incoming non-connecting `headers` is a potential BIP130 announcement, as this rule is no longer needed to prevent spurious Misbehavior. Instead, any non-connecting `headers` is now treated as a potential announcement.
ACKs for top commit:
sr-gi:
ACK [6eecba4](6eecba475e)
achow101:
ACK 6eecba475e
mzumsande:
Code Review ACK 6eecba475e
glozow:
light code review / concept ACK 6eecba475e
Tree-SHA512: e11e8a652c4ec048d8961086110a3594feefbb821e13f45c14ef81016377be0db44b5311751ef635d6e026def1960aff33f644e78ece11cfb54f2b7daa96f946
refactor: CBlockHeaderAndShortTxIDs constructor now always takes an explicit nonce.
test: Make blockencodings_tests deterministic using fixed seed providing deterministic
CBlockHeaderAndShortTxID nonces and dummy transaction IDs.
Fixes very rare flaky test failures, where the ShortIDs of test transactions collide, leading to
`READ_STATUS_FAILED` from PartiallyDownloadedBlock::InitData and/or `IsTxAvailable` giving `false`
when the transaction should actually be available.
* Use a new `FastRandomContext` with a fixed seed in each test, to ensure 'random' uint256s
used as fake prevouts are deterministic, so in-turn test txids and short IDs are deterministic
and don't collide causing very rare but flaky test failures.
* Add new test-only/internal initializer for `CBlockHeaderAndShortTxIDs` that takes a specified
nonce to further ensure determinism and avoid rare but undesireable short ID collisions.
In a test context this nonce is set to a fixed known-good value. Normally it is random, as
previously.
Flaky test failures can be reproduced with:
```patch
diff --git a/src/blockencodings.cpp b/src/blockencodings.cpp
index 695e8d806a..64d635a97a 100644
--- a/src/blockencodings.cpp
+++ b/src/blockencodings.cpp
@@ -44,7 +44,8 @@ void CBlockHeaderAndShortTxIDs::FillShortTxIDSelector() const {
uint64_t CBlockHeaderAndShortTxIDs::GetShortID(const Wtxid& wtxid) const {
static_assert(SHORTTXIDS_LENGTH == 6, "shorttxids calculation assumes 6-byte shorttxids");
- return SipHashUint256(shorttxidk0, shorttxidk1, wtxid) & 0xffffffffffffL;
+ // return SipHashUint256(shorttxidk0, shorttxidk1, wtxid) & 0xffffffffffffL;
+ return SipHashUint256(shorttxidk0, shorttxidk1, wtxid) & 0x0f;
}
```
to increase the likelihood of a short ID collision; and running
```shell
set -e;
n=0;
while (( n++ < 5000 )); do
src/test/test_bitcoin --run_test=blockencodings_tests;
done
```
This makes the options argument for BlockAssembler constructor mandatory,
dropping implicit use of ArgsManager. The caller i.e. the Mining
interface implementation now handles this.
In a future Stratum v2 change the Options object needs to be
mofified after arguments have been processed. Specifically
the pool communicates how many extra bytes it needs for
its own outputs (payouts, extra commitments, etc). This will need
to be substracted from what the user set as -blockmaxweight.
Such a change can be implemented in createNewBlock, after
ApplyArgsManOptions.
The fuzz target is generating a large amount of
transactions, but the core of the logic is
ConsumeTxMemPoolEntry making the mempool
entries for adding to the mempool. Since
ConsumeTxMemPoolEntry generates its own transaction
"vsize", we can improve efficiency of the target
by explicitly creating very small transactions,
reducing the hashing and memory burden.
94ed4fbf8e Add release note for size 2 package rbf (Greg Sanders)
afd52d8e63 doc: update package RBF comment (Greg Sanders)
6e3c4394cf mempool: Improve logging of replaced transactions (Greg Sanders)
d3466e4cc5 CheckPackageMempoolAcceptResult: Check package rbf invariants (Greg Sanders)
316d7b63c9 Fuzz: pass mempool to CheckPackageMempoolAcceptResult (Greg Sanders)
4d15bcf448 [test] package rbf (glozow)
dc21f61c72 [policy] package rbf (Suhas Daftuar)
5da3967815 PackageV3Checks: Relax assumptions (Greg Sanders)
Pull request description:
Allows any 2 transaction package with no in-mempool ancestors to do package RBF when directly conflicting with other mempool clusters of size two or less.
Proposed validation steps:
1) If the transaction package is of size 1, legacy rbf rules apply.
2) Otherwise the transaction package consists of a (parent, child) pair with no other in-mempool ancestors (or descendants, obviously), so it is also going to create a cluster of size 2. If larger, fail.
3) The package rbf may not evict more than 100 transactions from the mempool(bip125 rule 5)
4) The package is a single chunk
5) Every directly conflicted mempool transaction is connected to at most 1 other in-mempool transaction (ie the cluster size of the conflict is at most 2).
6) Diagram check: We ensure that the replacement is strictly superior, improving the mempool
7) The total fee of the package, minus the total fee of what is being evicted, is at least the minrelayfee * size of the package (equivalent to bip125 rule 3 and 4)
Post-cluster mempool this will likely be expanded to general package rbf, but this is what we can safely support today.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK 94ed4fbf8e
glozow:
reACK 94ed4fbf8e via range-diff
ismaelsadeeq:
re-ACK 94ed4fbf8e
theStack:
Code-review ACK 94ed4fbf8e
murchandamus:
utACK 94ed4fbf8e
Tree-SHA512: 9bd383e695964f362f147482bbf73b1e77c4d792bda2e91d7f30d74b3540a09146a5528baf86854a113005581e8c75f04737302517b7d5124296bd7a151e3992
Problem:
If `FuzzedSock::Recv(N, MSG_PEEK)` is called then `N` bytes would be
retrieved from the fuzz provider, saved in `m_peek_data` and returned
to the caller (ok).
If after this `FuzzedSock::Recv(M, 0)` is called where `M < N`
then the first `M` bytes from `m_peek_data` would be returned
to the caller (ok), but the remaining `N - M` bytes in `m_peek_data`
would be discarded/lost (not ok). They must be returned by a subsequent
`Recv()`.
To resolve this, only remove the head `N` bytes from `m_peek_data`.
Allow the callers of `CreateSock()` to pass all 3 arguments to the
`socket(2)` syscall. This makes it possible to create sockets of
any domain/type/protocol.
Instead of having separate warning functions (and globals) for each
different warning that can be raised, encapsulate this logic into
a single class and allow to (un)set any number of warnings.
Introduces behaviour change:
- the `-alertnotify` command is executed for all
`KernelNotifications::warningSet` calls, which now also covers the
`LARGE_WORK_INVALID_CHAIN` warning.
- previously, warnings were returned based on a predetermined order,
e.g. with the "pre-release test build" warning always first. This
is no longer the case, and Warnings::GetMessages() will return
messages sorted by the id of the warning.
Removes warnings.cpp from kernel.
c7376babd1 doc: Clarify distinction between util and common libraries in libraries.md (Ryan Ofsky)
4f74c59334 util: Move util/string.h functions to util namespace (Ryan Ofsky)
4d05d3f3b4 util: add TransactionError includes and namespace declarations (Ryan Ofsky)
680eafdc74 util: move fees.h and error.h to common/messages.h (Ryan Ofsky)
02e62c6c9a common: Add PSBTError enum (Ryan Ofsky)
0d44c44ae3 util: move error.h TransactionError enum to node/types.h (Ryan Ofsky)
9bcce2608d util: move spanparsing.h to script/parsing.h (Ryan Ofsky)
6dd2ad4792 util: move spanparsing.h Split functions to string.h (Ryan Ofsky)
23cc8ddff4 util: move HexStr and HexDigit from util to crypto (TheCharlatan)
6861f954f8 util: move util/message to common/signmessage (Ryan Ofsky)
cc5f29fbea build: move memory_cleanse from util to crypto (Ryan Ofsky)
5b9309420c build: move chainparamsbase from util to common (Ryan Ofsky)
ffa27af24d test: Add check-deps.sh script to check for unexpected library dependencies (Ryan Ofsky)
Pull request description:
Remove `fees.h`, `errors.h`, and `spanparsing.h` from the util library. Specifically:
- Move `Split` functions from `util/spanparsing.h` to `util/string.h`, using `util` namespace for clarity.
- Move remaining spanparsing functions to `script/parsing.h` since they are used for descriptor and miniscript parsing.
- Combine `util/fees.h` and `util/errors.h` into `common/messages.h` so there is a place for simple functions that generate user messages to live, and these functions are not part of the util library.
Motivation for this change is that the util library is a dependency of the kernel, and we should remove functionality from util that shouldn't be called by kernel code or kernel applications. These changes should also improve code organization and make functions easier to discover. Some of these same moves are (or were) part of #28690, but did not help with code organization, or made it worse, so it is better to move them and clean them up in the same PR so code only has to change one time.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK c7376babd1
TheCharlatan:
Re-ACK c7376babd1
hebasto:
re-ACK c7376babd1.
Tree-SHA512: 5bcef16c1255463b1b69270548711e7ff78ca0dd34e300b95e3ca1ce52ceb34f83d9ddb2839e83800ba36b200de30396e504bbb04fa02c6d0c24a16d06ae523d
faa41e29d5 fuzz: Use std::span in FuzzBufferType (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
The use of `Span` is problematic, because it lacks methods such as `rbegin`, leading to compile failures when used:
```
error: no member named 'rbegin' in 'Span<const unsigned char>'
```
One could fix `Span`, but it seems better to use `std::span`, given that `Span` will be removed anyway in the long term.
ACKs for top commit:
dergoegge:
utACK faa41e29d5
Tree-SHA512: 54bcaf51c83a1b48739cd7f1e8445c6eba0eb04231bce5c35591a47dddb3890ffcaf562cf932930443c80ab0e66950c4619560e6692240de0c52aeef3214facd
193c748e44 fuzz: add I2P harness (marcofleon)
Pull request description:
Addresses https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/28803. This updated harness sets mock time at the beginning of each iteration and deletes the private key file at the end of each iteration. Mock time is used to make the fuzz test more stable, as `GetTime` is called at points in `i2p`. Deleting the private key file ensures that each iteration is independent from the last. Now, a new key is generated in `i2p` every time, so the fuzzer can eventually make progress through the target code.
Re-working this harness also led me and dergoegge to resolve a couple of issues in `FuzzedSock`, which allows for full coverage of the `i2p` code. Those changes can be seen in https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/30211.
The SAM protocol for interacting with I2P requires some specifc inputs so it's best to use a dictionary when running this harness.
<details>
<summary>I2P dict</summary>
```
"HELLO VERSION"
"HELLO REPLY RESULT=OK VERSION="
"HELLO REPLY RESULT=NOVERSION"
"HELLO REPLY RESULT=I2P_ERROR"
"SESSION CREATE"
"SESSION STATUS RESULT=OK DESTINATION="
"SESSION STATUS RESULT=DUPLICATED_ID"
"SESSION STATUS RESULT=DUPLICATED_DEST"
"SESSION STATUS RESULT=INVALID_ID"
"SESSION STATUS RESULT=INVALID_KEY"
"SESSION STATUS RESULT=I2P_ERROR MESSAGE="
"SESSION ADD"
"SESSION REMOVE"
"STREAM CONNECT"
"STREAM STATUS RESULT=OK"
"STREAM STATUS RESULT=INVALID_ID"
"STREAM STATUS RESULT=INVALID_KEY"
"STREAM STATUS RESULT=CANT_REACH_PEER"
"STREAM STATUS RESULT=I2P_ERROR MESSAGE="
"STREAM ACCEPT"
"STREAM FORWARD"
"DATAGRAM SEND"
"RAW SEND"
"DEST GENERATE"
"DEST REPLY PUB= PRIV="
"DEST REPLY RESULT=I2P_ERROR"
"NAMING LOOKUP"
"NAMING REPLY RESULT=OK NAME= VALUE="
"DATAGRAM RECEIVED DESTINATION= SIZE="
"RAW RECEIVED SIZE="
"NAMING REPLY RESULT=INVALID_KEY NAME="
"NAMING REPLY RESULT=KEY_NOT_FOUND NAME="
"MIN"
"MAX"
"STYLE"
"ID"
"SILENT"
"DESTINATION"
"NAME"
"SIGNATURE_TYPE"
"CRYPTO_TYPE"
"SIZE"
"HOST"
"PORT"
"FROM_PORT"
"TRANSIENT"
"STREAM"
"DATAGRAM"
"RAW"
"MASTER"
"true"
"false"
```
</details>
I'll add this dict to qa-assets later on.
ACKs for top commit:
dergoegge:
tACK 193c748e44
brunoerg:
ACK 193c748e44
vasild:
ACK 193c748e44
Tree-SHA512: 09ae4b3fa0738aa6f159f4d920493bdbce786b489bc8148e7a135a881e9dba93d727b40f5400c9510e218dd2cfdccc7ce2d3ac9450654fb29c78aac59af92ec3
429ec1aaaa refactor: Rename CTransaction::nVersion to version (Ava Chow)
27e70f1f5b consensus: Store transaction nVersion as uint32_t (Ava Chow)
Pull request description:
Given that the use of a transaction's nVersion is always as an unsigned int, it doesn't make sense to store it as signed and then cast it to unsigned everywhere it is used and displayed.
Since a few alternative implementations have recently been revealed to have made an error with this signedness that would have resulted in consensus failure, I think it makes sense for us to just make this always unsigned to make it clear that the version is treated as unsigned. This would also help us avoid future potential issues with signedness of this value.
I believe that this is safe and does not actually change what transactions would or would not be considered both standard and consensus valid. Within consensus, the only use of the version in consensus is in BIP68 validation which was already casting it to uint32_t. Within policy, although it is used as a signed int for the transaction version number check, I do not think that this change would change standardness. Standard transactions are limited to the range [1, 2]. Negative numbers would have fallen under the < 1 condition, but by making it unsigned, they are still non-standard under the > 2 condition.
Unsigned and signed ints are serialized and unserialized the same way so there is no change in serialization.
ACKs for top commit:
maflcko:
ACK 429ec1aaaa 🐿
glozow:
ACK 429ec1aaaa
shaavan:
ACK 429ec1aaaa💯
Tree-SHA512: 0bcd92a245d7d16c3665d2d4e815a4ef28207ad4a1fb46c6f0203cdafeab1b82c4e95e4bdce7805d80a4f4a46074f6542abad708e970550d38a00d759e3dcef1
47f705b33f tests: add fuzz tests for BitSet (Pieter Wuille)
59a6df6bd5 util: add BitSet (Pieter Wuille)
Pull request description:
Extracted from #30126.
This introduces the `BitSet` data structure, inspired by `std::bitset`, but with a few features that cannot be implemented on top without efficiency loss:
* Finding the first set bit (`First`)
* Finding the last set bit (`Last`)
* Iterating over all set bits (`begin` and `end`).
And a few other operators/member functions that help readability for #30126:
* `operator-` for set subtraction
* `Overlaps()` for testing whether intersection is non-empty
* `IsSupersetOf()` for testing (non-strict) supersetness
* `IsSubsetOf()` for testing (non-strict) subsetness
* `Fill()` to construct a set with all numbers from 0 to n-1, inclusive
* `Singleton()` to construct a set with one specific element.
Everything is tested through a simulation-based fuzz test that compares the behavior with normal `std::bitset` equivalent operations.
ACKs for top commit:
instagibbs:
ACK 47f705b33f
achow101:
ACK 47f705b33f
cbergqvist:
re-ACK 47f705b33f
theStack:
Code-review ACK 47f705b33f
Tree-SHA512: e451bf4b801f193239ee434b6b614f5a2ac7bb49c70af5aba24c2ac0c54acbef4672556800e4ac799ae835632bdba716209c5ca8c37433a6883dab4eb7cd67c1