ad085f9ba1 multiprocess: Delay wallet client construction (Russell Yanofsky)
Pull request description:
Delay wallet client construction until after logging, thread and other init for two reasons:
- More responsive multiprocess GUI startup. When bitcoin-gui is started this moves the call from bitcoin-gui to bitcoin-node that spawns bitcoin-wallet off of the GUI event thread and onto the background GUI init executor thread.
- Avoids feature_logging.py test failures with bitcoin-node by making bitcoin-wallet logging start after bitcoin-node logging starts,
because the tests are not written to handle the bitcoin-wallet logging init code running first.
This partially reverts commit b266b3e0bf, moving wallet client creation back to the place it was located before.
---
This PR is part of the [process separation project](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/projects/10).
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
code review ACK ad085f9ba1
hebasto:
ACK ad085f9ba1, I have reviewed the code and it looks OK.
Tree-SHA512: 74d957ce2ee096db745c517124f60800185814b06c20db676090e10dce1b90311adbab02865a69731f8c39b9365f9ee14be0830ca1368cac9b474801ea92bad5
CJDNS is set up in the host OS, outside of the application. When the
routing is configured properly then connecting to fc00::/8 results in
connecting to the CJDNS network.
Introduce an option so that Bitcoin Core knows whether this is the case.
This commit does not change behavior in any way. See previous commit for
complete rationale, but these flags are being disabled because they
aren't implemented and will otherwise break backwards compatibility when
they are implemented.
-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
sed -i 's:\(ALLOW_.*\) \(//!< unimplemented\):// \1\2:' src/util/system.h
sed -i '/DISALLOW_NEGATION.*scripted-diff/d' src/util/system.cpp
git grep -l 'ArgsManager::ALLOW_\(INT\|STRING\)' | xargs sed -i 's/ArgsManager::ALLOW_\(INT\|STRING\)/ArgsManager::ALLOW_ANY | ArgsManager::DISALLOW_NEGATION/g'
git grep -l 'ALLOW_BOOL' -- ':!src/util/system.h' | xargs sed -i 's/ALLOW_BOOL/ALLOW_ANY/g'
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
There is no change in behavior. This just helps prepare for the
transition from boost::filesystem to std::filesystem by avoiding calls
to methods which will be unsafe after the transaction to std::filesystem
to due lack of a boost::filesystem::path::imbue equivalent and inability
to set a predictable locale.
Co-authored-by: Hennadii Stepanov <32963518+hebasto@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Kiminuo <kiminuo@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: MarcoFalke <falke.marco@gmail.com>
9d0379cea6 consensus: use <cstdint> over <stdint.h> in amount.h (fanquake)
863e52fe63 consensus: make COIN & MAX_MONEY constexpr (fanquake)
d09071da5b [MOVEONLY] consensus: move amount.h into consensus (fanquake)
Pull request description:
A first step (of a few) towards some source code reorganization, as well as making libbitcoinconsensus slightly more self contained.
Related to #15732.
ACKs for top commit:
MarcoFalke:
concept ACK 9d0379cea6 🏝
Tree-SHA512: 97fc79262dcb8c00996852a288fee69ddf8398ae2c95700bba5b326f1f38ffcfaf8fa66e29d0cb446d9b3f4e608a96525fae0c2ad9cd531ad98ad2a4a687cd6a
4747da3a5b Add syscall sandboxing (seccomp-bpf) (practicalswift)
Pull request description:
Add experimental syscall sandboxing using seccomp-bpf (Linux secure computing mode).
Enable filtering of system calls using seccomp-bpf: allow only explicitly allowlisted (expected) syscalls to be called.
The syscall sandboxing implemented in this PR is an experimental feature currently available only under Linux x86-64.
To enable the experimental syscall sandbox the `-sandbox=<mode>` option must be passed to `bitcoind`:
```
-sandbox=<mode>
Use the experimental syscall sandbox in the specified mode
(-sandbox=log-and-abort or -sandbox=abort). Allow only expected
syscalls to be used by bitcoind. Note that this is an
experimental new feature that may cause bitcoind to exit or crash
unexpectedly: use with caution. In the "log-and-abort" mode the
invocation of an unexpected syscall results in a debug handler
being invoked which will log the incident and terminate the
program (without executing the unexpected syscall). In the
"abort" mode the invocation of an unexpected syscall results in
the entire process being killed immediately by the kernel without
executing the unexpected syscall.
```
The allowed syscalls are defined on a per thread basis.
I've used this feature since summer 2020 and I find it to be a helpful testing/debugging addition which makes it much easier to reason about the actual capabilities required of each type of thread in Bitcoin Core.
---
Quick start guide:
```
$ ./configure
$ src/bitcoind -regtest -debug=util -sandbox=log-and-abort
…
2021-06-09T12:34:56Z Experimental syscall sandbox enabled (-sandbox=log-and-abort): bitcoind will terminate if an unexpected (not allowlisted) syscall is invoked.
…
2021-06-09T12:34:56Z Syscall filter installed for thread "addcon"
2021-06-09T12:34:56Z Syscall filter installed for thread "dnsseed"
2021-06-09T12:34:56Z Syscall filter installed for thread "net"
2021-06-09T12:34:56Z Syscall filter installed for thread "msghand"
2021-06-09T12:34:56Z Syscall filter installed for thread "opencon"
2021-06-09T12:34:56Z Syscall filter installed for thread "init"
…
# A simulated execve call to show the sandbox in action:
2021-06-09T12:34:56Z ERROR: The syscall "execve" (syscall number 59) is not allowed by the syscall sandbox in thread "msghand". Please report.
…
Aborted (core dumped)
$
```
---
[About seccomp and seccomp-bpf](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seccomp):
> In computer security, seccomp (short for secure computing mode) is a facility in the Linux kernel. seccomp allows a process to make a one-way transition into a "secure" state where it cannot make any system calls except exit(), sigreturn(), and read() and write() to already-open file descriptors. Should it attempt any other system calls, the kernel will terminate the process with SIGKILL or SIGSYS. In this sense, it does not virtualize the system's resources but isolates the process from them entirely.
>
> […]
>
> seccomp-bpf is an extension to seccomp that allows filtering of system calls using a configurable policy implemented using Berkeley Packet Filter rules. It is used by OpenSSH and vsftpd as well as the Google Chrome/Chromium web browsers on Chrome OS and Linux. (In this regard seccomp-bpf achieves similar functionality, but with more flexibility and higher performance, to the older systrace—which seems to be no longer supported for Linux.)
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review and lightly tested ACK 4747da3a5b
Tree-SHA512: e1c28e323eb4409a46157b7cc0fc29a057ba58d1ee2de268962e2ade28ebd4421b5c2536c64a3af6e9bd3f54016600fec88d016adb49864b63edea51ad838e17
dc3ec74d67 Add rescan removal release note (Samuel Dobson)
bccd1d942d Remove -rescan startup parameter (Samuel Dobson)
f963b0fa8c Corrupt wallet tx shouldn't trigger rescan of all wallets (Samuel Dobson)
6c006495ef Remove outdated dummy wallet -salvagewallet arg (Samuel Dobson)
Pull request description:
Remove the `-rescan` startup parameter.
Rescans can be run with the `rescanblockchain` RPC.
Rescans are still done on wallet-load if needed due to corruption, for example.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK dc3ec74d67
laanwj:
re-ACK dc3ec74d67
Tree-SHA512: 608360d0e7d73737fd3ef408b01b33d97a75eebccd70c6d1b47a32fecb99b9105b520b111b225beb10611c09aa840a2b6d2b6e6e54be5d0362829e757289de5c
Delay wallet client construction until after logging, thread and other
init for two reasons:
- More responsive multiprocess GUI startup. When bitcoin-gui is started
this moves the call from bitcoin-gui to bitcoin-node that spawns
bitcoin-wallet off of the GUI event thread and onto the background GUI
init executor thread.
- Avoids feature_logging.py test failures with bitcoin-node by making
bitcoin-wallet logging start after bitcoin-node logging starts,
because the tests are not written to handle the bitcoin-wallet logging
init code running first.
This partially reverts commit b266b3e0bf,
moving wallet client creation back to the place it was located before.
fa20f815a9 Remove txindex migration code (MarcoFalke)
fae8786033 doc: Fix validation typo (MarcoFalke)
fab89006d6 Add missing includes and forward declarations, remove unused ones (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
No supported version of Bitcoin Core used the legacy txindex, so all relevant nodes can be assumed to have upgraded. Thus, there is no need to keep this code any longer.
As a temporary courtesy, provide a one-time warning on how to free the disk space used by the legacy txindex.
Fixes#22615
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review ACK fa20f815a9
hebasto:
ACK fa20f815a9, tested on Linux Mint 20.2 (x86_64).
Zero-1729:
crACK fa20f815a9
theStack:
Approach ACK fa20f815a9
Tree-SHA512: 68aa32d064d1e3932e6e382816a4b5de417bd7e82861fea1ee50660e8c397f4efeb88ae4ed54a8ad1952c3563eb0b8449d7ccf883c353cc4d4dc7e15c53d78e8
e4709c7b56 Start using init makeNode, makeChain, etc methods (Russell Yanofsky)
Pull request description:
Use `interfaces::Init::make*` methods instead of `interfaces::Make*` functions, so interfaces can be constructed differently in different executable without having to change any code. (So for example `bitcoin-gui` can make an `interfaces::Node` pointer that communicates with a `bitcoin-node` subprocess, while `bitcoin-qt` can make an `interfaces::Node` pointer that controls node code in the same process.)
---
This PR is part of the [process separation project](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/projects/10). The commit was first part of larger PR #10102.
ACKs for top commit:
jamesob:
reACK e4709c7b56
achow101:
ACK e4709c7b56
benthecarman:
utACK e4709c7b56
Tree-SHA512: 580c1979dbb2ef444157c8e53041e70d15ddeee77e5cbdb34f70b6d228cc2d2fe3843825f172da84e506200c58f7e0932f7cd4c006bb5058c1f4e43259394834
fa55c3dc1b Raise InitError when peers.dat is invalid or corrupted (MarcoFalke)
fa4e2ccfd8 Inline ReadPeerAddresses (MarcoFalke)
fa5aeec80c Move LoadAddrman from init to addrdb (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
peers.dat is silently erased when it can not be parsed or when it appears corrupted. Fix that by notifying the user. This might help in the following examples:
* The user provided the database, but picked the wrong one.
* A future version of Bitcoin Core wrote the file and it can't be read.
* The file was corrupted by a logic bug in Bitcoin Core.
* The file was corrupted by a disk failure.
ACKs for top commit:
jonatack:
Code review re-ACK fa55c3dc1b per `git range-diff eb1f570 fa59c6d fa55c3` and verified the new tests fail on master, except "Check mocked addrman is valid", as expected
prayank23:
tACK fa55c3dc1b
vasild:
ACK fa55c3dc1b
Tree-SHA512: 78264a78ee570a3c3262cf9c8542b5ffaffa5f52da1eef66c8c381f346989272967cfe1769c573502d9d7d3f7ad68c3ac3b2ec734185d2e4e7595b7122b14196
853c4edb70 [net] Remove asmap argument from CNode::CopyStats() (John Newbery)
9fd5618610 [asmap] Make DecodeAsmap() a utility function (John Newbery)
bfdf4ef334 [asmap] Remove SanityCheckASMap() from netaddress (John Newbery)
07a9eccb60 [net] Remove CConnman::Options.m_asmap (John Newbery)
Pull request description:
These small cleanups to the asmap code are the first 4 commits from #22910. They're minor improvements that are independently useful whether or not 22910 is merged.
ACKs for top commit:
naumenkogs:
ACK 853c4edb70
theStack:
Concept and code-review ACK 853c4edb70🗺️
fanquake:
ACK 853c4edb70
Tree-SHA512: 64783743182592ac165df6ff8d18870b63861e9204ed722c207fca6938687aac43232a5ac4d8228cf8b92130ab0349de1b410a2467bb5a9d60dd9a7221b3b85b
Init should only concern itself with the initialization order, not the
detailed initialization logic of every module.
Also, inlining logic into a method that is ~800 lines of code, makes it
impossible to unit test on its own.
DecopeAsmap is a pure utility function and doesn't have any
dependencies on addrman, so move it to util/asmap.
Reviewer hint: use:
`git diff --color-moved=dimmed-zebra --color-moved-ws=ignore-all-space`
The class only stores the file path, reading it from a global. Globals
are confusing and make testing harder.
The method reading from a stream does not even use any class members, so
putting it in a class is also confusing.
Improve readability of code, simplify future scripted diff cleanup PRs, and be
more consistent with naming for GetBoolArg.
This will also be useful for replacing runtime settings type checking
with compile time checking.
-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
git grep -l GetArg | xargs sed -i 's/GetArg(\([^)]*\( [0-9]\+\|-1\|port\|BaseParams().RPCPort()\|Params().GetDefaultPort()\|_TIMEOUT\|Height\|_WORKQUEUE\|_THREADS\|_CONNECTIONS\|LIMIT\|SigOp\|Bytes\|_VERSION\|_AGE\|_CHECKS\|Checks() ? 1 : 0\|_BANTIME\|Cache\|BLOCKS\|LEVEL\|Weight\|Version\|BUFFER\|TARGET\|WEIGHT\|TXN\|TRANSACTIONS\|ADJUSTMENT\|i64\|Size\|nDefault\|_EXPIRY\|HEIGHT\|SIZE\|SNDHWM\|_TIME_MS\)\))/GetIntArg(\1)/g'
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
Co-authored-by: Hennadii Stepanov <32963518+hebasto@users.noreply.github.com>
ee7891a0c4 doc: Remove outdated comments (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
The first removed comment was introduced in #5288, the second one in #13503.
Both are outdated since #14336.
ACKs for top commit:
duncandean:
crACK ee7891a0
Tree-SHA512: a2d6071919e81c916bfc2178109bbc464417321bcc567ed0644448c5faea8e58cb08a7657afa1b6ffe1fb63e114a2a47b31c893e471839ba9d49a3986e68b2a7
Commit 181a1207 introduced an initialization order bug: CAddrMan's
m_asmap must be set before deserializing peers.dat. Restore that
ordering.
review hint: use
`git diff --color-moved=dimmed-zebra --color-moved-ws=ignore-all-space`
a38137479b net: do not advertise address where nobody is listening (Jadi)
Pull request description:
If the bitcoind starts when listen=0 but listenonion=1, the daemon will
advertise its onion address but nothing is listening for it.
This update will enforce listenonion=0 when the listen is 0.
ACKs for top commit:
vasild:
ACK a38137479b
jarolrod:
ACK a38137479b
amitiuttarwar:
ACK a38137479b
Tree-SHA512: e84a0a9a51f2217edf35d06c6cd9085d1e664452655ba92027195a1e88ba081d157310c84e9709a99ce5d46c94f231477ca2d36f010648b0c8b4f2a737d54e5d
Now that we manage the lifespan of node.addrman, we can just reset
node.addrman to a newly initialized CAddrMan if parsing peers.dat
fails, eliminating the possibility that Clear() leaves some old state
behind.
Use interfaces::Init::make* methods instead of interfaces::Make*
functions, so interfaces can be constructed differently in different
executables without having to change any code. (So for example
bitcoin-gui can make an interfaces::Node pointer that communicates with
a bitcoin-node subprocess, while bitcoin-qt can make an interfaces::Node
pointer that starts node code in the same process.)
Currently addrman consistency checks are a compile time option, and are not
enabled in our CI. It's unlikely anyone is running these consistency checks.
Make them a runtime option instead, where users can enable addrman
consistency checks every n operations (similar to mempool tests). Update
the addrman unit tests to do internal consistency checks every 100
operations (checking on every operations causes the test runtime to
increase by several seconds).
Also assert on a failed addrman consistency check to terminate program
execution.
703b1e612a Close minor startup race between main and scheduler threads (Larry Ruane)
Pull request description:
This is a low-priority bug fix. The scheduler thread runs `CheckForStaleTipAndEvictPeers()` every 45 seconds (EXTRA_PEER_CHECK_INTERVAL). If its first run happens before the active chain is set up (`CChain::SetTip()`), `bitcoind` will assert:
```
(...)
2021-07-28T22:16:49Z init message: Loading block index…
bitcoind: validation.cpp:4968: CChainState& ChainstateManager::ActiveChainstate() const: Assertion `m_active_chainstate' failed.
Aborted (core dumped)
```
I ran into this while using the debugger to investigate an unrelated problem. Single-stepping through threads with a debugger can cause the relative thread execution timing to be very different than usual. I don't think any automated tests are needed for this PR. I'll give reproduction steps in the next PR comment.
ACKs for top commit:
MarcoFalke:
cr ACK 703b1e612a
tryphe:
tested ACK 703b1e612a
0xB10C:
ACK 703b1e612a
glozow:
code review ACK 703b1e612a - it makes sense to me to start peerman's background tasks here, after `chainstate->LoadChainTip()` and `node.connman->Start()` have been called.
Tree-SHA512: 9316ad768cba3b171f62e2eb400e3790af66c47d1886d7965edb38d9710fc8c8f8e4fb38232811c9346732ce311d39f740c5c2aaf5f6ca390ddc48c51a8d633b
82b6f89819 [style] Small style improvements to DNS parameters (Amiti Uttarwar)
4c89e24f64 [test] Test the delay before querying DNS seeds (Amiti Uttarwar)
6395c8ed56 [test] Test the interactions between -forcednsseed and -dnsseed (Amiti Uttarwar)
6f6b7df6bd [init] Disallow starting up with conflicting paramters for -dnsseed and -forcednsseed (Amiti Uttarwar)
26d0ffe4f2 [test] Test -forcednsseed causes querying DNS seeds (Amiti Uttarwar)
35851450a9 [test] Test the interactions between -connect and -dnsseed (Amiti Uttarwar)
75c05af361 [test] Test logic to query DNS seeds with block-relay-only connections (Amiti Uttarwar)
9c08719778 [test] Introduce test logic to query DNS seeds (Amiti Uttarwar)
Pull request description:
This PR adds a DNS seed to the regtest chain params to enable testing the DNS seed querying logic of `CConnman::ThreadDNSAddressSeed` and relevant startup parameters. Adds coverage for the changes in #22013 (and then some).
The main behavioral change to bitcoind is that this PR disallows starting up with conflicting parameters for `-dnsseed` and `-forcednsseed`.
The tests include:
* parameter interactions of different combinations of `-connect`, `-dnsseed` and `-forcednsseed`
* the delay before querying DNS seeds depending on how many addresses are in the addrman
* the behavior of `-forcednsseed`
* skipping DNS querying if we have outbound full relay connections & not block-relay-only connections
Huge props to mzumsande for identifying the timing technique for testing successful connections before running `ThreadDNSAddressSeed` 🙌🏽
ACKs for top commit:
mzumsande:
ACK 82b6f89819
jnewbery:
reACK 82b6f89819
Tree-SHA512: 9f0c29bfbf99426727e79c0a25606ae09deab91a92e3c5cee7f84c3ca7503a8ac9ab85a85c51841d40b164ef8c991326070f0b2f41d075fb7985df26f6e95d6d
Don't schedule class PeerManagerImpl's background tasks from its
constructor, but instead do that from a separate method,
StartScheduledTasks(), that can be called later at the end of startup,
after other things, such as the active chain, are initialzed.
-dnsseed determines whether we run ThreadDNSAddressSeed and potentially query
the DNS seeds for addresses. -forcednsseed tells the node to force querying the
DNS seeds even if we have sufficient addresses or current connections.
This commit disallows starting up with explicitly conflicting parameters.
a806647d26 [validation] Always include merkle root in coinbase commitment (Dhruv Mehta)
189128c220 [validation] Set witness script flag with p2sh for blocks (Dhruv Mehta)
ac82b99db7 [p2p] remove redundant NODE_WITNESS checks (Dhruv Mehta)
6f8b198b82 [p2p] remove unused segwitheight=-1 option (Dhruv Mehta)
eba5b1cd64 [test] remove or move tests using `-segwitheight=-1` (Dhruv Mehta)
Pull request description:
Builds on #21009 and makes progress on remaining items in #17862
Removing `RewindBlockIndex()` in #21009 allows the following:
- removal of tests using `segwitheight=-1` in `p2p_segwit.py`.
- move `test_upgrade_after_activation()` out of `p2p_segwit.py` reducing runtime
- in turn, that allows us to drop support for `-segwitheight=-1`, which is only supported for that test.
- that allows us to always set `NODE_WITNESS` in our local services. The only reason we don't do that is to support `-segwitheight=-1`.
- that in turn allows us to drop all of the `GetLocalServices() & NODE_WITNESS` checks inside `net_processing.cpp`, since our local services would always include `NODE_WITNESS`
ACKs for top commit:
mzumsande:
Code-Review ACK a806647d26
laanwj:
Code review ACK a806647d26, nice cleanup
jnewbery:
utACK a806647d26
theStack:
ACK a806647d26
Tree-SHA512: 73e1a69d1d7eca1f5c38558ec6672decd0b60b16c2ef6134df6f6af71bb159e6eea160f9bb5ab0eb6723c6632d29509811e29469d0d87abbe9b69a2890fbc73e
ceb7b35a39 refactor: move UpdateTip into CChainState (James O'Beirne)
4abf0779d6 refactor: no mempool arg to GetCoinsCacheSizeState (James O'Beirne)
46e3efd1e4 refactor: move UpdateMempoolForReorg into CChainState (James O'Beirne)
617661703a validation: make CChainState::m_mempool optional (James O'Beirne)
Pull request description:
Make `CChainState::m_mempool` optional by making it a pointer instead of a reference. This will allow a simplification to assumeutxo semantics (see https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/15606#pullrequestreview-692965905) and help facilitate the `-nomempool` option.
ACKs for top commit:
jnewbery:
ACK ceb7b35a39
naumenkogs:
ACK ceb7b35a39
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK ceb7b35a39 (just minor style and test tweaks since last review)
lsilva01:
Code review ACK and tested on Signet ACK ceb7b35a39
MarcoFalke:
review ACK ceb7b35a39😌
Tree-SHA512: cc445ad33439d5918cacf80a6354eea8f3d33bb7719573ed5b970fad1a0dab410bcd70be44c862b8aba1b71263b82d79876688c553e339362653dfb3d8ec81e6
Since we now have multiple chainstate objects, only one of them is active at any given
time. An active chainstate has a mempool, but there's no point to others having one.
This change will simplify proposed assumeutxo semantics. See the discussion here:
https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/15606#pullrequestreview-692965905
Co-authored-by: Russell Yanofsky <russ@yanofsky.org>
4101ec9d2e doc: mention that we enforce port=0 in I2P (Vasil Dimov)
e0a2b390c1 addrman: reset I2P ports to 0 when loading from disk (Vasil Dimov)
41cda9d075 test: ensure I2P ports are handled as expected (Vasil Dimov)
4f432bd738 net: do not connect to I2P hosts on port!=0 (Vasil Dimov)
1f096f091e net: distinguish default port per network (Vasil Dimov)
aeac3bce3e net: change I2P seeds' ports to 0 (Vasil Dimov)
38f900290c net: change assumed I2P port to 0 (Vasil Dimov)
Pull request description:
_This is an alternative to https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/21514, inspired by https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/21514#issuecomment-815049933. They are mutually exclusive. Just one of them should be merged._
Change assumed ports for I2P to 0 (instead of the default 8333) as this is closer to what actually happens underneath with SAM 3.1 (https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/21514#issuecomment-812632520, https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/21514#issuecomment-816564719).
Don't connect to I2P peers with advertised port != 0 (we don't specify a port to our SAM 3.1 proxy and it always connects to port = 0).
Note, this change:
* Keeps I2P addresses with port != 0 in addrman and relays them to others via P2P gossip. There may be non-bitcoin-core-22.0 peers using SAM 3.2 and for them such addresses may be useful.
* Silently refuses to connect to I2P hosts with port != 0. This is ok for automatically chosen peers from addrman. Not so ok for peers provided via `-addnode` or `-connect` - a user who specifies `foo.b32.i2p:1234` (non zero port) may wonder why "nothing is happening".
Fixes#21389
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review ACK 4101ec9d2e
jonatack:
re-ACK 4101ec9d2e per `git range-diff efff9c3 0b0ee03 4101ec9`, built with DDEBUG_ADDRMAN, did fairly extensive testing on mainnet both with and without a peers.dat / -dnsseeds=0 to test boostrapping.
Tree-SHA512: 0e3c019e1dc05e54f559275859d3450e0c735596d179e30b66811aad9d5b5fabe3dcc44571e8f7b99f9fe16453eee393d6e153454dd873b9ff14907d4e6354fe
2feec3ce31 net: don't bind on 0.0.0.0 if binds are restricted to Tor (Vasil Dimov)
Pull request description:
The semantic of `-bind` is to restrict the binding only to some address.
If not specified, then the user does not care and we bind to `0.0.0.0`.
If specified then we should honor the restriction and bind only to the
specified address.
Before this change, if no `-bind` is given then we would bind to
`0.0.0.0:8333` and to `127.0.0.1:8334` (incoming Tor) which is ok -
the user does not care to restrict the binding.
However, if only `-bind=addr:port=onion` is given (without ordinary
`-bind=`) then we would bind to `addr:port` _and_ to `0.0.0.0:8333` in
addition.
Change the above to not do the additional bind: if only
`-bind=addr:port=onion` is given (without ordinary `-bind=`) then bind
to `addr:port` (only) and consider incoming connections to that as Tor
and do not advertise it. I.e. a Tor-only node.
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review ACK 2feec3ce31
jonatack:
utACK 2feec3ce31 per `git diff a004833 2feec3c`
hebasto:
ACK 2feec3ce31, tested on Linux Mint 20.1 (x86_64):
Tree-SHA512: a04483af601706da928958b92dc560f9cfcc78ab0bb9d74414636eed1c6f29ed538ce1fb5a17d41ed82c9c9a45ca94899d0966e7ef93da809c9bcdcdb1d1f040
* When accepting an I2P connection, assume the peer has port 0 instead
of the default 8333 (for mainnet). It is not being sent to us, so we
must assume something.
* When deriving our own I2P listen CService use port 0 instead of the
default 8333 (for mainnet). So that we later advertise it to peers
with port 0.
In the I2P protocol SAM 3.1 and older (we use 3.1) ports are not used,
so they are irrelevant. However in SAM 3.2 and newer ports are used and
from the point of view of SAM 3.2, a peer using SAM 3.1 seems to have
specified port=0.
The semantic of `-bind` is to restrict the binding only to some address.
If not specified, then the user does not care and we bind to `0.0.0.0`.
If specified then we should honor the restriction and bind only to the
specified address.
Before this change, if no `-bind` is given then we would bind to
`0.0.0.0:8333` and to `127.0.0.1:8334` (incoming Tor) which is ok -
the user does not care to restrict the binding.
However, if only `-bind=addr:port=onion` is given (without ordinary
`-bind=`) then we would bind to `addr:port` _and_ to `0.0.0.0:8333` in
addition.
Change the above to not do the additional bind: if only
`-bind=addr:port=onion` is given (without ordinary `-bind=`) then bind
to `addr:port` (only) and consider incoming connections to that as Tor
and do not advertise it. I.e. a Tor-only node.
Provides DeploymentEnabled, DeploymentActiveAt, and DeploymentActiveAfter
helpers for checking the status of buried deployments. Can be overloaded
so the same syntax works for non-buried deployments, allowing future
soft forks to be changed from signalled to buried deployments without
having to touch the implementation code.
Replaces IsWitnessEnabled and IsScriptWitnessEnabled.