16d4b3fd6d test: mempool.dat compatibility between versions (Ivan Metlushko)
Pull request description:
Rationale: Verify mempool.dat compatibility between versions
The format of mempool.dat has been changed in #18038
The tests verifies the fix made in #18807 and ensures that the file format is compatible between current version and v0.19.1
The test verifies both backward and forward compatibility.
This PR also adds a log when we fail to add a tx loaded from mempool.dat.
It was useful when debugging this test and could be potentially useful to debug other scenarios as well.
Closes#19037
ACKs for top commit:
Sjors:
tACK 16d4b3fd6d
Tree-SHA512: 00a38bf528c6478cb0da467af216488f83c1e3ca4d9166c109202ea8284023e99d87a3d6e252c4d88d08d9b5ed1a730b3e1970d6e5c0aef526fa7ced40de7490
Every `return false` is preceeded by a detailed debug log message to
explain that a disconnect or misbehavior happened. Logging another
generic "FAILED" message seems redundant.
Also, the size of the message and the message type has already been
logged and is thus redundant as well.
Finally, claiming that message processing FAILED seems odd, because the
message was fully processed to the point where it was concluded that the
peer should be either disconnected or marked as misbehaving.
62068381a3 [tests] Make mininode_lock non-reentrant (John Newbery)
c67c1f2c03 [tests] Don't call super twice in P2PTxInvStore.on_inv() (John Newbery)
9d80762fa0 [tests] Don't acquire mininode_lock twice in wait_for_broadcast() (John Newbery)
edae6075aa [tests] Only acquire lock once in p2p_compactblocks.py (John Newbery)
Pull request description:
There's no need for mininode_lock to be reentrant.
Use a simpler non-recursive lock.
ACKs for top commit:
MarcoFalke:
ACK 62068381a3😃
jonatack:
ACK 62068381a3
Tree-SHA512: dcbc19e6c986970051705789be0ff7bec70c69cf76d5b468c2ba4cb732883ad512b1de5c3206c2eca41fa3f1c4806999df4cabbf67fc3c463bb817458e59a19c
3a10d935ac [p2p/refactor] move disconnect logic and remove misbehaving (gzhao408)
ff8c430c65 [test] test disconnect for filterclear (gzhao408)
1c6b787e03 [netprocessing] disconnect node that sends filterclear (gzhao408)
Pull request description:
Nodes that don't have bloomfilters turned on (i.e. no `NODE_BLOOM` service) should disconnect peers that send them `filterclear` P2P messages.
Non-bloomfilter nodes already disconnect peers for [`filteradd` and `filterload`](19e919217e/src/net_processing.cpp (L2218)), but #8709 removed `filterclear` so it could be used to reset tx relay. This isn't needed now because using `feefilter` message is much better for this purpose (See #19204).
Also refactors existing disconnect logic for `filteradd` and `filterload` into respective message handlers and removes banning for them.
ACKs for top commit:
jnewbery:
Code review ACK 3a10d935ac
naumenkogs:
utACK 3a10d93
gillichu:
tested ACK: quick test_runner on macOS [`3a10d93`](3a10d935ac)
MarcoFalke:
re-ACK 3a10d935ac only change is replacing false with true 🚝
Tree-SHA512: 7aad8b3c0b0e776a47ad52544f0c1250feb242320f9a2962542f5905042f77e297a1486f8cdc3bf0fb93cd00c1ab66a67b2ec426eb6da3fe4cda56b5e623620f
In Python integers should be compared for equality (`i == j`), not identity (`i is j`). Recent versions of CPython 3.x emit a SyntaxWarning when they encounter this incorrect usage, e.g.
```
$ python3 base58.py
base58.py:110: SyntaxWarning: "is" with a literal. Did you mean "=="?
assert get_bcaddress_version('15VjRaDX9zpbA8LVnbrCAFzrVzN7ixHNsC') is 0
Tests passed
```
The utility is primarily useful to dereference pointer types, which are
known to be not null at that time.
For example, the ArgsManager is known to exist when the wallets are
started. Instead of silently relying on that assumption, Assert can be
used to abort the program and avoid UB should the assumption ever be
violated.
fa71667597 ci: Move travis workarounds to .travis.yml (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
It seems odd to have travis related workarounds in the general ci config files. Fix that oddity by moving the travis related workarounds to the travis yaml file.
For unexplained reasons, this should also work around and thus close#19171
ACKs for top commit:
hebasto:
ACK fa71667597, I have reviewed the code and it looks OK, I agree it can be merged.
Tree-SHA512: b4419d38e2b41f6e4d6e6b7658f1d972c40c390a49fe78808f8640d28efd84cc6668ce292d45b7c539e65b9e2ecbad10e796cb8f9329a0f1e7d0132ce962d226
0f8f515445 RPC: Rephrase generatetoaddress help, and use PACKAGE_NAME (Luke Dashjr)
Pull request description:
Top commit has no ACKs.
Tree-SHA512: 357c6e0bd1b144213ca6cf0bfd649c7a482c2d6d5e98a254d20c8365d228dc71ae1b78aca4918fdbf065f8894ef82f8a475902d605204275bb99fe77d4b42fae
-Increasing the banscore and/or banning is too harsh,
just disconnecting is enough.
-Return true from ProcessMessage because we already log
receipt of filterclear and disconnect.
-nodes not serving bloomfilters should disconnect peers
that send filterclear, just like filteradd and filterload
-nodes that want to enable/disable txrelay should use
feefilter
49236be099 [tests] Don't import asyncio to test magic bytes (John Newbery)
Pull request description:
Simplify the test for invalid start bytes. No need to import asyncio and the Network thread.
ACKs for top commit:
MarcoFalke:
review ACK 49236be099
jonatack:
ACK 49236be099
troygiorshev:
ACK 49236be. +0.1 on the additional `cut_len` reformat.
Tree-SHA512: 75cb695603cdc1be7035d7b5117dbef2a1fdb29fd4414a73d75b53d563d6fa800c31bfa9475004622c8bdea4978b51b2055d6fa7be0fe47c7ae34ccc2b0e89a0
ccf1f6ea24 refactor: Drop ::HasWallets() (João Barbosa)
Pull request description:
Minor follow-up of #19250. The global `HasWallets()` is used only once and at the call site there's already a way to know if any wallet is loaded.
ACKs for top commit:
MarcoFalke:
ACK ccf1f6ea24
hebasto:
ACK ccf1f6ea24, I have reviewed the changes and they look OK, I agree they can be merged.
Tree-SHA512: fb902c045cbd331eaf71716c04734520f2ce7f2b317db510c4ce140162bbc683327b5a40ac860f6cde5add37e069065274d39dfa147fac2091eedec505f2f7eb
This replaces the current benchmarking framework with nanobench [1], an
MIT licensed single-header benchmarking library, of which I am the
autor. This has in my opinion several advantages, especially on Linux:
* fast: Running all benchmarks takes ~6 seconds instead of 4m13s on
an Intel i7-8700 CPU @ 3.20GHz.
* accurate: I ran e.g. the benchmark for SipHash_32b 10 times and
calculate standard deviation / mean = coefficient of variation:
* 0.57% CV for old benchmarking framework
* 0.20% CV for nanobench
So the benchmark results with nanobench seem to vary less than with
the old framework.
* It automatically determines runtime based on clock precision, no need
to specify number of evaluations.
* measure instructions, cycles, branches, instructions per cycle,
branch misses (only Linux, when performance counters are available)
* output in markdown table format.
* Warn about unstable environment (frequency scaling, turbo, ...)
* For better profiling, it is possible to set the environment variable
NANOBENCH_ENDLESS to force endless running of a particular benchmark
without the need to recompile. This makes it to e.g. run "perf top"
and look at hotspots.
Here is an example copy & pasted from the terminal output:
| ns/byte | byte/s | err% | ins/byte | cyc/byte | IPC | bra/byte | miss% | total | benchmark
|--------------------:|--------------------:|--------:|----------------:|----------------:|-------:|---------------:|--------:|----------:|:----------
| 2.52 | 396,529,415.94 | 0.6% | 25.42 | 8.02 | 3.169 | 0.06 | 0.0% | 0.03 | `bench/crypto_hash.cpp RIPEMD160`
| 1.87 | 535,161,444.83 | 0.3% | 21.36 | 5.95 | 3.589 | 0.06 | 0.0% | 0.02 | `bench/crypto_hash.cpp SHA1`
| 3.22 | 310,344,174.79 | 1.1% | 36.80 | 10.22 | 3.601 | 0.09 | 0.0% | 0.04 | `bench/crypto_hash.cpp SHA256`
| 2.01 | 496,375,796.23 | 0.0% | 18.72 | 6.43 | 2.911 | 0.01 | 1.0% | 0.00 | `bench/crypto_hash.cpp SHA256D64_1024`
| 7.23 | 138,263,519.35 | 0.1% | 82.66 | 23.11 | 3.577 | 1.63 | 0.1% | 0.00 | `bench/crypto_hash.cpp SHA256_32b`
| 3.04 | 328,780,166.40 | 0.3% | 35.82 | 9.69 | 3.696 | 0.03 | 0.0% | 0.03 | `bench/crypto_hash.cpp SHA512`
[1] https://github.com/martinus/nanobench
* Adds support for asymptotes
This adds support to calculate asymptotic complexity of a benchmark.
This is similar to #17375, but currently only one asymptote is
supported, and I have added support in the benchmark `ComplexMemPool`
as an example.
Usage is e.g. like this:
```
./bench_bitcoin -filter=ComplexMemPool -asymptote=25,50,100,200,400,600,800
```
This runs the benchmark `ComplexMemPool` several times but with
different complexityN settings. The benchmark can extract that number
and use it accordingly. Here, it's used for `childTxs`. The output is
this:
| complexityN | ns/op | op/s | err% | ins/op | cyc/op | IPC | total | benchmark
|------------:|--------------------:|--------------------:|--------:|----------------:|----------------:|-------:|----------:|:----------
| 25 | 1,064,241.00 | 939.64 | 1.4% | 3,960,279.00 | 2,829,708.00 | 1.400 | 0.01 | `ComplexMemPool`
| 50 | 1,579,530.00 | 633.10 | 1.0% | 6,231,810.00 | 4,412,674.00 | 1.412 | 0.02 | `ComplexMemPool`
| 100 | 4,022,774.00 | 248.58 | 0.6% | 16,544,406.00 | 11,889,535.00 | 1.392 | 0.04 | `ComplexMemPool`
| 200 | 15,390,986.00 | 64.97 | 0.2% | 63,904,254.00 | 47,731,705.00 | 1.339 | 0.17 | `ComplexMemPool`
| 400 | 69,394,711.00 | 14.41 | 0.1% | 272,602,461.00 | 219,014,691.00 | 1.245 | 0.76 | `ComplexMemPool`
| 600 | 168,977,165.00 | 5.92 | 0.1% | 639,108,082.00 | 535,316,887.00 | 1.194 | 1.86 | `ComplexMemPool`
| 800 | 310,109,077.00 | 3.22 | 0.1% |1,149,134,246.00 | 984,620,812.00 | 1.167 | 3.41 | `ComplexMemPool`
| coefficient | err% | complexity
|--------------:|-------:|------------
| 4.78486e-07 | 4.5% | O(n^2)
| 6.38557e-10 | 21.7% | O(n^3)
| 3.42338e-05 | 38.0% | O(n log n)
| 0.000313914 | 46.9% | O(n)
| 0.0129823 | 114.4% | O(log n)
| 0.0815055 | 133.8% | O(1)
The best fitting curve is O(n^2), so the algorithm seems to scale
quadratic with `childTxs` in the range 25 to 800.
8a26848c46 build: Fix m4 escaping (Hennadii Stepanov)
9123ec15db build: Remove extra tokens warning (Hennadii Stepanov)
fded4f48c3 build: Remove duplicated QT_STATICPLUGIN define (Hennadii Stepanov)
05a93d5d96 build: Fix indentation in bitcoin_qt.m4 (Hennadii Stepanov)
ddbb419310 build: Use pkg-config in BITCOIN_QT_CONFIGURE for all hosts (Hennadii Stepanov)
492971de35 build: Fix mingw pkgconfig file and dependency naming (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
This PR makes `bitcoin_qt.m4` to use `pkg-config` for all hosts and removes non-pkg-config paths from it. This is a step towards the idea which was clear [stated](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/8314#issue-76644643) by Cory Fields:
> I believe the consensus is to treat Windows like the others and require pkg-config across the board. We can drop all of the non-pkg-config paths, and simply AC_REQUIRE(PKG_PROG_PKG_CONFIG)
There are two unsolved problems with this PR. If depends is built with `DEBUG=1` the `configure` script fails to pickup Qt:
- for macOS host (similar to, but not the same as #16391)
- for Windows host (regression)
The fix is ~on its way~ submitted in #18298 (as a followup).
Also this PR picks some small improvements from #17820.
ACKs for top commit:
theuni:
Code review ACK 8a26848c46
dongcarl:
Code Review ACK 8a26848c46
laanwj:
Code review ACK 8a26848c46
Tree-SHA512: 3b25990934b939121983df7707997b31d61063b1207d909f539d69494c7cb85212f353092956d09ecffebb9fef28b869914dd1216a596d102fcb9744bb5487f7
af2a145e57 Refactor resource exhaustion test (Troy Giorshev)
5c4648d17b Fix "invalid message size" test (Troy Giorshev)
ff1e7b8844 Move size limits to module-global (Troy Giorshev)
57890abf2c Remove two unneeded tests (Troy Giorshev)
Pull request description:
This PR touches only the p2p_invalid_messages.py functional test module. There are two main goals accomplished here. First, it fixes the "invalid message size" test, which previously made a message that was invalid for multiple reasons. Second, it refactors the file into a single consistent style. This file appears to have originally had two authors, with different styles and some test duplication.
It should now be easier and quicker to understand this module, anticipating the upcoming [BIP324](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/18242) and [AltNet](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/18989) changes.
This should probably go in ahead of #19107, but the two are not strictly related.
ACKs for top commit:
jnewbery:
ACK af2a145e57
MarcoFalke:
re-ACK af2a145e57🍦
Tree-SHA512: 9b57561e142c5eaefac5665f7355c8651670400b4db1a89525d2dfdd20e872d6873c4f6175c4222b6f5a8e5210cf5d6a52da69b925b673a2e2ac30a15d670d1c
45eff751c6 Add functional test for P2P eviction logic of inbound peers (Martin Zumsande)
Pull request description:
This adds a functional test for the eviction logic for inbound peers, which is triggered when the number of maximum connections is exceeded.
The functional test covers eviction protection for peers that have sent us blocks or txns recently, or that have faster pings. I couldn't find a way to test the logic of `CConnman::AttemptToEvictConnection` that is based on netgroup (see #14210 for related discussion)
Fixes#16660 (at least partially).
[Edit: Earlier, this PR also contained a unit test, which was removed after the discussion]
ACKs for top commit:
jonatack:
ACK 45eff751c6
naumenkogs:
Tested ACK 45eff75
fjahr:
re-ACK 45eff751c6
andrewtoth:
re-ACK 45eff751c6
Tree-SHA512: 177208ab6f30dc62da1cc5f51e654f7c9770d8c6b42aca6ae7ecb30e29d3096e04d75739578e7d149a0f29dd92652b4a707e93c0f1be8aa7ed315e6ec3ab07a4
fadf6bd04f refactor: Remove unused request.fHelp (MarcoFalke)
fad889cbf0 wallet: Make RPC help compile-time static (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
Currently calling `help` on a wallet RPC method will either return `help: unknown command: getnewaddress` or the actual help. This runtime dependency of the help is a bug that complicates any tool that relies on documentation. Also, the code that enables the bug is overly complicated and confusing.
The fix is split into two commits:
* First, a commit that can be reviewed with the `--color-moved=dimmed-zebra` option and tested with the included test.
* Second, a commit that removes the complicated and confusing code.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
re-ACK fadf6bd04f
promag:
Tested ACK fadf6bd04f.
Tree-SHA512: 65d4ff400467f57cb8415c30ce30f814dc76c5c157308b7a7409c59ac9db629e65dfba31cd9c389cfe60a008d3d87787ea0a0e0f2671fd65fd190543c915493d
This was left in after #17165, so that anyone who had been compiling
with (already disabled by default) BIP70 would realise that support
had been completely removed in 0.20.0. However we should be able to
remove it for 0.21.0.
dca73941eb scripted-diff: rename node to peer for mininodes (gzhao408)
0474ea25af [test] fix race conditions and test in p2p_filter (gzhao408)
4ef80f0827 [test] sending invalid msgs to node with bloomfilters=0 causes disconnect (gzhao408)
497a619386 [test] add BIP 37 test for node with fRelay=false (gzhao408)
e8acc60156 [test] add mempool msg test for node with bloomfilter enabled (gzhao408)
Pull request description:
This PR adds a few tests that are bloomfilter-related, including behavior for when bloomfilters are turned _off_:
1. Tests p2p message `msg_mempool`: a node that has `peerbloomfilters` enabled should send its mempool (disabled behavior already tested [here](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/master/test/functional/p2p_mempool.py)).
2. Tests that bloomfilter peers with [`fRelay=False`](https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0037.mediawiki#extensions-to-existing-messages) in the `version` message should not receive any invs until they set the filter. The rest is the same as what’s already tested in `p2p_filter.py`.
3. Tests that peers get disconnected if they send `filterload` or `filteradd` p2p messages to a node with bloom filters disabled.
4. Refactor: renames p2p_mempool.py to p2p_nobloomfilter_messages.py.
5. Fixes race conditions in p2p_filter.py
ACKs for top commit:
MarcoFalke:
ACK dca73941eb only changes is restoring accidentally deleted test 🍮
jonatack:
ACK dca73941eb modulo a few nits if you retouch, happy to re-ACK if you take any of them but don't feel obliged to.
Tree-SHA512: 442aeab0755cb8b830251ea170d1d5e6da8ac9029b3276d407a20ee3d588cc61b77b8842368de18c244056316b8c63b911776d6e106bc7c023439ab915b27ad3