This patch improves performance and resource usage around IP addresses that are banned for misbehavior. They're already not actually banned, as connections from them are still allowed, but they are preferred for eviction if the inbound connection slots are full. Stop treating these like manually banned IP ranges, and instead just keep them in a rolling Bloom filter of misbehaving nodes, which isn't persisted to disk or exposed through the ban framework. The effect remains the same: preferred for eviction, avoided for outgoing connections, and not relayed to other peers. Also change the name of this mechanism to better reflect reality; they're not banned, just discouraged. Contains release notes and several interface improvements by John Newbery.
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Changes regarding misbehaving peers
Peers that misbehave (e.g. send us invalid blocks) are now referred to as discouraged nodes in log output, as they're not (and weren't) strictly banned: incoming connections are still allowed from them, but they're preferred for eviction.
Furthermore, a few additional changes are introduced to how discouraged addresses are treated:
-
Discouraging an address does not time out automatically after 24 hours (or the
-bantime
setting). Depending on traffic from other peers, discouragement may time out at an indeterminate time. -
Discouragement is not persisted over restarts.
-
There is no method to list discouraged addresses. They are not returned by the
listbanned
RPC. That RPC also no longer reports theban_reason
field, as"manually added"
is the only remaining option. -
Discouragement cannot be removed with the
setban remove
RPC command. If you need to remove a discouragement, you can remove all discouragements by stop-starting your node.