d1684beabe fees: Pass in a filepath instead of referencing gArgs (Carl Dong)
9a3d825c30 init: Remove redundant -*mempool*, -limit* queries (Carl Dong)
6c5c60c412 mempool: Use m_limit for UpdateTransactionsFromBlock (Carl Dong)
9e93b10301 node/ifaces: Use existing MemPoolLimits (Carl Dong)
38af2bcf35 mempoolaccept: Use limits from mempool in constructor (Carl Dong)
9333427014 mempool: Introduce (still-unused) MemPoolLimits (Carl Dong)
716bb5fbd3 scripted-diff: Rename anc/desc size limit vars to indicate SI unit (Carl Dong)
1ecc77321d scripted-diff: Rename DEFAULT_MEMPOOL_EXPIRY to indicate time unit (Carl Dong)
aa9141cd81 mempool: Pass in -mempoolexpiry instead of referencing gArgs (Carl Dong)
51c7a41a5e init: Only determine maxmempool once (Carl Dong)
386c9472c8 mempool: Make GetMinFee() with custom size protected (Carl Dong)
82f00de7a6 mempool: Pass in -maxmempool instead of referencing gArgs (Carl Dong)
f1941e8bfd pool: Add and use MemPoolOptions, ApplyArgsManOptions (Carl Dong)
0199bd35bb fuzz/rbf: Add missing TestingSetup (Carl Dong)
ccbaf546a6 scripted-diff: Rename DEFAULT_MAX_MEMPOOL_SIZE to indicate SI unit (Carl Dong)
fc02f77ca6 ArgsMan: Add Get*Arg functions returning optional (Carl Dong)
Pull request description:
This is part of the `libbitcoinkernel` project: #24303, https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/projects/18
-----
As mentioned in the Stage 1 Step 2 description of [the `libbitcoinkernel` project](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/24303), `ArgsManager` will not be part of `libbitcoinkernel`. Therefore, it is important that we remove any dependence on `ArgsManager` by code that will be part of `libbitcoinkernel`. This is the first in a series of PRs aiming to achieve this.
This PR removes `CTxMemPool+MempoolAccept`'s dependency on `ArgsManager` by introducing a `CTxMemPool::Options` struct, which is used to specify `CTxMemPool`'s various options at construction time.
These options are:
- `-maxmempool` -> `CTxMemPool::Options::max_size`
- `-mempoolexpiry` -> `CTxMemPool::Options::expiry`
- `-limitancestorcount` -> `CTxMemPool::Options::limits::ancestor_count`
- `-limitancestorsize` -> `CTxMemPool::Options::limits::ancestor_size`
- `-limitdescendantcount` -> `CTxMemPool::Options::limits::descendant_count`
- `-limitdescendantsize` -> `CTxMemPool::Options::limits::descendant_size`
More context can be gleaned from the commit messages. The important commits are:
- 56eb479ded8bfb2ef635bb6f3b484f9d5952c70d "pool: Add and use MemPoolOptions, ApplyArgsManOptions"
- a1e08b70f3068f4e8def1c630d8f50cd54da7832 "mempool: Pass in -maxmempool instead of referencing gArgs"
- 6f4bf3ede5812b374828f08fc728ceded2f10024 "mempool: Pass in -mempoolexpiry instead of referencing gArgs"
- 5958a7fe4806599fc620ee8c1a881ca10fa2dd16 "mempool: Introduce (still-unused) MemPoolLimits"
Reviewers: Help needed in the following commits (see commit messages):
- a1e08b70f3068f4e8def1c630d8f50cd54da7832 "mempool: Pass in -maxmempool instead of referencing gArgs"
- 0695081a797e9a5d7787b78b0f8289dafcc6bff7 "node/ifaces: Use existing MemPoolLimits"
Note to Reviewers: There are perhaps an infinite number of ways to architect `CTxMemPool::Options`, the current one tries to keep it simple, usable, and flexible. I hope we don't spend too much time arguing over the design here since that's not the point. In the case that you're 100% certain that a different design is strictly better than this one in every regard, please show us a fully-implemented branch.
-----
TODO:
- [x] Use the more ergonomic `CTxMemPool::Options` where appropriate
- [x] Doxygen comments for `ApplyArgsManOptions`, `MemPoolOptions`
-----
Questions for Reviewers:
1. Should we use `std::chrono::seconds` for `CTxMemPool::Options::expiry` and `CTxMemPool::m_expiry` instead of an `int64_t`? Something else? (`std::chrono::hours`?)
2. Should I merge `CTxMemPool::Limits` inside `CTxMemPool::Options`?
ACKs for top commit:
MarcoFalke:
ACK d1684beabe🍜
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK d1684beabe. Just minor cleanups since last review, mostly switching to brace initialization
Tree-SHA512: 2c138e52d69f61c263f1c3648f01c801338a8f576762c815f478ef5148b8b2f51e91ded5c1be915e678c0b14f6cfba894b82afec58d999d39a7bb7c914736e0b
Better to be explicit when it comes to sizes to avoid unintentional
bugs. We use MB and KB all over the place.
-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
find_regex="DEFAULT_(ANCESTOR|DESCENDANT)_SIZE_LIMIT" \
&& git grep -l -E "$find_regex" \
| xargs sed -i -E "s@$find_regex@\0_KVB@g"
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
- Store the mempool size limit (-maxmempool) in CTxMemPool as a member.
- Remove the requirement to explicitly specify a mempool size limit for
CTxMemPool::GetMinFee(...) and LimitMempoolSize(...), just use the
stored mempool size limit where possible.
- Remove all now-unnecessary instances of:
gArgs.GetIntArg("-maxmempool", DEFAULT_MAX_MEMPOOL_SIZE_MB) * 1000000
The code change in CChainState::GetCoinsCacheSizeState() is correct
since the coinscache should not repurpose "extra" mempool memory
headroom for itself if the mempool doesn't even exist.
Better to be explicit when it comes to sizes to avoid unintentional
bugs. We use MB and KB all over the place.
-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
find_regex="DEFAULT_MAX_MEMPOOL_SIZE" \
&& git grep -l -E "$find_regex" \
| xargs sed -i -E "s@$find_regex@\0_MB@g"
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
Bitcoin core has a standardness rule for max satisfaction script sig size.
This PR adds to the policy header file so that it is documented along with
along policy rules. The initial reasoning that 1650 is an implicit
limit(would not reached assuming all other policy rules are being
followed) is outdated.
As we now know, bitcoin transactions can have spend conditions are more than
just signatures and there may exist p2sh transactions involving 100 byte
preimages that maybe non-standard because of this rule. Because this
rule is no longer implicit, we should explicitly document it in policy
header file
This adds a `TxoutType::WITNESS_V1_TAPROOT` for P2TR outputs, and permits spending
them in standardness rules. No corresponding `CTxDestination` is added for it,
as that isn't needed until we want wallet integration. The taproot validation flags
are also enabled for mempool transactions, and standardness rules are added
(stack item size limit, no annexes).
-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
# General rename helper: $1 -> $2
rename_global() { sed -i "s/\<$1\>/$2/g" $(git grep -l "$1"); }
# Helper to rename TxoutType $1
rename_value() {
sed -i "s/ TX_$1,/ $1,/g" src/script/standard.h; # First strip the prefix in the definition (header)
rename_global TX_$1 "TxoutType::$1"; # Then replace globally
}
# Change the type globally to bring it in line with the style-guide
# (clsses are UpperCamelCase)
rename_global 'enum txnouttype' 'enum class TxoutType'
rename_global 'txnouttype' 'TxoutType'
# Now rename each enum value
rename_value 'NONSTANDARD'
rename_value 'PUBKEY'
rename_value 'PUBKEYHASH'
rename_value 'SCRIPTHASH'
rename_value 'MULTISIG'
rename_value 'NULL_DATA'
rename_value 'WITNESS_V0_KEYHASH'
rename_value 'WITNESS_V0_SCRIPTHASH'
rename_value 'WITNESS_UNKNOWN'
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
Remove last few instances of accesses to node global variables from wallet
code. Also remove accesses to node globals from code in policy/policy.cpp that
isn't actually called by wallet code, but does get linked into wallet code.
This is the last change needed to allow bitcoin-wallet tool to be linked
without depending on libbitcoin_server.a, to ensure wallet code doesn't access
node global state and avoid bugs like
https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/15557#discussion_r267735431
This moves the following policy settings functions and globals to a new
src/policy/settings unit in lib_server:
- `incrementalRelayFee`
- `dustRelayFee`
- `nBytesPerSigOp`
- `fIsBareMultisigStd`
These settings are only required by the node and should not be accessed
by other libraries.
A transaction with 1 segwit input and 1 P2WPHK output has non-witness size of 82 bytes. Anything smaller than this have unnecessary malloc overhead and are not relayed/mined.
This disables OP_CODESEPARATOR in non-segwit scripts (even in an unexecuted branch), and makes a positive FindAndDelete result invalid. This ensures that the scriptCode serialized in SignatureHash() is always the same as the script passing to the EvalScript.
b224a47a1 Add address_types test (Pieter Wuille)
7ee54fd7c Support downgrading after recovered keypool witness keys (Pieter Wuille)
940a21932 SegWit wallet support (Pieter Wuille)
f37c64e47 Implicitly know about P2WPKH redeemscripts (Pieter Wuille)
57273f2b3 [test] Serialize CTransaction with witness by default (Pieter Wuille)
cf2c0b6f5 Support P2WPKH and P2SH-P2WPKH in dumpprivkey (Pieter Wuille)
37c03d3e0 Support P2WPKH addresses in create/addmultisig (Pieter Wuille)
3eaa003c8 Extend validateaddress information for P2SH-embedded witness (Pieter Wuille)
30a27dc5b Expose method to find key for a single-key destination (Pieter Wuille)
985c79552 Improve witness destination types and use them more (Pieter Wuille)
cbe197470 [refactor] GetAccount{PubKey,Address} -> GetAccountDestination (Pieter Wuille)
0c8ea6380 Abstract out IsSolvable from Witnessifier (Pieter Wuille)
Pull request description:
This implements a minimum viable implementation of SegWit wallet support, based on top of #11389, and includes part of the functionality from #11089.
Two new configuration options are added:
* `-addresstype`, with options `legacy`, `p2sh`, and `bech32`. It controls what kind of addresses are produced by `getnewaddress`, `getaccountaddress`, and `createmultisigaddress`.
* `-changetype`, with the same options, and by default equal to `-addresstype`, that controls what kind of change is used.
All wallet private and public keys can be used for any type of address. Support for address types dependent on different derivation paths will need a major overhaul of how our internal detection of outputs work. I expect that that will happen for a next major version.
The above also applies to imported keys, as having a distinction there but not for normal operations is a disaster for testing, and probably for comprehension of users. This has some ugly effects, like needing to associate the provided label to `importprivkey` with each style address for the corresponding key.
To deal with witness outputs requiring a corresponding redeemscript in wallet, three approaches are used:
* All SegWit addresses created through `getnewaddress` or multisig RPCs explicitly get their redeemscripts added to the wallet file. This means that downgrading after creating a witness address will work, as long as the wallet file is up to date.
* All SegWit keys in the wallet get an _implicit_ redeemscript added, without it being written to the file. This means recovery of an old backup will work, as long as you use new software.
* All keypool keys that are seen used in transactions explicitly get their redeemscripts added to the wallet files. This means that downgrading after recovering from a backup that includes a witness address will work.
These approaches correspond to solutions 3a, 1a, and 5a respectively from https://gist.github.com/sipa/125cfa1615946d0c3f3eec2ad7f250a2. As argued there, there is no full solution for dealing with the case where you both downgrade and restore a backup, so that's also not implemented.
`dumpwallet`, `importwallet`, `importmulti`, `signmessage` and `verifymessage` don't work with SegWit addresses yet. They're remaining TODOs, for this PR or a follow-up. Because of that, several tests unexpectedly run with `-addresstype=legacy` for now.
Tree-SHA512: d425dbe517c0422061ab8dacdc3a6ae47da071450932ed992c79559d922dff7b2574a31a8c94feccd3761c1dffb6422c50055e6dca8e3cf94a169bc95e39e959
No sensible user will ever keep the default settings here, so not
having sensible defaults only serves to screw users who are
paying less attention, which makes for terrible defaults.
* This removes block-size-limiting code in favor of GBT clients
doing the limiting themselves (if at all).
* -blockmaxsize is deprecated and only used to calculate an implied
blockmaxweight, addressing confusion from multiple users.
* getmininginfo's currentblocksize return value was returning
garbage values, and has been removed, also removing a
GetSerializeSize call in some block generation inner loops and
potentially addressing some performance edge cases.
This redefines dust to be the value of an output such that it would
cost that value in fees to (create and) spend the output at the dust
relay rate. The previous definition was that it would cost 1/3 of the
value. The default dust relay rate is correspondingly increased to
3000 sat/kB so the actual default dust output value of 546 satoshis
for a non-segwit output remains unchanged. This commit is a refactor
only unless a dustrelayfee is passed on the commandline in which case
that number now needs to be increased by a factor of 3 to get the same
behavior. -dustrelayfee is a hidden command line option.
Note: It's not exactly a refactor due to edge case changes in rounding
as evidenced by the required change to the unit test.
Three categories of modifications:
1)
1 instance of 'The Bitcoin Core developers \n',
1 instance of 'the Bitcoin Core developers\n',
3 instances of 'Bitcoin Core Developers\n', and
12 instances of 'The Bitcoin developers\n'
are made uniform with the 443 instances of 'The Bitcoin Core developers\n'
2)
3 instances of 'BitPay, Inc\.\n' are made uniform with the other 6
instances of 'BitPay Inc\.\n'
3)
4 instances where there was no '(c)' between the 'Copyright' and the year
where it deviates from the style of the local directory.