bb6fcc75d1 refactor: Drop boost::thread stuff in CCheckQueue (Hennadii Stepanov)
6784ac471b bench: Use CCheckQueue local thread pool (Hennadii Stepanov)
dba30695fc test: Use CCheckQueue local thread pool (Hennadii Stepanov)
01511776ac Add local thread pool to CCheckQueue (Hennadii Stepanov)
0ef938685b refactor: Use member initializers in CCheckQueue (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
This PR:
- gets rid of `boost::thread_group` in the `CCheckQueue` class
- allows thread safety annotation usage in the `CCheckQueue` class
- is alternative to #14464 (https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/18710#issuecomment-616618525, https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/18710#issuecomment-617291612)
Also, with this PR (I hope) it could be easier to resurrect a bunch of brilliant ideas from #9938.
Related: #17307
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review ACK bb6fcc75d1
LarryRuane:
ACK bb6fcc75d1
jonatack:
Code review ACK bb6fcc75d1 and verified rebase to master builds cleanly with unit/functional tests green
Tree-SHA512: fddeb720d5a391b48bb4c6fa58ed34ccc3f57862fdb8e641745c021841c8340e35c5126338271446cbd98f40bd5484f27926aa6c3e76fa478ba1efafe72e73c1
fa4435e22f Replace boost::optional with std::optional (MarcoFalke)
fa7e803f3e Remove unused MakeOptional (MarcoFalke)
fadd4029dc psbt: Assert that tx has a value in UpdatePSBTOutput (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
Now that we can use std::optional from the vanilla standard library, drop the third-party boost dependency
ACKs for top commit:
practicalswift:
cr ACK fa4435e22f: patch looks correct!
laanwj:
code review ACK fa4435e22f
hebasto:
ACK fa4435e22f, I have reviewed the code and it looks OK, I agree it can be merged.
Tree-SHA512: 50c5a1a130cac65e043e0177ba5b009fc2ba09343af4e23322ff2eb32184a55f8f2dea66e7a1b9d9acf56bc164eef4e47448750549a07f3b661199ac9bf9afef
34c80d9eee test: Add option to git-subtree-check to do full check, add help (Wladimir J. van der Laan)
Pull request description:
This adds a brief help text to `git-subtree-check.sh` and adds an option to do a full remote check instead of having two different code paths with a successful exit status. Also make it explicit that the CI is not doing this.
ACKs for top commit:
fjahr:
tested ACK 34c80d9eee
Tree-SHA512: 20f672fd3b3c1d633eccf9998fdd738194cdd7d10cc206691f2dcc28bbbf8187b8d06b87814f875a06145b179f5ca1f4f4f9922972be72759cf5ac6e0c11abd1
This adds a brief help text to `git-subtree-check.sh` and adds and an
option to do a full remote check instead of having two different code
paths with a successful exit status. Also make it explicit that the CI
is not doing this.
This moves the CBlockPolicyEstimator to the NodeContext, which get rids
of two globals and allows us to conditionally create the
CBlockPolicyEstimator (and to remove a circular dep).
Signed-off-by: Antoine Poinsot <darosior@protonmail.com>
8f7b930475 Drop the leading 0 from the version number (Andrew Chow)
Pull request description:
Removes the leading 0 from the version number. The minor version, which we had been using as the major version, is now the major version. The revision, which we had been using as the minor version, is now the minor version. The revision number is dropped. The build number is promoted to being part of the version number. This also avoids issues where it was accidentally not included in the version number.
The CLIENT_VERSION remains the same format as previous as previously, as the Major version was 0 so it never actually got included in it.
The user agent string formatter is updated to follow this new versioning.
***
Honestly I'm just tired of all of the people asking for "1.0" that maybe this'll shut them up. Skip the whole 1.0 thing and go straight to version 22.0!
Also, this means that the terminology we commonly use lines up with how the variables are named. So major versions are actually bumping the major version number, etc.
ACKs for top commit:
jnewbery:
Code review ACK 8f7b930475
MarcoFalke:
review ACK 8f7b930475🎻
Tree-SHA512: b5c3fae14d4c0a9c0ab3b1db7c949ecc0ac3537646306b13d98dd0efc17c489cdd16d43f0a24aaa28e9c4a92ea360500e05480a335b03f9fb308010cdd93a436
faaf9c58e4 remove CRPCCommand constructor that takes rpcfn_type function pointer (MarcoFalke)
fa19bb2cd8 remove dead rpc code (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
Remove the CRPCCommand arguments, now that they are asserted to be equal and thus redundant
### Future work
> Here or follow up, makes sense to also assert type of returned UniValue?
Sure, but let's not get ahead of ourselves. I am going to submit any further works as follow-ups, including:
* Removing all python regex linters on the args, now that RPCMan can be used to generate any output, including the cli.cpp table
* Auto-formatting and sanity checking the RPCExamples with RPCMan
* Checking passed-in json in self-check. Removing redundant checks
* Checking returned json against documentation to avoid regressions or false documentation
* Compile the RPC documentation at compile-time to ensure it doesn't change at runtime and is completely static
### Bugs found
* The assert identified issue #18607
* The changes itself fixed bug #19250
ACKs for top commit:
fjahr:
tested ACK faaf9c58e4
promag:
Tested ACK faaf9c58e4.
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK faaf9c58e4. Two obviously good simplifications.
Tree-SHA512: 5de3b440f7b2ed2c3e86655d4f0e2e5df9c67e8ce3c7817d5ea5311d1a38690f2f3e28fab41aad6936be9fc884326d037e5f19e85d4d2fe281474dada13911ee
46756a6987 depends: Fix PYTHONPATH setting in config.site.in (Carl Dong)
618cbd2c1a lint: Also lint files with shellcheck directive (Carl Dong)
6c7e8f067d depends: Allow relative CONFIG_SITE path env var (Carl Dong)
Pull request description:
This changeset:
1. Allows the `CONFIG_SITE` env var to be a relative path rather than requiring an absolute one
2. Enables linting of the `config.site.in` file with `shellcheck` in our linting scripts
3. Sets the `PYTHONPATH` var sensibly in `config.site.in`
Please see commit messages for more details
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
ACK 46756a6987
Tree-SHA512: 744089b9f6e5604e56466d9a3e64563f9183a70f7e300ac9ae6248f0f17c0b53fe28a2c41d43c5ffe5da825f53c2ca21f21aacba0579442da3056fb0c4b81454
Removes the leading 0 from the version number. The minor version, which
we had been using as the major version, is now the major version. The
revision, which we had been using as the minor version, is now the minor
version. The revision number is dropped. The build number is promoted to
being part of the version number. This also avoids issues where it was
accidentally not included in the version number.
The CLIENT_VERSION remains the same format as previous as previously,
the Major version was 0 so that was never a factor in CLIENT_VERSION.
Files like config.site.in are not referenced by any other script in our
tree, so we need to mark it manually with a "shellcheck shell="
directive and make sure that shellcheck is run on them.
3491bf358a test: Mention commit id in scripted diff error (Wladimir J. van der Laan)
Pull request description:
Add commit id to make spotting the issue easier.
ACKs for top commit:
robot-dreams:
ACK 3491bf358a
sipa:
utACK 3491bf358a
hebasto:
~ACK~ Concept ACK 3491bf358a, should help in situations like https://travis-ci.org/github/bitcoin/bitcoin/jobs/732481553
Tree-SHA512: 1ae66fa760f9e5d52e029bae71f6b5863f1efd7b95de3723ea09290944c9d7687f5ec6927aa115a3aebd6f2b993baa0c2433975c6ad5cd2858089013362eb599
e36f802fa4 lint: add C++ code linter (fanquake)
c4be50fea3 remove usage of boost::bind (fanquake)
Pull request description:
`boost::bind` usage was removed in #13743. However a new usage snuck in as
part of 2bc4c3eaf9 (#15225).
ACKs for top commit:
hebasto:
ACK e36f802fa4
practicalswift:
ACK e36f802fa4 -- patch looks correct
Tree-SHA512: 2b0387c5443c184bcbf7df4849db1ed1296ff82c7b4ff0aff18334a400e56a472a972d18234d3866531a088d7a8da64688e58dc9f15daaad4048697c759d55ce
3340dbadd3 Remove -zapwallettxes (Andrew Chow)
Pull request description:
It's not clear what use there is to keeping `-zapwallettxes` given that it's intended usage has been superseded by `abandontransaction`. So this removes it outright.
Alternative to #19700
ACKs for top commit:
meshcollider:
utACK 3340dbadd3
fanquake:
ACK 3340dbadd3 - remaining manpage references will get cleaned up pre-release.
Tree-SHA512: 3e58e1ef6f4f94894d012b93e88baba3fb9c2ad75b8349403f9ce95b80b50b0b4f443cb623cf76c355930db109f491b3442be3aa02972e841450ce52cf545fc8
-zapwallettxes is made a hidden option to inform users that it is
removed and they should be using abandontransaction to do the stuck
transaction thing.
ca185cf5a1 doc: Document differences in bitcoind and bitcoin-qt locale handling (practicalswift)
Pull request description:
Document differences in `bitcoind` and `bitcoin-qt` locale handling.
Since this seems to be the root cause to the locale dependency issues we've seen over the years I thought it was worth documenting :)
Note that 1.) `QLocale` (used by Qt), 2.) C locale (used by locale-sensitive C standard library functions/POSIX functions and some parts of the C++ standard library such as `std::to_string`) and 3.) C++ locale (used by the C++ input/output library) are three separate things. This comment is about the perhaps surprising interference with the C locale (2) that takes place as part of the Qt initialization.
ACKs for top commit:
hebasto:
re-ACK ca185cf5a1
Tree-SHA512: e51c32f3072c506b0029a001d8b108125e1acb4f2b6a48a6be721ddadda9da0ae77a9b39ff33f9d9eebabe2244c1db09e8502e3e7012d7a5d40d98e96da0dc44
31cf68a3ad [util] add RunCommandParseJSON (Sjors Provoost)
c17f54ee53 [ci] use boost::process (Sjors Provoost)
32128ba682 [doc] include Doxygen comments for HAVE_BOOST_PROCESS (Sjors Provoost)
3c84d85f7d [build] msvc: add boost::process (Sjors Provoost)
c47e4bbf0b [build] make boost-process opt-in (Sjors Provoost)
929cda5470 configure: add ax_boost_process (Sjors Provoost)
8314c23d7b [depends] boost: patch unused variable in boost_process (Sjors Provoost)
Pull request description:
Prerequisite for external signer support in #16546. Big picture overview in [this gist](https://gist.github.com/Sjors/29d06728c685e6182828c1ce9b74483d).
This adds a new dependency [boost process](https://github.com/boostorg/process/tree/boost-1.64.0). This is part of Boost since 1.64 which is part of `depends`. Because the minimum Boost version is 1.47, this functionality is skipped for older versions of Boost.
Use `./configure --with-boost-process` to opt in, which checks for the presence of Boost::Process.
We add `UniValue runCommandParseJSON(const std::string& strCommand)` to `system.{h,cpp}` which calls an arbitrary command and processes the JSON returned by it. This is currently only called by the test suite.
~For testing purposes this adds a new regtest-only RPC method `runcommand`, as well as `test/mocks/command.py` used by functional tests.~ (this is no longer the case)
TODO:
- [ ] review boost process in #15440
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK 31cf68a3ad
hebasto:
re-ACK 31cf68a3ad, only rebased (verified with `git range-diff`) and removed an unintentional tab character since the [previous](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/15382#pullrequestreview-458371035) review.
meshcollider:
Very light utACK 31cf68a3ad, although I am not very confident with build stuff.
promag:
Code review ACK 31cf68a3ad, don't mind the nit.
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK 31cf68a3ad. I left some comments below that could be ignored or followed up later. The current change is clean and comprehensive.
Tree-SHA512: c506e747014b263606e1f538ed4624a8ad7bcf4e025cb700c12cc5739964e254dc04a2bbb848996b170e2ccec3fbfa4fe9e2b3976b191222cfb82fc3e6ab182d
284a969cc0 Linter to check commit message formatting (Amir Ghorbanian)
Pull request description:
Write linter to check that commit messages have a new line before the body or no body at all. fixes issue #19091.
ACKs for top commit:
troygiorshev:
ACK 284a969cc0 Reviewed, manually tested. Works great!
fjahr:
tested ACK 284a969cc0
adamjonas:
utACK 284a969cc0
Tree-SHA512: fa278f090780b54e4fa6e2967a62b4c1a4da55d112ec1ad6dd7e1181ac490c5c1af0165524b5781b463fdd6d0f79fd3d95b5160184e6eca432ccff1189f77390
78c312c983 Replace current benchmarking framework with nanobench (Martin Ankerl)
Pull request description:
Replace current benchmarking framework with nanobench
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
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
ACK 78c312c983
Tree-SHA512: 9e18770b18b6f95a7d0105a4a5497d31cf4eb5efe6574f4482f6f1b4c88d7e0946b9a4a1e9e8e6ecbf41a3f2d7571240677dcb45af29a6f0584e89b25f32e49e
Write linter to check that commit messages have a new line before the body or no body at all.
reference: gist.github.com/agnivade/67b42d664ece2d4210c7
Fixes issue #19091.
a4a3fc4cd2 doc: improve subtree check instructions (Sjors Provoost)
Pull request description:
Running `git-subtree-check.sh` requires adding the subtree repository as a remote. I learned that several years ago and then forgot again.
This PR also improves the error message if the subtree commit can't be found.
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
ACK a4a3fc4cd2
fanquake:
ACK a4a3fc4cd2 - this looks ok.
Tree-SHA512: 959bd923726c172d17f9f97f8a56988bf2df5a94d3131e5152a66150b941394cee9e82fdc6b86e09c0ba91d123a496599f07ca454212168d8d301738394c12c8
fab80fef61 refactor: Remove unused EnsureChainman (MarcoFalke)
fa34587f1c scripted-diff: Replace EnsureChainman with Assert in unit tests (MarcoFalke)
fa6ef701ad util: Add Assert identity function (MarcoFalke)
fa457fbd33 move-only: Move NDEBUG compile time check to util/check (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
The utility function 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: https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/18923/files#diff-fdb2a1a1d8bc790fcddeb6cf5a42ac55R503 . Instead of silently relying on that assumption, `Assert` can be used to abort the program and avoid UB should the assumption ever be violated.
ACKs for top commit:
promag:
Tested ACK fab80fef61.
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK fab80fef61
Tree-SHA512: 830fba10152ba17d47c4dd42809c7e26f9fe6d38e17a2d5b3f054fd644a5c4c9841286ac421ec9bb28cea9f5faeb659740fcf00de6cc589d423fee7694c42d16
54b5eb2b14 tests: Add std::locale::global to list of locale dependent functions in lint-locale-dependence.sh (practicalswift)
Pull request description:
Add `std::locale::global` to list of locale dependent functions in `lint-locale-dependence.sh`.
We currently flag `setlocale(...)` as locale dependent, but prior to this commit we didn't flag
`std::locale::global(...)` as such.
In addition to setting the global C++ locale `std::locale::global(...)` also does the equivalent of `std::setlocale(LC_ALL, ...);`.
Thus the functionality of `std::locale::global(...)` is a superset of `setlocale(...)` :)
ACKs for top commit:
MarcoFalke:
ACK 54b5eb2b14, fine with me
Tree-SHA512: bcf2f1c765add6ed09c3debca968b75eeea81602503f109c0f76ec98635911d453f4834a39e741703c3d470f123178e8952191a9b1a3429394b99c07765dcf1f
optional_last_value, which does not throw, has replaced optional_value as
boost's default combiner. Besides being better supported, it also doesn't
trigger gcc's -Wmaybe-unitialized warning, presumably because exceptions no
longer bubble-up out of signals:
```bash
boost/signals2/last_value.hpp:54:36: warning: '*((void*)& value +1)' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Wmaybe-uninitialized]
if(value) return value.get();
```
The change in default happened in Boost 1.39.0 (along with the
introduction of the signals 2 library. More information is available here:
https://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_73_0/doc/html/signals2/rationale.html#id-1.3.36.9.4
and here:
https://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_73_0/doc/html/boost/signals2/optional_last_value.html
Co-authored-by: fanquake <fanquake@gmail.com>
Updates Python linters, spellchecking, and ShellCheck versions. The PR links are updated for
the dependency versions in test/README.md. ShellCheck SC2230 removed to align with with new
behaviour in v0.7.1.
Fixes#19346.
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.
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.