By moving the 'StartIndexes()' call into the 'initload'
thread, we can remove the threads active wait. Optimizing
the available resources.
The only difference with the current state is that now the
indexes threads will only be started when they can process
work and not before it.
The thread does not only load blocks, it loads the mempool and,
in a future commit, will start the indexes as well.
Also, renamed the 'ThreadImport' function to 'ImportBlocks'
And the 'm_load_block' class member to 'm_thread_load'.
-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
sed -i "s/ThreadImport/ImportBlocks/g" $(git grep -l ThreadImport -- ':!/doc/')
sed -i "s/loadblk/initload/g" $(git grep -l loadblk -- ':!/doc/release-notes/')
sed -i "s/m_load_block/m_thread_load/g" $(git grep -l m_load_block)
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
7ecc29a0b7 test: wallet, add coverage for addressbook migration (furszy)
a277f8357a wallet: migration bugfix, persist empty labels (furszy)
1b64f6498c wallet: migration bugfix, clone 'send' record label to all wallets (furszy)
Pull request description:
Addressing two specific bugs encountered during the wallet migration process, related to the address book, and improves the test coverage for it.
Bug 1: Non-Cloning of External 'Send' Records
The external 'send' records were not being correctly cloned to all wallets.
Bug 2: Persistence of Empty Labels
As address book entries without associated db label records can be treated as change (the `label` field inside the `CAddressBookData` class is optional, `nullopt` labels make `CAddressBookData ::IsChange()` return true), we must persist empty labels during the migration process.
The user might have called `setlabel` with an "" string for an external address and that must be retained during migration.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK 7ecc29a0b7
Tree-SHA512: b8a8483a4178a37c49af11eb7ba8a82ca95e54a6cd799e155e33f9fbe7f37b259e28372c77d6944d46b6765f9eaca6b8ca8d1cdd9d223120a3653e4e41d0b6b7
fa1e27fe8e fuzz: Generate rpc fuzz targets individually (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
The `rpc` fuzz target was added more than two years ago in e45863166f. However, the bug https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/27913 was only found recently. Thus, it is pretty clear that fuzz engines can't deal with a search space that is too broad and can be extended in too many directions.
Fix that by limiting the search space to each RPC method name and then iterate over all names, instead of letting the fuzz engine do the iteration.
With this, the bug can be found in seconds, as opposed to years of CPU time (or never).
ACKs for top commit:
brunoerg:
ACK fa1e27fe8e
dergoegge:
ACK fa1e27fe8e
Tree-SHA512: 45ccba842367650d010320603153276b1b303deda9ba8c6bb31a4d2473b00aa5bca866db95f541485d65efd8276e2575026968c037872ef344fa33cf45bcdcd7
6eb33bd0c2 kernel: Add fatalError method to notifications (TheCharlatan)
7320db96f8 kernel: Add flushError method to notifications (TheCharlatan)
3fa9094b92 scripted-diff: Rename FatalError to FatalErrorf (TheCharlatan)
edb55e2777 kernel: Pass interrupt reference to chainman (TheCharlatan)
e2d680a32d util: Add SignalInterrupt class and use in shutdown.cpp (TheCharlatan)
Pull request description:
Get rid of all `ShutdownRequested` calls in validation code by introducing an interrupt object that applications can use to cancel long-running kernel operations.
Replace all `AbortNode` calls in validation code with new fatal error and flush error notifications so kernel applications can be notified about failures and choose how to handle them.
---
This pull request is part of the `libbitcoinkernel` project https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/27587https://github.com/orgs/bitcoin/projects/3 and more specifically its "Step 2: Decouple most non-consensus code from libbitcoinkernel".
The pull request mostly allows dropping the kernel dependency on shutdown.cpp. The only dependency left after this is a `StartShutdown` call which will be removed in followup PR https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/27711. This PR also drops the last reference to the `uiInterface` global in kernel code. The process of moving the `uiInterface` out of the kernel was started in https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/27636.
This pull request contains a subset of patches originally proposed in #27711. It will be part of a series of changes required to make handling of interrupts (or in other words the current shutdown procedure) in the kernel library more transparent and less reliable on global mutable state. The set of patches contained here was originally proposed by @ryanofsky [here](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/27711#issuecomment-1580779869).
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
light ACK 6eb33bd0c2
hebasto:
ACK 6eb33bd0c2, I have reviewed the code and it looks OK.
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK 6eb33bd0c2. No changes since last review other than rebase.
Tree-SHA512: 7d2d05fa4805428a09466d43c11ae32946cbb25aa5e741b1eec9cd142e4de4bb311e13ebf1bb125ae490c9d08274f2d56c93314e10f3d69e7fec7445e504987c
8fbb6e99bf wallet: Give deprecation warning when loading a legacy wallet (Andrew Chow)
Pull request description:
Next step in legacy wallet deprecation.
ACKs for top commit:
S3RK:
reACK 8fbb6e99bf
jonatack:
re-ACK 8fbb6e99bf
Tree-SHA512: 902984b09452926cf199f06e5fb56e4985325cdd5e0dcc829992158488f42d5fbc33e9a30a29303feac24c8315193e8d31712022e2a0503abd6b67169a0027f4
4f4d039a98 test: add ellswift test vectors from BIP324 (stratospher)
a31287718a test: Add ellswift unit tests (stratospher)
714fb2c02a test: Add python ellswift implementation to test framework (stratospher)
Pull request description:
Built on top of https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/26222.
This PR introduces Elligator swift encoding and decoding in the functional test framework. It's used in #24748 for writing p2p encryption tests.
ACKs for top commit:
sipa:
ACK 4f4d039a98
theStack:
ACK 4f4d039a98🐊
Tree-SHA512: 32bc8e88f715f2cd67dc04cd38db92680872072cb3775478e2c30da89aa2da2742992779ea14da2f1faca09228942cfbd86d6957402b24bf560244b389e03540
6c97757a48 script: appease spelling linter (Jon Atack)
1316119ce7 script: update ignored-words.txt (Jon Atack)
146c861da2 script: update linter dependencies (Jon Atack)
92408224a4 test: fix PEP484 no implicit optional argument types errors (Jon Atack)
f86a301433 script, test: add missing python type annotations (Jon Atack)
Pull request description:
With these updates, `./test/lint/lint-python.py` and `./test/lint/lint-spelling.py` should be green again for developers using relatively recent Python dependencies, in particular mypy 0.991 (released 11/2022) and later. Please see the commit messages for details.
ACKs for top commit:
fanquake:
ACK 6c97757a48
Tree-SHA512: 8a46a4d36d5978affdcecf4f2ace20ca1b52d483e098304911a2169afe60ccb9b042fa90c04b762d94f3ce53d2cafe6f24476ae839867a770c7f31e7e7242d99
Fix warnings for these files when ./test/lint/lint-python.py is run using
mypy 0.991 (released 11/2022) and later:
$ test/lint/lint-python.py
test/functional/test_framework/coverage.py:23: error: Incompatible default for argument "coverage_logfile" (default has type "None", argument has type "str") [assignment]
test/functional/test_framework/coverage.py:23: note: PEP 484 prohibits implicit Optional. Accordingly, mypy has changed its default to no_implicit_optional=True
test/functional/test_framework/util.py:318: error: Incompatible default for argument "timeout" (default has type "None", argument has type "int") [assignment]
test/functional/test_framework/util.py:318: note: PEP 484 prohibits implicit Optional. Accordingly, mypy has changed its default to no_implicit_optional=True
test/functional/test_framework/util.py:318: error: Incompatible default for argument "coveragedir" (default has type "None", argument has type "str") [assignment]
test/functional/interface_rest.py:67: error: Incompatible default for argument "query_params" (default has type "None", argument has type "dict[str, Any]") [assignment]
test/functional/interface_rest.py:67: note: PEP 484 prohibits implicit Optional. Accordingly, mypy has changed its default to no_implicit_optional=True
Verified using https://github.com/hauntsaninja/no_implicit_optional
For details, see:
https://mypy-lang.blogspot.com/2022/11/mypy-0990-released.html
Fix warnings for these files when ./test/lint/lint-python.py is run using
mypy 0.991 (released 11/2022) and later:
"By default the bodies of untyped functions are not checked, consider using
--check-untyped-defs [annotation-unchecked]"
For details, see:
https://mypy-lang.blogspot.com/2022/11/mypy-0990-released.html
fae7c50d20 test: Run fuzz tests on macOS (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
Any reason not to?
ACKs for top commit:
jamesob:
Github ACK fae7c50d20
dergoegge:
utACK fae7c50d20
Tree-SHA512: e45122d73fafb17cea312258314b826cb0745e08daadd28465f687ec02d4c127d2f8cbe20179a9fff5712038850c02c968abb4838fa088b7555e28709317d3a3
aaaa3aefbd test: Use TestNode *_path properties where possible (MarcoFalke)
dddd89962b test: Allow pathlib.Path as RPC argument via authproxy (MarcoFalke)
fa41614a0a scripted-diff: Use wallets_path and chain_path where possible (MarcoFalke)
fa493fadfb test: Use wallet_dir lambda in wallet_multiwallet test where possible (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
It seems inconsistent, fragile and verbose to:
* Call `get_datadir_path` to recreate the path that already exists as field in TestNode
* Call `os.path.join` with the hardcoded chain name or `self.chain` to recreate the TestNode `chain_path` property
* Sometimes even use the hardcoded node dir name (`"node0"`)
Fix all issues by using the TestNode properties.
ACKs for top commit:
willcl-ark:
re-ACK aaaa3aefbd
theStack:
Code-review ACK aaaa3aefbd🌊
Tree-SHA512: e4720278085beb8164e1fe6c1aa18f601558a9263494ce69a83764c1487007de63ebb51d1b1151862dc4d5b49ded6162a5c1553cd30ea1c28627d447db4d8e72
d4fb58ae8a test: EC: optimize scalar multiplication of G by using lookup table (Sebastian Falbesoner)
1830dd8820 test: add secp256k1 module with FE (field element) and GE (group element) classes (Pieter Wuille)
Pull request description:
This PR rewrites a portion of `test_framework/key.py`, in a compatible way, by introducing classes that encapsulate field element and group element logic, in an attempt to be more readable and reusable.
To maximize readability, the group element logic does not use Jacobian coordinates. Instead, group elements just store (affine) X and Y coordinates directly. To compensate for the performance loss this causes, field elements are represented as fractions. This undoes most, but not all, of the performance loss, and there is a few % slowdown (as measured in `feature_taproot.py`, which heavily uses this).
The upside is that the implementation for group laws (point doubling, addition, subtraction, ...) is very close to the mathematical description of elliptic curves, and this extends to potential future extensions (e.g. ElligatorSwift as needed by #27479).
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK d4fb58ae8a
theStack:
re-ACK d4fb58ae8a
stratospher:
tested ACK d4fb58a. really liked how this PR makes the secp256k1 code in the tests more intuitive and easier to follow!
Tree-SHA512: 9e0d65d7de0d4fb35ad19a1c19da7f41e5e1db33631df898c6d18ea227258a8ba80c893dab862b0fa9b0fb2efd0406ad4a72229ee26d7d8d733dee1d56947f18
FatalError replaces what previously was the AbortNode function in
shutdown.cpp.
This commit is part of the libbitcoinkernel project and further removes
the shutdown's and, more generally, the kernel library's dependency on
interface_ui with a kernel notification method. By removing interface_ui
from the kernel library, its dependency on boost is reduced to just
boost::multi_index. At the same time it also takes a step towards
de-globalising the interrupt infrastructure.
Co-authored-by: Russell Yanofsky <russ@yanofsky.org>
Co-authored-by: TheCharlatan <seb.kung@gmail.com>
This is done in preparation for the next commit where a new FatalError
function is introduced. FatalErrorf follows common convention to append
'f' for functions accepting format arguments.
-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
sed -i 's/FatalError/FatalErrorf/g' $( git grep -l 'FatalError')
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
32e2ffc393 Remove the syscall sandbox (fanquake)
Pull request description:
After initially being merged in #20487, it's no-longer clear that an internal syscall sandboxing mechanism is something that Bitcoin Core should have/maintain, especially when compared to better maintained/supported alterantives, i.e [firejail](https://github.com/netblue30/firejail).
There is more related discussion in #24771.
Note that given where it's used, the sandbox also gets dragged into the kernel.
If it's removed, this should not require any sort of deprecation, as this was only ever an opt-in, experimental feature.
Closes#24771.
ACKs for top commit:
davidgumberg:
crACK 32e2ffc393
achow101:
ACK 32e2ffc393
dergoegge:
ACK 32e2ffc393
Tree-SHA512: 8cf71c5623bb642cb515531d4a2545d806e503b9d57bfc15a996597632b06103d60d985fd7f843a3c1da6528bc38d0298d6b8bcf0be6f851795a8040d71faf16
On my machine, this speeds up the functional test feature_taproot.py by
a factor of >1.66x (runtime decrease from 1m16.587s to 45.334s).
Co-authored-by: Pieter Wuille <pieter@wuille.net>
54877253c8 test: avoid sporadic MINIMALDATA failure in feature_taproot.py (fixes#27595) (Sebastian Falbesoner)
Pull request description:
The functional test feature_taproot.py fails in some rare cases on the execution of the following `"branched_codesep"` spending script (can be reproduced via `$ ./test/functional/feature_taproot.py --randomseed 9048710178866422833` on master / 137a98c5a2):
9d85c03620/test/functional/feature_taproot.py (L741)
The problem occurs if the first data-push (having random content with a random length in the range [0, 510]) has a length of 1 and the single byte has value of [1...16] or [-1]; in this case, the data-push is not minimally encoded by test framework's CScript class (i.e. doesn't use the special op-codes OP_1...OP_16 or OP_1NEGATE) and the script interpreter throws an SCRIPT_ERR_MINIMALDATA error:
```
test_framework.authproxy.JSONRPCException: non-mandatory-script-verify-flag (Data push larger than necessary) (-26)
```
Background: the functional test framework's CScript class translates passed bytes/bytearrays always to data pushes using OP_PUSHx/OP_PUSHDATA{1,2,4} op-codes (see `CScript.__coerce_instance(...)`). E.g. the expression `CScript(bytes([1]))` yields `bytes([OP_PUSH1, 1])` instead of the minimal-encoded `bytes([OP_1])`.
Fix this by adapting the random-size range to [2,...], i.e. never pass byte-arrays below length two to be pushed.
Closes#27595.
ACKs for top commit:
instagibbs:
ACK 54877253c8
sipa:
utACK 54877253c8
achow101:
ACK 54877253c8
Tree-SHA512: 3ffad89b2c3985c20702242192e744c9b10188bff880efaf3c38424a00fa07bd4608d8c948678ff9cdbb4e1e5b06696c7f55407ee10bb05edbb3ee03aa599cdc
30778124b8 net: Give seednodes time before falling back to fixed seeds (Martin Zumsande)
Pull request description:
`-seednode` is an alternative bootstrap mechanism - when choosing it, we make a `AddrFetch` connection to the specified peer, gather addresses from them, and then disconnect. Presumably, if users specify a seednode they prefer addresses from that node over fixed seeds.
However, when disabling dns seeds and specifiying `-seednode`, `CConnman::ProcessAddrFetch()` immediately removes the entry from `m_addr_fetches` (before the seednode could give us addresses) - and once `m_addr_fetches` is empty, `ThreadOpenConnections` will add fixed seeds, resulting in a "race" between the fixed seeds and seednodes filling up AddrMan.
This PR suggests to check for any provided `-seednode` arg instead of using the size of `m_addr_fetches`, thus delaying the querying of fixed seeds for 1 minute when specifying any seednode (as we already do for `addnode` peers).
That way, we actually give the seednodes a chance for to provide us with addresses before falling back to fixed seeds.
This can be tested with `bitcoind -debug=net -dnsseed=0 -seednode=(...)` on a node without `peers.dat` and observing the debug log.
ACKs for top commit:
ajtowns:
utACK 30778124b8
achow101:
ACK 30778124b8
dergoegge:
Code review ACK 30778124b8
sr-gi:
ACK [3077812](30778124b8) with a tiny nit, feel free to ignore it
Tree-SHA512: 96446eb34c0805f10ee158a00a3001a07029e795ac40ad5638228d426e30e9bb836c64ac05d145f2f9ab23ec5a528f3a416e3d52ecfdfb0b813bd4b1ebab3c01
61f4b9b7ad Manage exceptions in bcc callback functions (virtu)
Pull request description:
Address #27380 (and similar future issues) by handling failed `assert_equal()` assertions in bcc callback functions
### Problem
Exceptions are not propagated in ctype callback functions used by bcc. This means an AssertionError exception raised by `assert_equal()` to signal a failed assertion is not getting caught and properly logged. Instead, the error is logged to stdout and execution of the callback stops.
The current workaround to check whether all `assert_equal()` assertions in a callback succeeded is to increment a success counter after the assertions (which only gets incremented if none exception is raised and stops execution). Then, outside the callback, the success counter can be used to check whether a callback executed successfully.
One issue with the described workaround is that when an exception occurs, there is no way of telling which of the `assert_equal()` statements caused the exception; moreover, there is no way of inspecting how the pieces of data that got compared in `assert_equal()` differed (often a crucial clue when debugging what went wrong).
This problem is happening in #27380: Sporadically, in the `mempool:rejected` test, execution does not reach the end of the callback function and the success counter is not incremented. Thus, the test fails when comparing the counter to its expected value of one. Without knowing which of the asserts failed any why it failed, this issue is hard to debug.
### Solution
Two fixes come to mind. The first involves having the callback function make event data accessible outside the callback and inspecting the event using `assert_equal()` outside the callback. This solution still requires a counter in the callback in order to tell whether a callback was actually executed or if instead the call to perf_buffer_poll() timed out.
The second fix entails wrapping all relevant `assert_equal()` statements inside callback functions into try-catch blocks and manually logging AssertionErrors. While not as elegant in terms of design, this approach can be more pragmatic for more complex tests (e.g., ones involving multiple events, events of different types, or the order of events).
The solution proposed here is to select the most pragmatic fix on a case-by-case basis: Tests in `interface_usdt_net.py`, `interface_usdt_mempool.py` and `interface_usdt_validation.py` have been refactored to use the first approach, while the second approach was chosen for `interface_usdt_utxocache.py` (partly to provide a reference for the second approach, but mainly because the utxocache tests are the most intricate tests, and refactoring them to use the first approach would negatively impact their readability). Lastly, `interface_usdt_coinselection.py` was kept unchanged because it does not use `assert_equal()` statements inside callback functions.
ACKs for top commit:
0xB10C:
Reviewed the changes since my last review. ACK 61f4b9b7ad. I've tested that the combined log contains both exceptions by modifying `interface_usdt_utxocache.py`.
willcl-ark:
utACK 61f4b9b
stickies-v:
utACK 61f4b9b7a
Tree-SHA512: 85cdaabf370d4f09a9eab6af9ce7c796cd9d08cb91f38f021f71adda34c5f643331022dd09cadb95be2185dad6016c95cbb8942e41e4fbd566a49bf431c5141a
Also, fix a few bugs:
* Error: RPC command "enumeratesigners" not found in RPC_COMMANDS_SAFE_FOR_FUZZING or RPC_COMMANDS_NOT_SAFE_FOR_FUZZING. Please update test/fuzz/rpc.cpp.
* in run_once: ...format(" ".join(result.args), ... TypeError: sequence item 2: expected str instance, PosixPath found
28fff06afe test: Make linter to look for `BOOST_ASSERT` macros (Hennadii Stepanov)
47fe551e52 test: Kill `BOOST_ASSERT` (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
One of the goals of https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/27783 was to get rid of the `BOOST_ASSERT` macros instead of including the `boost/assert.hpp` headers. See https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/27783#discussion_r1210612717.
It turns out that a couple of those macros sneaked into the codebase in https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/27790.
This PR makes the linter guard against new instances of the `BOOST_ASSERT` macros and replaces the current ones.
ACKs for top commit:
kevkevinpal:
ACK [28fff06](28fff06afe)
stickies-v:
ACK 28fff06af
TheCharlatan:
ACK 28fff06afe
Tree-SHA512: 371f613592cf677afe0196d18c83943c6c8f1e998f57b4ff3ee58bfeff8636e4dac1357840d8611b4f7b197def94df10fe1a8ca3282b00b7b4eff4624552dda8
1a572ce7d6 test: refactor: introduce `generate_keypair` helper with WIF support (Sebastian Falbesoner)
Pull request description:
In functional tests it is a quite common scenario to generate fresh elliptic curve keypairs, which is currently a bit cumbersome as it involves multiple steps, e.g.:
privkey = ECKey()
privkey.generate()
privkey_wif = bytes_to_wif(privkey.get_bytes())
pubkey = privkey.get_pubkey().get_bytes()
Simplify this by providing a new `generate_keypair` helper function that returns the private key either as `ECKey` object or as WIF-string (depending on the boolean `wif` parameter) and the public key as byte-string; these formats are what we mostly need (currently we don't use `ECPubKey` objects from generated keypairs anywhere).
With this, most of the affected code blocks following the pattern above can be replaced by one-liners, e.g.:
privkey, pubkey = generate_keypair(wif=True)
Note that after this commit, the only direct uses of `ECKey` remain in situations where we want to set the private key explicitly, e.g. in MiniWallet (test/functional/test_framework/wallet.py) or the test for the signet miner script (test/functional/tool_signet_miner.py).
ACKs for top commit:
instagibbs:
ACK 1a572ce7d6
kevkevinpal:
reACK [1a572ce](1a572ce7d6)
stratospher:
ACK 1a572ce7. neat to have this since keypair generation is done in lots of places.
Tree-SHA512: ceb695ba7b34dc9f65357b55be03e67609e7e13a178083d405284eff4d8d3c5cea4fb0b6632658604a533f38ebfefc33e0c375995cc21ebc7843442ad764287b
0000f55293 ci: Run fuzz target even if input folder is empty (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
This should catch trivial integer sanitizer bugs if the author and all reviewers forget to look for them.
ACKs for top commit:
brunoerg:
reACK 0000f55293
dergoegge:
reACK 0000f55293
Tree-SHA512: f139b9d56f0cf1aae339c2890721c77c88d1fea77b73d492c1386ec99b4f393c5b664029919ff4a22e4e8a2929f085699a148c6acc2cc3e40df8a72fd39ff474
Instead of passing the datadir and chain name to os.path.join, just use
the existing properties, which are the same.
-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
sed -i --regexp-extended 's|\.datadir, self\.chain, .wallets.|.wallets_path|g' $(git grep -l '\.datadir, self\.chain,')
sed -i --regexp-extended 's|\.datadir, self\.chain,|.chain_path,|g' $(git grep -l '\.datadir, self\.chain,')
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
Seems odd to hardcode all parent directory names in the path for no good
reason.
Also, add wallet_path property to TestNode.
Also, rework wallet_backup.py test for scripted-diff in the next commit.
fa76f0d0ef refactor: Make m_count_with_* in CTxMemPoolEntry int64_t, drop UBSAN supp (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
This is a refactor as long as no signed integer overflow appears. In normal operation and absent bugs, signed integer overflow should never happen in the touched code paths.
The main benefit of this refactor is to drop the file-wide ubsan suppression `unsigned-integer-overflow:txmempool.cpp`.
For now, this only changes the internal private representation and the publicly returned type remains `uint64_t`.
ACKs for top commit:
glozow:
ACK fa76f0d0ef
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK fa76f0d0ef
Tree-SHA512: a09e33a915d60c65d369d44ba1a45ce4a6a76e6dc2bea43216ba02b5eab0b74e214b2c7cc44360493f2c483d18d96e4636b7a75b23050976efc80e38de852c39
a1e653828b test: Add test for migrating default wallet and plain file wallet (Andrew Chow)
bdbe3fd76b wallet: Generated migrated wallet's path from walletdir and name (Andrew Chow)
Pull request description:
This PR fixes an assertion error that is hit during the setup of the new database during migration of a wallet that was not contained in a wallet dir. Also added a test for this case as well as one for migrating the default wallet.
ACKs for top commit:
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK a1e653828b
furszy:
ACK a1e65382
Tree-SHA512: 96b218c0de8567d8650ec96e1bf58b0f8ca4c4726f5efc6362453979b56b9d569baea0bb09befb3a5aed8d16d29bf75ed5cd8ffc432bbd4cbcad3ac5574bc479
daa5a658c0 refactor: rename BCLog::BLOCKSTORE to BLOCKSTORAGE (Jon Atack)
cf622b214b doc: release note re raising on invalid -debug/debugexclude/loglevel (Jon Atack)
6cb1c66041 init: remove config option names from translated -loglevel strings (Jon Atack)
2547829272 test: -loglevel raises on invalid values (Jon Atack)
a9c295888b init: raise on invalid loglevel config option (Jon Atack)
b0c3995393 test: -debug and -debugexclude raise on invalid values (Jon Atack)
4c3c19d943 init: raise on invalid debug/debugexclude config options (Jon Atack)
Pull request description:
and rename BCLog::BLOCKSTORE to BLOCKSTORAGE so the enum is the same as its value like the other BCLog enums.
Per discussion in bitcoin-core-dev IRC today from https://bitcoin-irc.chaincode.com/bitcoin-core-dev/2023-05-11#921458.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK daa5a658c0
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK daa5a658c0. Just translated string template cleanup since last review
pinheadmz:
re-ACK daa5a658c0
Tree-SHA512: 4c107a93d8e8ce4e2ee81d44aec672526ca354ec390b241221067f68204beac8b4ba7a65748bcfa124ff2245c4307fa9243ec4fe0b464d0fa69c787fb322c3cc
d2b39e09bc test: ensure old fee_estimate.dat not read on restart and flushed (ismaelsadeeq)
cf219f29f3 tx fees, policy: read stale fee estimates with a regtest-only option (ismaelsadeeq)
3eb241a141 tx fees, policy: do not read estimates of old fee_estimates.dat (ismaelsadeeq)
5b886f2b43 tx fees, policy: periodically flush fee estimates to fee_estimates.dat (ismaelsadeeq)
Pull request description:
Fixes#27555
The issue arises when an old `fee_estimates.dat` file is sometimes read during initialization.
Or after an unclean shutdown, the latest fee estimates are not flushed to `fee_estimates.dat`.
If the fee estimates in the old file are old, they can cause transactions to become stuck in the mempool.
This PR ensures that nodes do not use stale estimates from the old file during initialization. If `fee_estimates.dat`
has not been updated for 60 hours or more, it is considered stale and will not be read during initialization. To avoid
having old estimates, the `fee_estimates.dat` file will be flushed periodically every hour. As mentioned #27555
> "The immediate improvement would be to store fee estimates to disk once an hour or so to reduce the chance of having an old file. From there, this case could probably be detected, and refuse to serve estimates until we sync."
In addition, I will follow-up PR to persist the `mempoolminfee` across restarts.
ACKs for top commit:
willcl-ark:
ACK d2b39e09bc
instagibbs:
reACK d2b39e09bc
glozow:
ACK d2b39e09bc. One nit if you follow up.
Tree-SHA512: 4f6e0c296995d0eea5cf80c6aefdd79b7295a6a0ba446f2166f32afc105fe4f831cfda1ad3abd13c5c752b4fbea982cf4b97eaeda2af1fd7184670d41edcfeec
In functional tests it is a quite common scenario to generate fresh
elliptic curve keypairs, which is currently a bit cumbersome as it
involves multiple steps, e.g.:
privkey = ECKey()
privkey.generate()
privkey_wif = bytes_to_wif(privkey.get_bytes())
pubkey = privkey.get_pubkey().get_bytes()
Simplify this by providing a new `generate_keypair` helper function that
returns the private key either as `ECKey` object or as WIF-string
(depending on the boolean `wif` parameter) and the public key as
byte-string; these formats are what we mostly need (currently we don't
use `ECPubKey` objects from generated keypairs anywhere).
With this, most of the affected code blocks following the pattern above
can be replaced by one-liners, e.g.:
privkey, pubkey = generate_keypair(wif=True)
Note that after this commit, the only direct uses of `ECKey` remain in
situations where we want to set the private key explicitly, e.g. in
MiniWallet (test/functional/test_framework/wallet.py) or the test for
the signet miner script (test/functional/tool_signet_miner.py).
Exceptions are not propagated in ctype callback functions used by bcc.
This means an AssertionError exception raised by check_equal() to signal
a failed assertion is not getting caught and properly logged. Instead,
the error is logged to stdout and execution of the handler stops.
The current workaround to check whether all check_equal() assertions in
a callback succeeded is to increment a success counter after the
assertions (which only gets incremented if none exception is raised and
stops execution). Then, outside the callback, the success counter can be
used to check whether a callback executed successfully.
One issue with the described workaround is that when an exception
occurs, there is no way of telling which of the check_equal() statements
caused the exception; moreover, there is no way of inspecting how the
pieces of data that got compared in check_equal() differed (often
a crucial clue when debugging what went wrong).
Two fixes to this problem come to mind. The first involves having the
callback function make event data accessible outside the callback and
inspecting the event using check_equal() outside the callback. This
solution still requires a counter in the callback to tell whether
a callback was actually executed or if instead the call to
perf_buffer_poll() timed out.
The second fix entails wrapping all relevant check_equal() statements
inside callback functions into try-catch blocks and manually logging
AssertionErrors. While not as elegant in terms of design, this approach
can be more pragmatic for more complex tests (e.g., ones involving
multiple events, events of different types, or the order of events).
The solution proposed here is to select the most pragmatic fix on
a case-by-case basis: Tests in interface_usdt_net.py,
interface_usdt_mempool.py and interface_usdt_validation.py have been
refactored to use the first approach, while the second approach was
chosen for interface_usdt_utxocache.py (partly to provide a reference
for the second approach, but mainly because the utxocache tests are the
most intricate tests, and refactoring them to use the first approach
would negatively impact their readability). Lastly,
interface_usdt_coinselection.py was kept unchanged because it does not
use check_equal() statements inside callback functions.
5524fa00fa doc: add release note about removal of `deprecatedrpc=walletwarningfield` flag (Sebastian Falbesoner)
5c77db7354 Restorewallet/createwallet help documentation fixups/improvements (Jon Atack)
a00ae31fcc rpc: remove deprecated "warning" field from {create,load,restore,unload}wallet (Sebastian Falbesoner)
Pull request description:
The "warning" string field for wallet creating/loading RPCs (`createwallet`, `loadwallet`, `unloadwallet` and `restorewallet`) has been deprecated with the configuration option `-deprecatedrpc=walletwarningfield` in PR #27279 (released in v25.0). For the next release v26.0, the field and the configuration option can be removed.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK 5524fa00fa
jonatack:
ACK 5524fa00fa
Tree-SHA512: 8212f72067d08095304018b8a95d2ebef630004b65123483fbbfb078cc5709c2d825bbc35b16ea5f6b28ae7377347382d7e9afaf7bdbf0575d2c229d970784de