96635e6177 init: use GetNetworkNames() in -onlynet help (Jon Atack)
0dbde700a6 rpc: use GetNetworkNames() in getnetworkinfo and getpeerinfo helps (Jon Atack)
1c3af37881 net: create GetNetworkNames() (Jon Atack)
b45eae4d53 net: update NET_UNROUTABLE to not_publicly_routable in GetNetworkName() (Jon Atack)
Pull request description:
per the IRC discussion today at http://www.erisian.com.au/bitcoin-core-dev/log-2021-01-19.html#l-87
- return a more helpful string name for `Network::NET_UNROUTABLE`: "not_publicly_routable" instead of "unroutable"
- update the RPC getpeerinfo "network" help, and automate it and the getnetworkinfo "network#name" and the -onlynet help doc generation
ACKs for top commit:
theStack:
re-ACK 96635e6177🌳
MarcoFalke:
review ACK 96635e6177🐗
Tree-SHA512: 511a7d987126b48a7a090739aa7c4964b6186a3ff8f5f7eec9233dd816c6b7a6dc91b3ea6b824aa68f218a8a3ebdc6ffd214e9a88af38f2bf23f3257c4284c3a
In the arguments of `InterruptibleRecv()`, `Socks5()` and
`ConnectThroughProxy()` the variable `hSocket` was previously of type
`SOCKET`, but has been changed to `Sock`. Thus rename it to `sock` to
imply its type, to distinguish from other `SOCKET` variables and to
abide to the coding style wrt variables' names.
Use the `Sock` class instead of `SOCKET` for `InterruptibleRecv()` and
`Socks5()`.
This way the `Socks5()` function can be tested by giving it a mocked
instance of a socket.
Co-authored-by: practicalswift <practicalswift@users.noreply.github.com>
Introduce a class to manage the lifetime of a socket - when the object
that contains the socket goes out of scope, the underlying socket will
be closed.
In addition, the new `Sock` class has a `Send()`, `Recv()` and `Wait()`
methods that can be overridden by unit tests to mock the socket
operations.
The `Wait()` method also hides the
`#ifdef USE_POLL poll() #else select() #endif` technique from higher
level code.
Move `CloseSocket()` (and `NetworkErrorString()` which it uses) from
`netbase.{h,cpp}` to newly added `src/util/sock.{h,cpp}`.
This is necessary in order to use `CloseSocket()` from a newly
introduced Sock class (which will live in `src/util/sock.{h,cpp}`).
`sock.{h,cpp}` cannot depend on netbase because netbase will depend
on it.
Move `MillisToTimeval()` from `netbase.{h,cpp}` to
`src/util/system.{h,cpp}`.
This is necessary in order to use `MillisToTimeval()` from a newly
introduced `src/util/sock.{h,cpp}` which cannot depend on netbase
because netbase will depend on it.
Before this change `CNetAddr::ip` was a fixed-size array of 16 bytes,
not being able to store larger addresses (e.g. TORv3) and encoded
smaller ones as 16-byte IPv6 addresses.
Change its type to `prevector`, so that it can hold larger addresses and
do not disguise non-IPv6 addresses as IPv6. So the IPv4 address
`1.2.3.4` is now encoded as `01020304` instead of
`00000000000000000000FFFF01020304`.
Rename `CNetAddr::ip` to `CNetAddr::m_addr` because it is not an "IP" or
"IP address" (TOR addresses are not IP addresses).
In order to preserve backward compatibility with serialization (where
e.g. `1.2.3.4` is serialized as `00000000000000000000FFFF01020304`)
introduce `CNetAddr` dedicated legacy serialize/unserialize methods.
Adjust `CSubNet` accordingly. Still use `CSubNet::netmask[]` of fixed 16
bytes, but use the first 4 for IPv4 (not the last 4). Only allow
subnetting for IPv4 and IPv6.
Co-authored-by: Carl Dong <contact@carldong.me>
Identified via -Wdocumentation, e.g.:
./rpc/rawtransaction_util.h:31:13: error: parameter 'prevTxs' not found in the function declaration [-Werror,-Wdocumentation]
* @param prevTxs Array of previous txns outputs that tx depends on but may not yet be in the block chain
^~~~~~~
./rpc/rawtransaction_util.h:31:13: note: did you mean 'prevTxsUnival'?
* @param prevTxs Array of previous txns outputs that tx depends on but may not yet be in the block chain
^~~~~~~
prevTxsUnival
netbase.cpp:766:11: error: parameter 'outProxyConnectionFailed[out]' not found in the function declaration [-Werror,-Wdocumentation]
* @param outProxyConnectionFailed[out] Whether or not the connection to the
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
netbase.cpp:766:11: note: did you mean 'outProxyConnectionFailed'?
* @param outProxyConnectionFailed[out] Whether or not the connection to the
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
outProxyConnectionFailed
-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
# Delete outdated alias for RecursiveMutex
sed -i -e '/CCriticalSection/d' ./src/sync.h
# Replace use of outdated alias with RecursiveMutex
sed -i -e 's/CCriticalSection/RecursiveMutex/g' $(git grep -l CCriticalSection)
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
poll should block until there is data to be read or the timeout expires.
Filtering for the POLLOUT event causes poll to return immediately which leads to high CPU usage when trying to connect to non-responding peers through tor.
Removing POLLOUT matches how select is used when USE_POLL isn't defined.
This commit removes the `boost/algorithm/string/case_conv.hpp` dependency from the project. It replaces the `boost::to_lower` and `boost::to_upper` functions with custom functions that are locale independent and ASCII deterministic.
This is a squashed commit that squashes the following commits:
This commit removes the `boost/algorithm/string/predicate.hpp` dependenc
from the project by replacing the function calls to `boost::algorithm::starts_with`
`boost::algorithm::ends_with` and `all` with respectively C++11'
`std::basic_string::front`, `std::basic_string::back`, `std::all_of` function calls
This commit replaces `boost::algorithm::is_digit` with a locale independent isdigi
function, because the use of the standard library's `isdigit` and `std::isdigit
functions is discoraged in the developer notes
-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
sed --in-place'' --expression='s/NET_TOR/NET_ONION/g' $(git grep -I --files-with-matches 'NET_TOR')
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
The --in-place'' hack is required for sed on macOS to edit files in-place without passing a backup extension.
It is redundant to check for the presence of MSG_NOSIGNAL macro in
configure.ac, define HAVE_MSG_NOSIGNAL and then check whether the later
is defined in the source code. Instead we can check directly whether
MSG_NOSIGNAL is defined. Same for MSG_DONTWAIT.
In addition to that, the checks we had in configure.ac produce a
compiler warning about unused variable and thus could fail if
-Werror is present and erroneously proclaim that the macros are
not available.
9ad6746ccd Use static_cast instead of C-style casts for non-fundamental types (practicalswift)
Pull request description:
A C-style cast is equivalent to try casting in the following order:
1. `const_cast(...)`
2. `static_cast(...)`
3. `const_cast(static_cast(...))`
4. `reinterpret_cast(...)`
5. `const_cast(reinterpret_cast(...))`
By using `static_cast<T>(...)` explicitly we avoid the possibility of an unintentional and dangerous `reinterpret_cast`. Furthermore `static_cast<T>(...)` allows for easier grepping of casts.
For a more thorough discussion, see ["ES.49: If you must use a cast, use a named cast"](https://isocpp.github.io/CppCoreGuidelines/CppCoreGuidelines#es49-if-you-must-use-a-cast-use-a-named-cast) in the C++ Core Guidelines (Stroustrup & Sutter).
Tree-SHA512: bd6349b7ea157da93a47b8cf238932af5dff84731374ccfd69b9f732fabdad1f9b1cdfca67497040f14eaa85346391404f4c0495e22c467f26ca883cd2de4d3c
3830b6e net: use CreateSocket for binds (Cory Fields)
df3bcf8 net: pass socket closing responsibility up to caller for outgoing connections (Cory Fields)
9e3b2f5 net: Move IsSelectableSocket check into socket creation (Cory Fields)
1729c29 net: split socket creation out of connection (Cory Fields)
Pull request description:
Requirement for #11227.
We'll need to create sockets and perform the actual connect in separate steps, so break them up.
#11227 adds an RAII wrapper around connection attempts, as a belt-and-suspenders in case a CloseSocket is missed.
Tree-SHA512: de675bb718cc56d68893c303b8057ca062c7431eaa17ae7c4829caed119fa3f15b404d8f52aca22a6bca6e73a26fb79e898b335d090ab015bf6456cf417fc694
We use select in ConnectSocketDirectly, so this check needs to happen before
that.
IsSelectableSocket will not be relevant after upcoming changes to remove select.
b887676 net: remove now-unused functions (Cory Fields)
45fd754 net: remove now-superfluous numeric resolve (Cory Fields)
2416dd7 net: separate resolving and conecting (Cory Fields)
Pull request description:
This is a greatly simplified version of #10285, which only aims to address async resolving.
It essentially breaks up two wrapper functions for things only used in one place (ConnectSocketDirectly/ConnectThroughProxy) in favor of calling them directly. This allows us to fully handle resolves before attempting a connection, as is necessary for async connections.
As a bonus, I believe the logic is now much easier to follow than before.
Tree-SHA512: f03f618107379edf3efe2a9f3e3677e8f075017ab140a0b4fdc3b8263e6beff148d55256263ab10bc2125ef089ca68e0d8e865beeae176f1eca544e769c976d3
A C-style cast is equivalent to try casting in the following order:
1. const_cast(...)
2. static_cast(...)
3. const_cast(static_cast(...))
4. reinterpret_cast(...)
5. const_cast(reinterpret_cast(...))
By using static_cast<T>(...) explicitly we avoid the possibility
of an unintentional and dangerous reinterpret_cast. Furthermore
static_cast<T>(...) allows for easier grepping of casts.
ConnectSocketByName handled resolves as necessary, obscuring the connection
process. With them separated, each can be handled asynchronously.
Also, since proxies must be considered now anyway, go ahead and eliminate the
ConnectSocket wrapper and use ConnectSocketDirectly... directly.
5c643241e [utils] allow square brackets for ipv6 addresses in bitcoin-cli (John Newbery)
fe4fabaf1 [refactor] move SplitHostPort() into utilstrencodings (John Newbery)
Pull request description:
bitcoin-cli's `-rpcconnect` can accept ipv6 addresses (as long as the libevent version is new enough), but fails to parse ipv6 with square brackets. This PR makes `bitcoin-cli` parse ipv6 in square brackets correctly.
`bitcoin-cli -rpcconnect=[::1] <command>`
should now be equivalent to
`bitcoin-cli -rpcconnect=::1 <command>`
This is useful so the `bitcoin-cli` option can now be in the same format as the `bitcoind` option.
Doesn't include tests. I have a branch that fully tests `bitcoin-cli`, but that's queued behind several intermediate PRs.
- first commit moves `SplitHostPort()` from libbitcoin_common into libbitcoin_util
- second commit adds proper ipv6 parsing to bitcoin-cli
Tree-SHA512: 249d409f10360c989474283341f458cc97364a56a7d004ae6d5f13d8bffe3a51b5dc2484d42218848e2d42cd9c0b13a1b92e94ea19b209f7e91c875c208d8409
In order to prevent mixups, our internal range is never allowed as a resolve
result. This means that no user-provided string will ever be confused with an
internal address.
5844609 [net] Avoid initialization to a value that is never read (practicalswift)
Tree-SHA512: 068c3fba58034187f546688bc9b8b7317e0657e797850613fb6289a4efc28637e4d06a0fa5e57480538c6b8340ed6d6a6c6f9a96f130b698d5d60975490a03d8
This changes the logging categories to boolean flags instead of strings.
This simplifies the acceptance testing by avoiding accessing a scoped
static thread local pointer to a thread local set of strings. It
eliminates the only use of boost::thread_specific_ptr outside of
lockorder debugging.
This change allows log entries to be directed to multiple categories
and makes it easy to change the logging flags at runtime (e.g. via
an RPC, though that isn't done by this commit.)
It also eliminates the fDebug global.
Configuration of unknown logging categories now produces a warning.
Define MSG_DONTWAIT and MSG_NO_SIGNAL in the implementation files that
use them (`net.cpp` and `netbase.cpp`), instead of compat.h which is
included all over the place.
This avoids putting them in the global namespace, as defining them as 0
is a hack that works for our specific usage, but it is not a general
solution.
Also makes sure they are defined only once so the `!defined(MSG_x)` guard can go.
If a timeout happens while reading the proxy response, this effectively
means we timed out while connecting to the remote node. This is very
common for Tor, so do not print an error message.
There are only a few uses of `insecure_random` outside the tests.
This PR replaces uses of insecure_random (and its accompanying global
state) in the core code with an FastRandomContext that is automatically
seeded on creation.
This is meant to be used for inner loops. The FastRandomContext
can be in the outer scope, or the class itself, then rand32() is used
inside the loop. Useful e.g. for pushing addresses in CNode or the fee
rounding, or randomization for coin selection.
As a context is created per purpose, thus it gets rid of
cross-thread unprotected shared usage of a single set of globals, this
should also get rid of the potential race conditions.
- I'd say TxMempool::check is not called enough to warrant using a special
fast random context, this is switched to GetRand() (open for
discussion...)
- The use of `insecure_rand` in ConnectThroughProxy has been replaced by
an atomic integer counter. The only goal here is to have a different
credentials pair for each connection to go on a different Tor circuit,
it does not need to be random nor unpredictable.
- To avoid having a FastRandomContext on every CNode, the context is
passed into PushAddress as appropriate.
There remains an insecure_random for test usage in `test_random.h`.
* The "ERROR" was printed far too often during normal operation for what was not an error.
* Makes the Socks5() connect failure similar to the IP connect failure in debug.log.
Before:
`2016-05-09 00:15:00 ERROR: Proxy error: host unreachable`
After:
`2016-05-09 00:15:00 Socks5() connect to t6xj6wilh4ytvcs7.onion:18333 failed: host unreachable"`
Rather than allowing CNetAddr/CService/CSubNet to launch DNS queries, require
that addresses are already resolved.
This greatly simplifies async resolve logic, and makes it harder to
accidentally leak DNS queries.
Starting with Tor version 0.2.7.1 it is possible, through Tor's control socket
API, to create and destroy 'ephemeral' hidden services programmatically.
https://stem.torproject.org/api/control.html#stem.control.Controller.create_ephemeral_hidden_service
This means that if Tor is running (and proper authorization is available),
bitcoin automatically creates a hidden service to listen on, without user
manual configuration. This will positively affect the number of available
.onion nodes.
- When the node is started, connect to Tor through control socket
- Send `ADD_ONION` command
- First time:
- Make it create a hidden service key
- Save the key in the data directory for later usage
- Make it redirect port 8333 to the local port 8333 (or whatever port we're listening on).
- Keep control socket connection open for as long node is running. The hidden service will
(by default) automatically go away when the connection is closed.
Nagle appears to be a significant contributor to latency now that the static
sleeps are gone. Most of our messages are relatively large compared to
IP + TCP so I do not expect this to create enormous overhead.
This may also reduce traffic burstyness somewhat.