Without explicitly declaring the move, these UniValues get copied,
causing increased memory usage. Fix this by explicitly moving the
UniValue objects.
Used by `rest_block` and `getblock` RPC.
Github-Pull: #30094
Rebased-From: b77bad309e
Fixes: #809
Previously it was possible through the GUI to enter an IP address:port
into the "Proxy IP" configuration box. After the node was restarted the
errant setting would prevent the node starting back up until manually
removed from settings.json.
Github-Pull: https://github.com/bitcoin-core/gui/pull/813
Rebased-From: 10c5275ba4
The default max file size for LevelDB is 2 MiB, which results in the
LevelDB compaction code generating ~4 disk cache flushes per second when
syncing with the Bitcoin network.
These disk cache flushes are triggered by fdatasync() syscall issued by the
LevelDB compaction code when reaching the max file size.
If the database is on a HDD this flush rate brings the whole system to a
crawl.
It also results in very slow throughput since 2 MiB * 4 flushes per second
is about 8 MiB / second max throughput, while even an old HDD can pull
100 - 200 MiB / second streaming throughput.
Increase the default db file size for LevelDB to 128 MiB instead so the flush
rate drops to about 1 flush / 2 seconds and the system no longer gets so
sluggish.
The db file size value chosen also matches the MAX_BLOCKFILE_SIZE file
size setting already used by the block storage.
As described in #10542 (and numerous other places), message signing in
Bitcoin Core only supports message signing using P2PKH addresses, at
least until a new message-signing standard is agreed upon.
Therefore update the possibly-misleading error message presented to the
user in the GUI to detail more specifically the reason their message
cannot be signed, in the case that a non P2PKH address is entered.
Github-Pull: gui#819
Rebased-From: fb9f150759
The script provided for signature might be externally provided, for
instance by way of 'finalizepsbt'. Therefore the script might be
ill-crafted, so don't assume pubkeys are always 32 bytes.
Thanks to Niklas for finding this.
Github-Pull: #29853
Rebased-From: 4d8d21320e
A common issue that our fuzzers keep finding is that outpoints don't
exist in the non witness utxos. Instead of trying to track this down and
checking in various individual places, do the check early during
deserialization.
Github-Pull: #29855
Rebased-From: 9e13ccc50e
Limit number of IPs learned from a single DNS seed to 32, to prevent the results from
one DNS seed from dominating AddrMan. Note that the number of results from a UDP DNS query is
bounded to 33 already, but it is possible for it to use TCP where a potentially enormous
number of results can be returned.
Closes#16070.
Github-Pull: #29850
Rebased-From: f2e3662e57
When WalletDir == DataDir we would have iterate trough our own node files
to find wallets, that consumes time and could cause an unresponsive node.
Github-Pull: #19419
Rebased-From: c730c7a6b6eb9f2e5138e2874ca7c5c269086bf3
7ab54397f8 seeds: Update testnet seeds (Ava Chow)
34a233b6d8 seeds: Update mainnet seeds (Ava Chow)
9701bc435f makeseeds: Check i2p seeds too (Ava Chow)
a8ec9eede4 makeseeds: Update PATTERN_AGENT (Ava Chow)
Pull request description:
The ipv4 and ipv6 seeds are updated from sipa's crawler, as outlined in contrib/seeds/README.md. The onion and i2p seeds are pulled from my node's addrman using `getrawaddrman` and then a connection was made to each node to retrieve the current service flags, block height, and user agent string before filtering through makeseeds.py. The CJDNS nodes were not updated as my node is not connected to that network.
makeseeds.py is also updated for more recent user agent strings as well as being able to handle i2p addresses.
Also updated the testnet seeds.
ACKs for top commit:
fanquake:
ACK 7ab54397f8
Tree-SHA512: 5edba63d51116e5d9a8ae23561ba5a311f4df88c555c60b2d7a6066e63f8cdfd256be7dac9acea4b370879d0d3c3a4b55328c15de4284b5f0d86e6cac2e5ba9b
This RPC allows the client to retrieve the file system locations
of the confirmed blocks and their undo data, to allow building
efficient indexes outside of Bitcoin Core.
An example usage is described here:
https://github.com/romanz/electrs/issues/308
By using the new RPC, it is possible to build an address-based
index taking ~24GB and a txindex taking ~6GB (as of Dec. 2020).
b7aa717cdd refactor: gui, simplify boost signals disconnection (furszy)
f3a612f901 gui: guard accessing a nullptr 'clientModel' (furszy)
Pull request description:
Fixing #800.
During shutdown, already queue events dispatched from the backend such
'numConnectionsChanged' and 0networkActiveChanged' could try to access
the clientModel object, which might not exist because we manually delete
it inside 'BitcoinApplication::requestShutdown()'.
This happen because boost does not clears the queued events when they arise
concurrently with the signal disconnection (see https://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_55_0/doc/html/signals2/thread-safety.html).
From the docs:
1) "Note that since we unlock the connection's mutex before executing its associated slot, it is possible a slot will still be executing after it has been disconnected by a [connection::disconnect](https://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_55_0/doc/html/boost/signals2/connection.html#idp89761576-bb)(), if the disconnect was called concurrently with signal invocation."
2) "The fact that concurrent signal invocations use the same combiner object means you need to insure any custom combiner you write is thread-safe"
So, we need to guard `clientModel` before accessing it at the handler side.
ACKs for top commit:
hebasto:
re-ACK b7aa717cdd
Tree-SHA512: f1a21d69248628f6a13556a9438c9e4ea9f0a3678aab09ddfe836e78e4eee405a6730d37d39f1445068ada3a110b655b619cf0e090fc2d0cdf99bed061364aeb
86b7f28d6c serialization: use internal endian conversion functions (Cory Fields)
432b18ca8d serialization: detect byteswap builtins without autoconf tests (Cory Fields)
297367b3bb crypto: replace CountBits with std::bit_width (Cory Fields)
52f9bba889 crypto: replace non-standard CLZ builtins with c++20's bit_width (Cory Fields)
Pull request description:
This replaces #28674, #29036, and #29057. Now ready for testing and review.
Replaces platform-specific endian and byteswap functions. This is especially useful for kernel, as it means that our deep serialization code no longer requires bitcoin-config.h.
I apologize for the size of the last commit, but it's hard to avoid making those changes at once.
All platforms now use our internal functions rather than libc or platform-specific ones, with the exception of MSVC.
Sadly, benchmarking showed that not all compilers are capable of detecting and optimizing byteswap functions, so compiler builtins are instead used where possible. However, they're now detected via macros rather than autoconf checks.
This[ matches how libc++ implements std::byteswap for c++23](https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/blob/main/libcxx/include/__bit/byteswap.h#L26).
I suggest we move/rename `compat/endian.h`, but I left that out of this PR to avoid bikeshedding.
#29057 pointed out some irregularities in benchmarks. After messing with various compilers and configs for a few weeks with these changes, I'm of the opinion that we can't win on every platform every time, so we should take the code that makes sense going forward. That said, if any real-world slowdowns are caused here, we should obviously investigate.
ACKs for top commit:
maflcko:
ACK 86b7f28d6c📘
fanquake:
ACK 86b7f28d6c - we can finish pruning out the __builtin_clz* checks/usage once the minisketch code has been updated. This is more good cleanup pre-CMake & for the kernal.
Tree-SHA512: 715a32ec190c70505ffbce70bfe81fc7b6aa33e376b60292e801f60cf17025aabfcab4e8c53ebb2e28ffc5cf4c20b74fe3dd8548371ad772085c13aec8b7970e
f8a06f7a02 doc: remove references to disable-asm option now that it's gone (Cory Fields)
376f0f6d07 build: remove confusing and inconsistent disable-asm option (Cory Fields)
Pull request description:
1. It didn't actually disable asm usage in our code. Regardless of the setting, asm is used in random.cpp and support/cleanse.cpp.
2. The value wasn't forwarded to libsecp as a user might have reasonably expected.
3. We now have the DISABLE_OPTIMIZED_SHA256 define which is what disable-asm actually did in practice.
If there is any desire, we can hook DISABLE_OPTIMIZED_SHA256 up to a new configure option that actually does what it says.
Additionally, this is one of the last (THE last?) remaining uses of autoconf defines in our crypto code. As such it seems like low-hanging fruit.
ACKs for top commit:
fanquake:
ACK f8a06f7a02
Tree-SHA512: 4a99c2130225acbe9dc7399ed572a04ca155cbfa3eef8178a632ba533017d264691e6482cceb1d8f9c5d768619d99a2466dea4b82b27b18b872bceae91b92fbb
6ee3997d03 test: removes unnecessary check from validation_tests (Sergi Delgado Segura)
Pull request description:
An unnecessary check was added to the block mutation tests in #29412 where IsBlockMutated is returning true for the invalid reasons: we try to check mutation via transaction duplication, but the merkle root is not updated before the check, therefore the check fails because the provided root and the computed root differ, but not because the block contains the same transaction twice.
Notice that a proper check to test the duplication case is added a few lines later, so this check is just meaningless and can be removed. Check https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/29412#discussion_r1506490281 for context.
ACKs for top commit:
maflcko:
ACK 6ee3997d03
dergoegge:
utACK 6ee3997d03
BrandonOdiwuor:
utACK 6ee3997d03
Tree-SHA512: e4627668091dda5f589e4c15edac39dc84aabc9b34b8f7fadbf512beb7111d5477e1b69567a34b4a657e48ba66dfb864db5ff37c9bbe3ff24cd32931b2dd89e6
1. It didn't actually disable asm usage in our code. Regardless of the setting,
asm is used in random.cpp and support/cleanse.cpp.
2. The value wasn't forwarded to libsecp as a user might have reasonably
expected.
3. We now have the DISABLE_OPTIMIZED_SHA256 define which is what disable-asm
actually did in practice.
If there is any desire, we can hook DISABLE_OPTIMIZED_SHA256 up to a new
configure option that actually does what it says.
e073f1dfda test: make sure keypool sizes do not change on `getrawchangeaddress`/`getnewaddress` failures (UdjinM6)
367bb7a80c wallet: Avoid updating `ReserveDestination::nIndex` when `GetReservedDestination` fails (UdjinM6)
Pull request description:
I think the expected behaviour of `getrawchangeaddress` and `getnewaddress` RPCs is that their failure should not affect keypool in any way. At least that's how legacy wallets work, you can confirm this behaviour by running `wallet_keypool.py --legacy-wallet` on master with e073f1dfda applied on top. However running `wallet_keypool.py --descriptors` on the same commit results in the following failure:
```
File "/path/to/bitcoin/test/functional/test_framework/test_framework.py", line 131, in main
self.run_test()
File "/path/to/bitcoin/test/functional/wallet_keypool.py", line 114, in run_test
assert_equal(kp_size_before, kp_size_after)
File "/path/to/bitcoin/test/functional/test_framework/util.py", line 57, in assert_equal
raise AssertionError("not(%s)" % " == ".join(str(arg) for arg in (thing1, thing2) + args))
AssertionError: not([18, 24] == [19, 24])
```
This happens because we pass `nIndex` (which is a class member) into `GetReservedDestination` and since it's passed by reference we get an updated value back, so `nIndex` won't be equal `-1` anymore, no matter if the function failed or succeeded. This means that `ReturnDestination` (called by dtor of `ReserveDestination`) will try to return something we did not actually reserve.
The fix is to simply use a temporary variable instead of a class member and only update `nIndex` when `op_address` actually has value, basically do it the same way we do for other class members (`address` and `fInternal`) already.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK e073f1dfda
josibake:
ACK e073f1dfda
Tree-SHA512: 1128288a60dd4d8f306ef6f7ac66cdfeae3c9cc35c66ecada2d78fa61ac759f2a757b70fc3976ba8b5081200942b58dfabc184c01ccf911af40ba8c145344651
An unnecessary check was added to the block mutation tests
in #29412 where IsBlockMutated is returning true for the invalid
reasons: we try to check mutation via transaction duplication,
but the merkle root is not updated before the check, therefore
the check fails because the provided root and the computed root
differ, but not because the block contains the same transaction twice.
The check is meaningless so it can be removed.
d8087adc7e [test] IsBlockMutated unit tests (dergoegge)
1ed2c98297 Add transaction_identifier::size to allow Span conversion (dergoegge)
1ec6bbeb8d [validation] Cache merkle root and witness commitment checks (dergoegge)
5bf4f5ba32 [test] Add regression test for #27608 (dergoegge)
49257c0304 [net processing] Don't process mutated blocks (dergoegge)
2d8495e080 [validation] Merkle root malleation should be caught by IsBlockMutated (dergoegge)
66abce1d98 [validation] Introduce IsBlockMutated (dergoegge)
e7669e1343 [refactor] Cleanup merkle root checks (dergoegge)
95bddb930a [validation] Isolate merkle root checks (dergoegge)
Pull request description:
This PR proposes to check for mutated blocks early as a defense-in-depth mitigation against attacks leveraging mutated blocks.
We introduce `IsBlockMutated` which catches all known forms of block malleation and use it to do an early mutation check whenever we receive a `block` message.
We have observed attacks that abused mutated blocks in the past, which could have been prevented by simply not processing mutated blocks (e.g. https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/27608 for which a regression test is included in this PR).
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK d8087adc7e
maflcko:
ACK d8087adc7e🏄
fjahr:
Code review ACK d8087adc7e
sr-gi:
Code review ACK d8087adc7e
Tree-SHA512: 618ff4ea7f168e10f07504d3651290efbb1bb2ab3b838ffff3527c028caf6c52dedad18d04d3dbc627977479710930e200f2dfae18a08f627efe7e64a57e535f
51bc1c7126 test: Remove Windows-specific code from `system_tests/run_command` (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
The removed code has been dead since https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/28967.
Required as a precondition for replacing Boost.Process with [cpp-subprocess](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/28981) to make diff for this code meaningful and reviewable.
The plan is to reintroduce Windows-specific code in this test simultaneously with enabling Windows support in cpp-subprocess.
ACKs for top commit:
Sjors:
utACK 51bc1c7126
theStack:
Code-review ACK 51bc1c7126
Tree-SHA512: 0e3875c4dc20564332555633daf2227223b10dc3d052557635eced2734575d1e0252fb19e46ea6e6c47a15c51c345f70b6d437e33435abcd0e4fcf29edb50887
During shutdown, already queue events dispatched from the backend such
'numConnectionsChanged' and 'networkActiveChanged' could try to access
the clientModel object, which might not exist because we manually delete
it inside 'BitcoinApplication::requestShutdown()'.
These replace our platform-specific mess in favor of c++20 endian detection
via std::endian and internal byteswap functions when necessary.
They no longer rely on autoconf detection.
Rather than a complicated set of tests to decide which bswap functions to
use, always prefer the compiler built-ins when available.
These builtins and fallbacks can all be removed once we're using c++23, which
adds std::byteswap.
This code has been dead since https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/28967.
Required as a precondition for replacing Boost.Process with
cpp-subprocess to make diff for this code meaningful and reviewable.
The plan is to reintroduce Windows-specific code in this test
simultaneously with enabling Windows support in cpp-subprocess.
We preemptively perform a block mutation check before further processing
a block message (similar to early sanity checks on other messsage
types). The main reasons for this change are as follows:
- `CBlock::GetHash()` is a foot-gun without a prior mutation check, as
the hash returned only commits to the header but not to the actual
transactions (`CBlock::vtx`) contained in the block.
- We have observed attacks that abused mutated blocks in the past, which
could have been prevented by simply not processing mutated blocks
(e.g. https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/27608).
d2fe90571e test: Drop `x` modifier in `fsbridge::fopen` call for mingw builds (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
The MinGW-w64 toolchain links executables to the old msvcrt C Runtime Library that does not support the `x` modifier for the [`_wfopen()`](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/c-runtime-library/reference/fopen-wfopen?view=msvc-170) function.
Fixes https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/29014.
ACKs for top commit:
maflcko:
ACK d2fe90571e
fanquake:
ACK d2fe90571e - the plan here should still be to migrate to the newer windows runtime.
Tree-SHA512: 0269b66531e58c093ecda3a3e355a20ee8274e165d7e010f8f125881b3c8d4cfe801abdca4605d81efd3b2dbe9a81896968971f6f53da7f6c6093b76b47c5bc9
This `LogPrint(BCLog::RAND, ...)` is never logged because the
`SeedStartup` function is called at a very early stage, such as during
the instantiation of the static `CSignatureCache` object, before any log
categories are added. This change addresses this behavior.
b03b20685a Fix CI-detected codespell warnings (Lőrinc)
Pull request description:
Split out the typo fixes encountered in https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/29458 to a separate PR.
ACKs for top commit:
maflcko:
ACK b03b20685a
Tree-SHA512: 99b6fac01ba2ae6e6de9c50d2b481387899844a4b3a77d544c7b8afe7cfd25251a982329688d4739cde8b98ad35afcfd49be7c7cc3dad9bdff1d5915861a206d
faa30a4c56 rpc: Do not wait for headers inside loadtxoutset (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
While the `loadtxoutset` default 10 minute timeout is convenient when it is sufficient, it may cause hassle where it is not. For example:
* When P2P connections are missing, it seems better to abort early than wait for the timeout.
* When the 10 minute timeout is not sufficient, the RPC will have to be called again, so a check or loop is needed outside the RPC either way. So might as well remove the loop inside the RPC.
ACKs for top commit:
fjahr:
ACK faa30a4c56
theStack:
Code-review ACK faa30a4c56
pablomartin4btc:
tACK faa30a4c56
TheCharlatan:
ACK faa30a4c56
Tree-SHA512: 9167c7d8b2889bb3fd369de4acd2cc4d24a2fe225018d82bd9568ecd737093f6e19be7cc62815b574137b61076a6f773c29bff75398991b5cd702423aab2322b
fa58ae74ea refactor: Add missing include for USE_BDB, USE_SQLITE to bench/wallet_ismine.cpp (MarcoFalke)
fa31908ea8 lint: Check for missing or redundant bitcoin-config.h includes (MarcoFalke)
fa63b0e351 lint: Make lint error easier to spot in output (MarcoFalke)
fa770fd368 doc: Add missing RUST_BACKTRACE=1 (MarcoFalke)
fa10051267 lint: Add get_subtrees() helper (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
Missing `bitcoin-config.h` includes are problematic, because the build could silently pass, but produce an unintended result. For example, a slower fallback algorithm could be picked, even though `bitcoin-config.h` indicates that a faster feature is available and should be used.
As the build succeeds silently, this problem is not possible to detect with iwyu.
Thus, fix this by using a linter based on grepping the source code.
ACKs for top commit:
theuni:
Weak ACK fa58ae74ea.
TheCharlatan:
ACK fa58ae74ea
hebasto:
ACK fa58ae74ea, tested on Ubuntu 23.10 -- it catches bugs properly. I didn't review rust code changes.
Tree-SHA512: cf4346f81ea5b8c215da6004cb2403d1aaf569589613c305d8ba00329b82b3841da94fe1a69815ce15f2edecbef9b031758ec9b6433564976190e3cf91ec8181
9d1dbbd4ce scripted-diff: Fix bitcoin_config_h includes (TheCharlatan)
Pull request description:
As mentioned in https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/26924#issuecomment-1403449932 and https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/29263#issuecomment-1922334399, it is currently not safe to remove `bitcoin-config.h` includes from headers because some unrelated file might be depending on it.
See also #26972 for discussion.
Solve this by including the file directly everywhere it's required, regardless of whether or not it's already included by another header.
There should be no functional change here, but it will allow us to safely remove includes from headers in the future.
~I'm afraid it's a bit tedious to reproduce these commits, but it's reasonably straightforward:~
Edit: See note below
```bash
# All commands executed from the src/ subdir.
# Collect all tokens from bitcoin-config.h.in
# Isolate the tokens and remove blank lines
# Replace newlines with | and remove the last trailing one
# Collect all files which use these tokens
# Filter out subprojects (proper forwarding can be verified from Makefiles)
# Filter out .rc files
# Save to a text file
git grep -E -l `grep undef config/bitcoin-config.h.in | cut -d" " -f2 | grep -v '^$' | tr '\n' '|' | sed 's/|$//'` | grep -v -e "^leveldb/" -e "^secp256k1/" -e "^crc32c/" -e "^minisketch/" -e "^Makefile" -e "\.rc$" > files-with-config-include.txt
# Find all files from the above list which don't include bitcoin-config.h
git grep -L -E "config/bitcoin-config.h" -- `cat files-with-config-include.txt`
# Include them manually with the exception of some files in crypto:
# crypto/sha256_arm_shani.cpp crypto/sha256_avx2.cpp crypto/sha256_sse41.cpp crypto/sha256_x86_shani.cpp
# These are exceptions which don't use bitcoin-config.h, rather the Makefile.am adds these cppflags manually.
# Commit changes. This should match the first commit of this PR.
# Use the same search as above to find all files which DON'T use any config tokens
git grep -E -L `grep undef config/bitcoin-config.h.in | cut -d" " -f2 | grep -v '^$' | tr '\n' '|' | sed 's/|$//'` | grep -v -e "^leveldb/" -e "^secp256k1/" -e "^crc32c/" -e "^minisketch/" -e "^Makefile" -e "\.rc$" > files-without-config-include.txt
# Manually remove the includes and commit changes. This should match the second commit of this PR.
```
Edit: I'll keep this old description for posterity, but the manual approach has been replaced with a scripted diff from TheCharlatan
ACKs for top commit:
maflcko:
ACK 9d1dbbd4ce🚪
TheCharlatan:
ACK 9d1dbbd4ce
hebasto:
ACK 9d1dbbd4ce, I have reviewed the code and it looks OK.
fanquake:
ACK 9d1dbbd4ce
Tree-SHA512: f11ddc4ae6a887f96b954a6b77f310558ddb271088a3fda3edc833669c4251b7f392515224bbb8e5f67eb2c799b4ffed3b07d96454e82ec635c686d0df545872
e041ed9b75 wallet: Retrieve ID from loaded DescSPKM directly (Ava Chow)
39640dd34e wallet: Use scriptPubKeyCache in GetSolvingProvider (Ava Chow)
b410f68791 wallet: Use scriptPubKey cache in GetScriptPubKeyMans (Ava Chow)
edf4e73a16 wallet: Use scriptPubKey cache in IsMine (Ava Chow)
37232332bd wallet: Cache scriptPubKeys for all DescriptorSPKMs (Ava Chow)
99a0cddbc0 wallet: Introduce a callback called after TopUp completes (Ava Chow)
b276825932 bench: Add a benchmark for ismine (Ava Chow)
Pull request description:
Wallets that have a ton of non-ranged descriptors (such as a migrated non-HD wallet) perform fairly poorly due to looping through all of the wallet's `ScriptPubKeyMan`s. This is done in various places, such as `IsMine`, and helper functions for fetching a `ScriptPubKeyMan` and a `SolvingProvider`. This also has a bit of a performance impact on standard descriptor wallets, although less noticeable due to the small number of SPKMs.
As these functions are based on doing `IsMine` for each `ScriptPubKeyMan`, we can improve this performance by caching `IsMine` scriptPubKeys for all descriptors and use that to determine which `ScriptPubKeyMan` to actually use for those things. This cache is used exclusively and we no longer iterate the SPKMs.
Also added a benchmark for `IsMine`.
ACKs for top commit:
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK e041ed9b75. Just suggested changes since last review
josibake:
ACK e041ed9b75
furszy:
Code review ACK e041ed9b
Tree-SHA512: 8e7081991a025e682e9dea838b4543b0d179832d1c47397fb9fe7a97fa01eb699c15a5d5a785634926844fc83a46e6ac07ef753119f39d84423220ef8a548894
dddd7be9bf doc: Clarify maxfeerate help (MarcoFalke)
fa2a4fdef7 rpc: Fixed signed integer overflow for large feerates (MarcoFalke)
fade94d11a rpc: Add ParseFeeRate helper (MarcoFalke)
fa0ff66109 rpc: Implement RPCHelpMan::ArgValue<> for UniValue (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
Passing large BTC/kvB feerates to RPCs is problematic, because:
* They are likely a typo. 1BTC/kvB (or larger) seems absurd.
* They may cause signed integer overflow.
* Anyone really wanting to pick such a large value can set `0` to disable the check.
Fix all issues by rejecting anything more than 1BTC/kvB during parsing.
ACKs for top commit:
brunoerg:
crACK dddd7be9bf
achow101:
ACK dddd7be9bf
vasild:
ACK dddd7be9bf
tdb3:
Code review ACK and basic test ACK for dddd7be9bf.
fjahr:
utACK dddd7be9bf
Tree-SHA512: 5dcce1f0abe059dc6b2ff56787e11081d73a45b4ddd6dcc2c1ea13709ebc13af5e7265e84fffb97ef32027b56b81955672a67ed7702e8fa30c2e849d67727bac
Instead of iterating m_spk_managers a DescriptorSPKM has been loaded in
order to get it's ID to compare, have LoadDescriptorSPKM return a
reference to the loaded DescriptorSPKM so it can be queried directly.
Have CWallet maintain a cache of all known scriptPubKeys for its
DescriptorSPKMs in order to improve performance of the functions that
require searching for scriptPubKeys.
After TopUp completes, the wallet containing each SPKM will want to know
what new scriptPubKeys were generated. In order for all TopUp calls
(including ones internal the the SPKM), we use a callback function in
the WalletStorage interface.
f1684bb88a rpc: mention that migratewallet can take a while (Andrew Chow)
9ecff997e1 rpc: Drop migratewallet experimental warning (Andrew Chow)
Pull request description:
The migration process itself hasn't fundamentally changed since it was added, so I think it's reasonable to say that it is no longer experimental.
ACKs for top commit:
maflcko:
lgtm ACK f1684bb88a
josibake:
ACK f1684bb88a
furszy:
ACK f1684bb88a
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK f1684bb88a
willcl-ark:
ACK f1684bb88a
Tree-SHA512: 99b176cddbf3878c76bd4c80c030106200bf03139785e26dbae3341e1a675b623a13cd6dc7a0bb78344335bf859ae7548d97b2b58eb650c6e7b305d7cdc86e40
3d1bb1a122 qt: Update translation source file for v27.0 string freeze (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
This PR updates the `src/qt/locale/bitcoin_en.xlf` translation source file according to the [Release schedule for 27.0](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/29028).
Note for reviewers: it is expected to get a zero diff after running `make -C src translate` locally.
ACKs for top commit:
jarolrod:
ACK 3d1bb1a122
Tree-SHA512: 9b6e5aa3aaabb918d0a6418559bc3eb14297abc48b99e8c6e6de770aa1478b8b28881f8965fd15fe23cf4aa377b88ba903e978c8b75681c4f11e428ca1588b96
-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
regex_string='^(?!//).*(AC_APPLE_UNIVERSAL_BUILD|BOOST_PROCESS_USE_STD_FS|CHAR_EQUALS_INT8|CLIENT_VERSION_BUILD|CLIENT_VERSION_IS_RELEASE|CLIENT_VERSION_MAJOR|CLIENT_VERSION_MINOR|COPYRIGHT_HOLDERS|COPYRIGHT_HOLDERS_FINAL|COPYRIGHT_HOLDERS_SUBSTITUTION|COPYRIGHT_YEAR|ENABLE_ARM_SHANI|ENABLE_AVX2|ENABLE_EXTERNAL_SIGNER|ENABLE_SSE41|ENABLE_TRACING|ENABLE_WALLET|ENABLE_X86_SHANI|ENABLE_ZMQ|HAVE_BOOST|HAVE_BUILTIN_CLZL|HAVE_BUILTIN_CLZLL|HAVE_BYTESWAP_H|HAVE_CLMUL|HAVE_CONSENSUS_LIB|HAVE_CXX20|HAVE_DECL_BE16TOH|HAVE_DECL_BE32TOH|HAVE_DECL_BE64TOH|HAVE_DECL_BSWAP_16|HAVE_DECL_BSWAP_32|HAVE_DECL_BSWAP_64|HAVE_DECL_FORK|HAVE_DECL_FREEIFADDRS|HAVE_DECL_GETIFADDRS|HAVE_DECL_HTOBE16|HAVE_DECL_HTOBE32|HAVE_DECL_HTOBE64|HAVE_DECL_HTOLE16|HAVE_DECL_HTOLE32|HAVE_DECL_HTOLE64|HAVE_DECL_LE16TOH|HAVE_DECL_LE32TOH|HAVE_DECL_LE64TOH|HAVE_DECL_PIPE2|HAVE_DECL_SETSID|HAVE_DECL_STRERROR_R|HAVE_DEFAULT_VISIBILITY_ATTRIBUTE|HAVE_DLFCN_H|HAVE_DLLEXPORT_ATTRIBUTE|HAVE_ENDIAN_H|HAVE_EVHTTP_CONNECTION_GET_PEER_CONST_CHAR|HAVE_FDATASYNC|HAVE_GETENTROPY_RAND|HAVE_GETRANDOM|HAVE_GMTIME_R|HAVE_INTTYPES_H|HAVE_LIBADVAPI32|HAVE_LIBCOMCTL32|HAVE_LIBCOMDLG32|HAVE_LIBGDI32|HAVE_LIBIPHLPAPI|HAVE_LIBKERNEL32|HAVE_LIBOLE32|HAVE_LIBOLEAUT32|HAVE_LIBSHELL32|HAVE_LIBSHLWAPI|HAVE_LIBUSER32|HAVE_LIBUUID|HAVE_LIBWINMM|HAVE_LIBWS2_32|HAVE_MALLOC_INFO|HAVE_MALLOPT_ARENA_MAX|HAVE_MINIUPNPC_MINIUPNPC_H|HAVE_MINIUPNPC_UPNPCOMMANDS_H|HAVE_MINIUPNPC_UPNPERRORS_H|HAVE_NATPMP_H|HAVE_O_CLOEXEC|HAVE_POSIX_FALLOCATE|HAVE_PTHREAD|HAVE_PTHREAD_PRIO_INHERIT|HAVE_STDINT_H|HAVE_STDIO_H|HAVE_STDLIB_H|HAVE_STRERROR_R|HAVE_STRINGS_H|HAVE_STRING_H|HAVE_STRONG_GETAUXVAL|HAVE_SYSCTL|HAVE_SYSCTL_ARND|HAVE_SYSTEM|HAVE_SYS_ENDIAN_H|HAVE_SYS_PRCTL_H|HAVE_SYS_RESOURCES_H|HAVE_SYS_SELECT_H|HAVE_SYS_STAT_H|HAVE_SYS_SYSCTL_H|HAVE_SYS_TYPES_H|HAVE_SYS_VMMETER_H|HAVE_THREAD_LOCAL|HAVE_TIMINGSAFE_BCMP|HAVE_UNISTD_H|HAVE_VM_VM_PARAM_H|LT_OBJDIR|PACKAGE_BUGREPORT|PACKAGE_NAME|PACKAGE_STRING|PACKAGE_TARNAME|PACKAGE_URL|PACKAGE_VERSION|PTHREAD_CREATE_JOINABLE|QT_QPA_PLATFORM_ANDROID|QT_QPA_PLATFORM_COCOA|QT_QPA_PLATFORM_MINIMAL|QT_QPA_PLATFORM_WINDOWS|QT_QPA_PLATFORM_XCB|QT_STATICPLUGIN|STDC_HEADERS|STRERROR_R_CHAR_P|USE_ASM|USE_BDB|USE_DBUS|USE_NATPMP|USE_QRCODE|USE_SQLITE|USE_UPNP|_FILE_OFFSET_BITS|_LARGE_FILES)'
exclusion_files=":(exclude)src/minisketch :(exclude)src/crc32c :(exclude)src/secp256k1 :(exclude)src/crypto/sha256_arm_shani.cpp :(exclude)src/crypto/sha256_avx2.cpp :(exclude)src/crypto/sha256_sse41.cpp :(exclude)src/crypto/sha256_x86_shani.cpp"
git grep --perl-regexp --files-with-matches "$regex_string" -- '*.cpp' $exclusion_files | xargs git grep -L "bitcoin-config.h" | while read -r file; do line_number=$(awk -v my_file="$file" '/\/\/ file COPYING or https?:\/\/www.opensource.org\/licenses\/mit-license.php\./ {line = NR} /^\/\// && NR == line + 1 {while(getline && /^\/\//) line = NR} END {print line+1}' "$file"); sed -i "${line_number}i\\\\n\#if defined(HAVE_CONFIG_H)\\n#include <config/bitcoin-config.h>\\n\#endif" "$file"; done;
git grep --perl-regexp --files-with-matches "$regex_string" -- '*.h' $exclusion_files | xargs git grep -L "bitcoin-config.h" | while read -r file; do sed -i "/#define.*_H/a \\\\n\#if defined(HAVE_CONFIG_H)\\n#include <config/bitcoin-config.h>\\n\#endif" "$file"; done;
for file in $(git grep --files-with-matches 'bitcoin-config.h' -- '*.cpp' '*.h' $exclusion_files); do if ! grep -q --perl-regexp "$regex_string" $file; then sed -i '/HAVE_CONFIG_H/{N;N;N;d;}' $file; fi; done;
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
The first command creates a regular expression for matching all bitcoin-config.h symbols in the following form: ^(?!//).*(AC_APPLE_UNIVERSAL_BUILD|BOOST_PROCESS_USE_STD_FS|...|_LARGE_FILES). It was generated with:
./autogen.sh && printf '^(?!//).*(%s)' $(awk '/^#undef/ {print $2}' src/config/bitcoin-config.h.in | paste -sd "|" -)
The second command holds a list of files and directories that should not be processed. These include subtree directories as well as some crypto files that already get their symbols through the makefile.
The third command checks for missing bitcoin-config headers in .cpp files and adds the header if it is missing.
The fourth command checks for missing bitcoin-config headers in .h files and adds the header if it is missing.
The fifth command checks for unneeded bitcoin-config headers in sources files and removes the header if it is unneeded.
77331aa2a1 wallet: simplify EraseRecords by using 'ErasePrefix' (furszy)
33757814ce wallet: bdb batch 'ErasePrefix', do not create txn internally (furszy)
cf4d72a75e wallet: db, introduce 'RunWithinTxn()' helper function (furszy)
Pull request description:
Seeks to optimize and simplify `WalletBatch::EraseRecords`. Currently, this process opens a cursor to iterate over the entire database, searching for records that match the type prefixes, to then call the `WalletBatch::Erase` function for each of the matching records.
This PR rewrites this 40-line manual process into a single line; instead of performing all of those actions manually, we can simply utilize the `ErasePrefix()` functionality. The result is 06216b344dea6ad6c385fda0b37808ff9ae5273b.
Moreover, it expands the test coverage for the `ErasePrefix` functionality and documents the db txn requirement for `BerkeleyBatch::ErasePrefix` .
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
reACK 77331aa2a1
josibake:
code review ACK 77331aa2a1
Tree-SHA512: 9f78dda658677ff19b5979ba0efd11cf9fabf3d315feb79ed1160526f010fe843c41903fc18c0b092f78aa88bc874cf24edad8fc1ea6e96aabdc4fd1daf21ca5
864e2e9097 fuzz: increase length of string used for `NetWhitelist{bind}Permissions::TryParse` (brunoerg)
Pull request description:
The string `s` represents the value from `-whitelist`/`-whitebind` (e.g. "bloom,forcerelay,noban@1.2.3.4:32") and it is used in `NetWhitelistPermissions::TryParse` and `NetWhitebindPermissions::TryParse`. However, a max length of 32 is not enough to cover a lot of cases. Even disconsidering the permissions, 32 would not be enough to cover a lot of addresses. This PR fixes it.
ACKs for top commit:
maflcko:
lgtm ACK 864e2e9097
epiccurious:
utACK 864e2e9097.
vasild:
ACK 864e2e9097
Tree-SHA512: 2b89031b9f2ea92d636f05fd167b1e5ac726742a7e7c1af8ddaeaf90236e659731aaa6b7c23f65ec16ce52ac1b9e68e7b16e23c59e355312d057e001976d172a
In the presence of smaller transactions on the network, blocks can sustain a
higher relay rate than 7tx/second. In this event, the per-peer inventory queues
can grow too large.
This commit bumps the rate up to 14 tx/s (for inbound peers), increasing the
safety margin by a factor of 2.
Outbound peers continue to receive relayed transactions at 2.5x the rate of
inbound peers, for a rate of 35tx/second.
Co-Authored-By: Suhas Daftuar <sdaftuar@gmail.com>
Transactions are intended to be started on upper layers rather than
internally by the bdb batch object. This enables us to consolidate
different write operations within a procedure in the same db txn,
improving consistency due to the atomic property of the transaction,
as well as its performance due to the reduction of disk write
operations.
Important Note:
This approach also ensures that the BerkeleyBatch::ErasePrefix
function behaves exactly as the SQLiteBatch::ErasePrefix function,
which does not create a db txn internally.
Furthermore, since the `BerkeleyBatch::ErasePrefix' implementation
erases records one by one (by traversing the db), this change
ensures that the function is always called within an active txn
context. Without this measure, there's a potential risk to consistency;
certain records may be removed while others could persist due to an
internal failure during the procedure.
'RunWithinTxn()' provides a way to execute db operations within a
transactional context. It avoids writing repetitive boilerplate code for
starting and committing the database transaction.
9a3c5c8697 scripted-diff: rename ZapSelectTx to RemoveTxs (furszy)
83b762845f wallet: batch and simplify ZapSelectTx process (furszy)
595d50a103 wallet: migration, remove extra NotifyTransactionChanged call (furszy)
a2b071f992 wallet: ZapSelectTx, remove db rewrite code (furszy)
Pull request description:
Work decoupled from #28574. Brother of #28894.
Includes two different, yet interconnected, performance and code improvements to the zap wallet transactions process.
1) As the goal of the `ZapSelectTx` function is to erase tx records that match any of the inputted hashes. There is no need to traverse the whole database record by record. We could just check if the tx exist, and remove it directly by calling `EraseTx()`.
2) Instead of performing single write operations per removed tx record, this PR batches them all within a single atomic db txn.
Moreover, these changes will enable us to consolidate all individual write operations that take place during the wallet migration process into a single db txn in the future.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK 9a3c5c8697
josibake:
ACK 9a3c5c8697
Tree-SHA512: fb2ecc48224c400ab3b1fbb32e174b5b13bf03794717727f80f01f55fb183883b067a68c0a127b2de8885564da15425d021a96541953bf38a72becc2e9929ccf
517c7f9cba gui: Check for private keys disabled before attempting unlock (Andrew Chow)
Pull request description:
Before trying to unlock a wallet, first check if it has private keys disabled. If so, there is no need to unlock.
Note that such wallets are not expected to occur in typical usage. However bugs in previous versions allowed such wallets to be created, and so we need to handle them.
Fixes#772
For some additional context, see #631
ACKs for top commit:
hebasto:
ACK 517c7f9cba, I have reviewed the code and it looks OK.
BrandonOdiwuor:
ACK 517c7f9cba
Tree-SHA512: c92aa34344d04667b70b059d2aa0a1da999cb7239cd1413f3009781aa82379f309ff9808d7dc91d385e2c8afe2abda3564568e2091ef833b1536ebfcf80f7c3c
bee0ffbecf GUI/Intro: Never change the prune checkbox after the user has touched it (Luke Dashjr)
420a983e25 Bugfix: GUI/Intro: Disable GUI prune option if -prune is set, regardless of set value (Luke Dashjr)
Pull request description:
Re-PR from https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/18729
Now includes a bugfix too (`-prune=2+` disabled the checkbox, but `-prune=0/1` did not; this behaviour is necessary since `-prune` overrides GUI settings)
ACKs for top commit:
hebasto:
ACK bee0ffbecf, both commits are improvements of the current behaviour. Tested on Ubuntu 23.10.
Tree-SHA512: 8eb7d90af37deb30fe226179db3bc9df8ab59e4f3218c8e447ed31fc9ddc81ac1a1629da63347518587a56a4c8558b05cf7ec474024c5f5dfc6d49d6ff0eb0cc
b2e531e70a qt: update widgets availability on wallet selection (pablomartin4btc)
Pull request description:
This PR addresses an issue where, with no wallet selected, ticking on "Settings -> Mask values" checkbox twice enables the transaction tab when the checkbox is unticked.
<details>
<summary>Current behavior display on master</summary>

</details>
<details>
<summary>Correction display from this branch</summary>

</details>
Note for maintaners: this PR should be backported to both 25.x and 26.x.
---
Originally this PR was disabling the "Mask Values" checkbox when no wallet was selected but since a reviewer pointed out that a user might want to open a wallet already on "privacy mode" I rolled that change out.
<details>
<summary>Original correction display disabling "Mask Values" </summary>

</details>
ACKs for top commit:
alfonsoromanz:
Tested ACK b2e531e70a
hebasto:
ACK b2e531e70a, tested on Ubuntu 22.04.
Tree-SHA512: 6be77ab4d5ec86267a9b0a289a4d8600bb67d279f7e0be65e47b608ec392fe705cf026e32f3c082d2f27449b697d1d9e6a1d110035900d7a804ba823c9f5dfd4
ede5014c44 Modify command line help to show support for BIP21 URIs (Hernan Marino)
Pull request description:
While reviewing a different PR (see https://github.com/bitcoin-core/gui/pull/742 ) **hebasto** suggested that the help for bitcoin-qt should be updated to reflect the fact that bitcoin-qt supports an optional BIP21 URI parameter.
Since this reflects actual behaviour of bitcoin-qt and is independent of whether or not the other PR gets merged, I created this simple PR to fix the help message.
ACKs for top commit:
kristapsk:
utACK ede5014c44
pablomartin4btc:
lgtm, re ACK ede5014c44
hebasto:
ACK ede5014c44.
Tree-SHA512: c456297c486bc5cc65e0e092e7ba9d51b0bd7a584d4fabca7f7ca1f8e58cbcc66e96226539c689ed0f5e7f40da220bbc4ea30b90e31e1aeeb8867a385a90209c
29029df5c7 [doc] v3 signaling in mempool-replacements.md (glozow)
e643ea795e [fuzz] v3 transactions and sigop-adjusted vsize (glozow)
1fd16b5c62 [functional test] v3 transaction submission (glozow)
27c8786ba9 test framework: Add and use option for tx-version in MiniWallet methods (MarcoFalke)
9a1fea55b2 [policy/validation] allow v3 transactions with certain restrictions (glozow)
eb8d5a2e7d [policy] add v3 policy rules (glozow)
9a29d470fb [rpc] return full string for package_msg and package-error (glozow)
158623b8e0 [refactor] change Workspace::m_conflicts and adjacent funcs/structs to use Txid (glozow)
Pull request description:
See #27463 for overall package relay tracking.
Delving Bitcoin discussion thread: https://delvingbitcoin.org/t/v3-transaction-policy-for-anti-pinning/340
Delving Bitcoin discussion for LN usage: https://delvingbitcoin.org/t/lightning-transactions-with-v3-and-ephemeral-anchors/418
Rationale:
- There are various pinning problems with RBF and our general ancestor/descendant limits. These policies help mitigate many pinning attacks and make package RBF feasible (see #28984 which implements package RBF on top of this). I would focus the most here on Rule 3 pinning. [1][2]
- Switching to a cluster-based mempool (see #27677 and #28676) requires the removal of CPFP carve out, which applications depend on. V3 + package RBF + ephemeral anchors + 1-parent-1-child package relay provides an intermediate solution.
V3 policy is for "Priority Transactions." [3][4] It allows users to opt in to more restrictive topological limits for shared transactions, in exchange for the more robust fee-bumping abilities that offers. Even though we don't have cluster limits, we are able to treat these transactions as having as having a maximum cluster size of 2.
Immediate benefits:
- You can presign a transaction with 0 fees (not just 1sat/vB!) and add a fee-bump later.
- Rule 3 pinning is reduced by a significant amount, since the attacker can only attach a maximum of 1000vB to your shared transaction.
This also enables some other cool things (again see #27463 for overall roadmap):
- Ephemeral Anchors
- Package RBF for these 1-parent-1-child packages. That means e.g. a commitment tx + child can replace another commitment tx using the child's fees.
- We can transition to a "single anchor" universe without worrying about package limit pinning. So current users of CPFP carve out would have something else to use.
- We can switch to a cluster-based mempool [5] (#27677#28676), which removes CPFP carve out [6].
[1]: Original mailing list post and discussion about RBF pinning problems https://gist.github.com/glozow/25d9662c52453bd08b4b4b1d3783b9ff, https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2022-January/019817.html
[2]: A FAQ is "we need this for cluster mempool, but is this still necessary afterwards?" There are some pinning issues that are fixed here and not fully fixed in cluster mempool, so we will still want this or something similar afterward.
[3]: Mailing list post for v3 https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2022-September/020937.html
[4]: Original PR #25038 also contains a lot of the discussion
[5]: https://delvingbitcoin.org/t/an-overview-of-the-cluster-mempool-proposal/393/7
[6]: https://delvingbitcoin.org/t/an-overview-of-the-cluster-mempool-proposal/393#the-cpfp-carveout-rule-can-no-longer-be-supported-12
ACKs for top commit:
sdaftuar:
ACK 29029df5c7
achow101:
ACK 29029df5c7
instagibbs:
ACK 29029df5c7 modulo that
Tree-SHA512: 9664b078890cfdca2a146439f8835c9d9ab483f43b30af8c7cd6962f09aa557fb1ce7689d5e130a2ec142235dbc8f21213881baa75241c5881660f9008d68450
13161ecf03 opt: Skip over barren combinations of tiny UTXOs (Murch)
b7672c7cdd opt: Skip checking max_weight separately (Murch)
1edd2baa37 opt: Cut if last addition was minimal weight (Murch)
5248e2a60d opt: Skip heavier UTXOs with same effective value (Murch)
9124c73742 opt: Tiebreak UTXOs by weight for CoinGrinder (Murch)
451be19dc1 opt: Skip evaluation of equivalent input sets (Murch)
407b1e3432 opt: Track remaining effective_value in lookahead (Murch)
5f84f3cc04 opt: Skip branches with worse weight (Murch)
d68bc74fb2 fuzz: Test optimality of CoinGrinder (Murch)
67df6c629a fuzz: Add CoinGrinder fuzz target (Murch)
1502231229 coinselection: Track whether CG completed (Murch)
7488acc646 test: Add coin_grinder_tests (Murch)
6cc9a46cd0 coinselection: Add CoinGrinder algorithm (Murch)
89d0956643 opt: Tie-break UTXO sort by waste for BnB (Murch)
aaee65823c doc: Document max_weight on BnB (Murch)
Pull request description:
***Please refer to the [topic on Delving Bitcoin](https://delvingbitcoin.org/t/gutterguard-and-coingrinder-simulation-results/279) discussing Gutter Guard/Coingrinder simulation results.***
Adds a coin selection algorithm that minimizes the weight of the input set while creating change.
Motivations
---
- At high feerates, using unnecessary inputs can significantly increase the fees
- Users are upset when fees are relatively large compared to the amount sent
- Some users struggle to maintain a sufficient count of UTXOs in their wallet
Approach
---
So far, Bitcoin Core has used a balanced approach to coin selection, where it will generate multiple input set candidates using various coin selection algorithms and pick the least wasteful among their results, but not explicitly minimize the input set weight. Under some circumstances, we _do_ want to minimize the weight of the input set. Sometimes changeless solutions require many or heavy inputs, and there is not always a changeless solution for Branch and Bound to find in the first place. This can cause expensive transactions unnecessarily. Given a wallet with sufficient funds, `CoinGrinder` will pick the minimal-waste input set for a transaction with a change output. The current implementation only runs `CoinGrinder` at feerates over 3×long-term-feerate-estimate (by default 30 ṩ/vB), which may be a decent compromise between our goal to reduce costs for the users, but still permit transactions at lower feerates to naturally reduce the wallet’s UTXO pool to curb bloat.
Trade-offs
---
Simulations for my thesis on coin selection ([see Section 6.3.2.1 [PDF]](https://murch.one/erhardt2016coinselection.pdf)) suggest that minimizing the input set for all transactions tends to grind a wallet’s UTXO pool to dust (pun intended): an approach selecting inputs per coin-age-priority (in effect similar to “largest first selection”) on average produced a UTXO pool with 15× the UTXO count as Bitcoin Core’s Knapsack-based Coin Selection then (in 2016). Therefore, I do not recommend running `CoinGrinder` under all circumstances, but only at extreme feerates or when we have another good reason to minimize the input set for other reasons. In the long-term, we should introduce additional metrics to score different input set candidates, e.g. on basis of their privacy and wallet health impact, to pick from all our coin selection results, but until then, we may want to limit use of `CoinGrinder` in other ways.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK 13161ecf03
sr-gi:
ACK [13161ec](13161ecf03)
sipa:
ACK 13161ecf03
Tree-SHA512: 895b08b2ebfd0b71127949b7dba27146a6d10700bf8590402b14f261e7b937f4e2e1b24ca46de440c35f19349043ed2eba4159dc2aa3edae57721384186dae40
The goal of the function is to erase the wallet transactions that
match the inputted hashes. There is no need to traverse the database,
reading record by record, to then perform single entry removals for
each of them.
To ensure consistency and improve performance, this change-set removes
all tx records within a single atomic db batch operation, as well as
it cleans up code, improves error handling and simplifies the
transactions removal process entirely.
This optimizes the removal of watch-only transactions during the wallet
migration process and the 'removeprunedfunds' RPC command.
Given a lot of small amount UTXOs it is possible that the lookahead
indicates sufficient funds, but any combination of them would push us
beyond the current best_weight.
We can estimate a lower bound for the minimal necessary weight to reach
target from the maximal amount and minimal weight in the tail of the
UTXO pool: if adding a number of hypothetical UTXOs of this maximum
amount and minimum weight would not be able to beat `best_weight`, we
can SHIFT to the omission branch, and CUT if the last selected UTXO is
not heavier than the minimum weight of the remainder.
In situations where we have UTXO groups of various weight, we can CUT
rather than SHIFT when we exceeded the max_weight or the best
selection’s weight while the last step was equal to the minimum weight
in the lookahead.
When two successive UTXOs differ in weight but match in effective value,
we can skip the second if the first is not selected, because all input
sets we can generate by swapping out a lighter UTXOs with a heavier UTXO
of matching effective value would be strictly worse.
When two successive UTXOs match in effective value and weight, we can
skip the second if the prior is not selected: adding it would create an
equivalent input set to a previously evaluated.
E.g. if we have three UTXOs with effective values {5, 3, 3} of the same
weight each, we want to evaluate
{5, _, _}, {5, 3, _}, {5, 3, 3}, {_, 3, _}, {_, 3, 3},
but skip {5, _, 3}, and {_, _, 3}, because the first 3 is not selected,
and we therefore do not need to evaluate the second 3 at the same
position in the input set.
If we reach the end of the branch, we must SHIFT the previously selected
UTXO group instead.
Introduces a dedicated data structure to track the total
effective_value available in the remaining UTXOs at each index of the
UTXO pool. In contrast to the approach in BnB, this allows us to
immediately jump to a lower index instead of visiting every UTXO to add
back their eff_value to the lookahead.
CoinGrinder may not be able to exhaustively search all potentially
interesting combinations for large UTXO pools, so we keep track of
whether the search was terminated by the iteration limit.
5ca9b24da1 test: Add makefile target for running unit tests (TheCharlatan)
Pull request description:
`make check` runs a bunch of other subtree tests that exercise code that is hardly ever changed and have a comparatively long runtime. There seems to be no target for running just the unit tests, so add one.
Alternatively the secp256k1 tests could be removed from the `check-local` target, reducing its runtime. This was rejected before though in https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/20264.
ACKs for top commit:
delta1:
utACK 5ca9b24da1
edilmedeiros:
Tested ACK 5ca9b24da1
achow101:
ACK 5ca9b24da1
ryanofsky:
Tested ACK 5ca9b24da1.
Tree-SHA512: 470969d44585d7cc33ad038a16e791db9e2be8469f52ddf122c46f20776fad34e6a48f988861a132c42540158fed05f3cf66fcc3bea05708253daaa35af54339
Ensure we are checking sigop-adjusted virtual size by creating setups
and packages where sigop cost is larger than bip141 vsize.
Co-authored-by: Gregory Sanders <gsanders87@gmail.com>
e064487ca2 addrman, refactor: improve stochastic test in `AddSingle` (brunoerg)
Pull request description:
This PR changes this algorithm to be O(1) instead of O(n). Also, in the current implementation, if `pinfo->nRefCount` is 0, we created an unnecessary variable (`nFactor`), this changes it. the change is relatively simple and does not cause conflicts.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK e064487ca2
amitiuttarwar:
ACK e064487ca2
stratospher:
ACK e064487ca2. simple use of << instead of a loop, didn't observe any behaviour difference before and after.
Tree-SHA512: ff0a65155e47f65d2ce3cb5a3fd7a86efef1861181143df13a9d8e59cb16aee9be2f8801457bba8478b17fac47b015bff5cc656f6fac2ccc071ee7178a38d291
fab41697a5 Allow int8_t optimized vector serialization (MarcoFalke)
facaa14785 Faster std::byte (pre)vector (un)serialize (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
Currently, large vectors of `std::byte` are (un)serialized byte-by-byte, which is slow. Fix this, by enabling the already existing optimization for them.
On my system this gives a 10x speedup for `./src/bench/bench_bitcoin --filter=PrevectorDeserializeTrivial`, when `std::byte` are used:
```diff
diff --git a/src/bench/prevector.cpp b/src/bench/prevector.cpp
index 2524e215e4..76b16bc34e 100644
--- a/src/bench/prevector.cpp
+++ b/src/bench/prevector.cpp
@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ struct nontrivial_t {
static_assert(!std::is_trivially_default_constructible<nontrivial_t>::value,
"expected nontrivial_t to not be trivially constructible");
-typedef unsigned char trivial_t;
+typedef std::byte trivial_t;
static_assert(std::is_trivially_default_constructible<trivial_t>::value,
"expected trivial_t to be trivially constructible");
```
However, the optimization does not cover `signed char`. Fix that as well.
ACKs for top commit:
sipa:
utACK fab41697a5
achow101:
ACK fab41697a5
TheCharlatan:
ACK fab41697a5
Tree-SHA512: a3e20f375fd1d0e0dedb827a8ce528de1173ea69660c8c891ad1343a86b422072f6505096fca0d3f8af4442fbe1378a02e32d5974919d4e88ff06934d0258cba
86960cdb7f wallet: migration, batch addressbook records removal (furszy)
342c45f80e wallet: addressbook migration, batch db writes (furszy)
595bbe6e81 refactor: wallet, simplify addressbook migration (furszy)
d0943315b1 refactor: SetAddressBookWithDB, minimize number of map lookups (furszy)
bba4f8dcb5 refactor: SetAddrBookWithDB, signal only if write succeeded (furszy)
97b0753923 wallet: clean redundancies in DelAddressBook (furszy)
Pull request description:
Commits decoupled from #28574, focused on the address book cloning process
Includes:
1) DB batch operations and flow simplification for the address book migration process.
2) Code improvements to `CWallet::DelAddressBook` and `Wallet::SetAddrBookWithDB` methods.
These changes will let us consolidate all individual write operations that take place during the wallet migration process into a single db txn in the future.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK 86960cdb7f
josibake:
reACK 86960cdb7f
Tree-SHA512: 10c941df3cd84fd8662b9c9ca6a1ed2c7402d38c677d2fc66b8b6c9edc6d73e827a5821487bbcacb5569d502934fa548fd10699e2ec45185f869e43174d8b2a1
cfcb9b1ecf test: wallet, coverage for concurrent db transactions (furszy)
548ecd1155 tests: Test for concurrent writes with db tx (Ava Chow)
395bcd2454 sqlite: Ensure that only one SQLiteBatch is writing to db at a time (Ava Chow)
Pull request description:
The way that we have configured SQLite to run means that only one database transaction can be open at a time. Typically, each individual read and write operation will be its own transaction that is opened and committed automatically by SQLite. However, sometimes we want these operations to be batched into a multi-statement transaction, so `SQLiteBatch::TxnBegin`, `SQLiteBatch::TxnCommit`, and `SQLiteBatch::TxnAbort` are used to manage the transaction of the database.
However, once a db transaction is begun with one `SQLiteBatch`, any operations performed by another `SQLiteBatch` will also occur within the same transaction. Furthermore, those other `SQLiteBatch`s will not be expecting a transaction to be active, and will abort it once the `SQLiteBatch` is destructed. This is problematic as it will prevent some data from being written, and also cause the `SQLiteBatch` that opened the transaction in the first place to be in an unexpected state and throw an error.
To avoid this situation, we need to prevent the multiple batches from writing at the same time. To do so, I've implemented added a `CSemaphore` within `SQLiteDatabase` which will be used by any `SQLiteBatch` trying to do a write operation. `wait()` is called by `TxnBegin`, and at the beginning of `WriteKey`, `EraseKey`, and `ErasePrefix`. `post()` is called in `TxnCommit`, `TxnAbort` and at the end of `WriteKey`, `EraseKey`, and `ErasePrefix`. To avoid deadlocking on ` TxnBegin()` followed by a `WriteKey()`, `SQLiteBatch will now also track whether a transaction is in progress so that it knows whether to use the semaphore.
This issue is not a problem for BDB wallets since BDB uses WAL and provides transaction objects that must be used if an operation is to occur within a transaction. Specifically, we either pass a transaction pointer, or a nullptr, to all BDB operations, and this allows for concurrent transactions so it doesn't have this problem.
Fixes#29110
ACKs for top commit:
josibake:
ACK cfcb9b1ecf
furszy:
ACK cfcb9b1ecf
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK cfcb9b1ecf. This looks great and I think it is ready for merge. Just holding off because josibake seemed ready to review https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/29112#issuecomment-1930372190 and might have more feedback.
Tree-SHA512: 2dd5a8e76df52451a40e0b8a87c7139d68a0d8e1bf2ebc79168cc313e192dab87cfa4270ff17fea4f7b370060d3bc9b5d294d50f7e07994d9b5a69b40397c927
Instead of doing one db transaction per removed record,
we now batch all removals in a single db transaction.
Speeding up the process and preventing the wallet from entering
an inconsistent state when any of the intermediate writes fail.
1) Encode destination only once (instead of three).
2) Fail if the entry's linked data cannot be removed.
3) Don't remove entry from memory if db write fail.
4) Notify GUI only if removal succeeded
a17fd33edd GUI: OptionsDialog: Replace verbose two-option font selector with simple combobox with Custom... choice (Luke Dashjr)
98e9ac5199 GUI: Use FontChoice type in OptionsModel settings abstraction (Luke Dashjr)
3a6757eed9 GUI: Load custom FontForMoney from QSettings (Luke Dashjr)
49eb97eff9 GUI: Add possibility for an explicit QFont for FontForMoney in OptionsModel (Luke Dashjr)
f2dfde80b8 GUI: Move "embedded font or not" decision into new OptionsModel::getFontForMoney method (Luke Dashjr)
Pull request description:
This replaces the overly-verbose radio-button font setting (which only allows embedded or autodetected from system) with a simple combobox providing both existing options as well as a custom option to allow the user to select any font of their choice/style.
ACKs for top commit:
pablomartin4btc:
tested ACK a17fd33edd
hebasto:
ACK a17fd33edd, I have reviewed the code and tested it on Ubuntu 22.04. This is a UX improvement. https://github.com/bitcoin-core/gui/pull/497#issuecomment-1341222673 might be addressed in a follow-up.
Tree-SHA512: 2f0a8bc1242a374c4b7dc6e34014400428b6d36063fa0b01c9f62a8bd6078adfbbca93d95c87e4ccb580d982fe10173e1d9a28bcec586591dd3f966c7b90fc5d
b14298c5bc fuzz: remove unused `args` and `context` from `FuzzedWallet` (brunoerg)
Pull request description:
`ArgsManager args` and `WalletContext context` were previously used to create the wallet into `FuzzedWallet`. After fa15861763, they are not used anymore. This PR removes them.
ACKs for top commit:
maflcko:
lgtm ACK b14298c5bc
epiccurious:
utACK b14298c5bc
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK b14298c5bc
Tree-SHA512: 164e6a66ba05e11176a0cf68db6257f0ac07459cf7aa01ec4302b303c156c205a68128373a0b8daba0a6dfbff990af7fa14465a6341a296312fb20ea778c7a8c
e2ad343f69 wallet: remove unused `SignatureData` instances in spkm's `FillPSBT` methods (Sebastian Falbesoner)
Pull request description:
These are filled with signature data from a PSBT input, but not used anywhere after, hence they can be removed. Note that the same code is in the `SignPSBTInput` function where the `sigdata` result is indeed used.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK e2ad343f69
brunoerg:
crACK e2ad343f69
Tree-SHA512: f0cabcc000bcea6bc7d7ec9d3be2e2a8accbdbffbe35252250ea2305b65a5813fde2b8096fbdd2c7cccdf417ea285183dc325fc2d210d88bce62978ce642930e
2bb25ce502 wallet: remove unused 'accept_no_keys' arg from decryption process (furszy)
Pull request description:
Found it while reviewing other PR. Couldn't contain myself from cleaning it up.
The wallet decryption process (`CheckDecryptionKey()` and `Unlock()`)
contains an arg 'accept_no_keys,' introduced in #13926, that has
never been used.
Additionally, this also removes the unimplemented `SplitWalletPath`
function.
ACKs for top commit:
delta1:
ACK 2bb25ce502
epiccurious:
utACK 2bb25ce502.
achow101:
ACK 2bb25ce502
theStack:
Code-review ACK 2bb25ce502
Tree-SHA512: e0537c994be19ca0032551d8a64cf1755c8997e04d21ee0522b31de26ad90b9eb02a8b415448257b60bced484b9d2a23b37586e12dc5ff6e35bdd8ff2165c6bf
A SQLiteBatch need to wait for any other batch to finish writing before
it can begin writing, otherwise db txn state may be incorrectly
modified. To enforce this, each SQLiteDatabase has a semaphore which
acts as a lock and is acquired by a batch when it begins a write, erase,
or a transaction, and is released by it when it is done.
To avoid deadlocking on itself for writing during a transaction,
SQLiteBatch also keeps track of whether it has begun a transaction.
e7fd70f4b6 [test] make v2transport arg in addconnection mandatory and few cleanups (stratospher)
Pull request description:
- make `v2transport` argument in `addconnection` regression-testing only RPC mandatory. https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/24748#discussion_r1470738750
- previously it was an optional arg with default `false` value.
- only place this RPC is used is in the [functional tests](11b436a66a/test/functional/test_framework/test_node.py (L742)) where we always pass the appropriate `v2transport` option to the RPC anyways. (and that too just for python dummy peer(`P2PInterface`) and bitcoind(`TestNode`) interactions)
- rename `v2_handshake()` to `_on_data_v2_handshake()` https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/24748#discussion_r1466958424
- more compact return statement in `wait_for_reconnect()` https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/24748#discussion_r1466979708
- assertion to check that empty version packets are received from `TestNode`.
ACKs for top commit:
glozow:
ACK e7fd70f4b6
theStack:
Code-review ACK e7fd70f4b6
mzumsande:
Code Review ACK e7fd70f4b6
Tree-SHA512: e66e29baccd91e1e4398b91f7d45c5fc7c2841d77d8a6178734586017bf2be63496721649da91848dec71da605ee31664352407d5bb896e624cc693767c61a1f
c819a83b4d Don't use scientific notation in log messages (Kristaps Kaupe)
Pull request description:
Don't see any benefits here, only harder to read for most of the users.
Before:
```
2024-01-16T13:11:36Z Dumped mempool: 8.165e-06s to copy, 0.00224268s to dump
```
After:
```
2024-01-16T13:11:36Z Dumped mempool: 0.000s to copy, 0.002s to dump
```
ACKs for top commit:
kristapsk:
> > > > lgtm ACK [c819a83](c819a83b4d). can you update the PR description?
glozow:
lgtm ACK c819a83b4d. can you update the PR description?
Tree-SHA512: 0972e0a05934e1b014fdeca0c235065aa017ba9abf74b3018f514e4d8022ef02b7f042a07d3675144b51449492468aea6b5b0183233ad7f1bab887d18e3d06af
fa5cd66f0a test: Assumeutxo with more than just coinbase transactions (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
Currently the AU tests only check that loading a txout set with only coinbase outputs works.
Fix that by adding other transactions.
ACKs for top commit:
jamesob:
ACK fa5cd66f0a
glozow:
concept ACK fa5cd66f0a
Tree-SHA512: e090c41f73490ad72e36c478405bfd0716d46fbf5a131415095999da6503094a86689a179a84addae3562b760df64cdb67488f81692178c8ca8bf771b1e931ff
make check runs a bunch of other subtree tests that exercise code that
is hardly ever changed and have a comparatively long runtime. There
seems to be no target for running just the unit tests, so add one.
The wallet decryption process (CheckDecryptionKey() and Unlock())
contains an arg 'accept_no_keys,' introduced in #13926, that has
never been used.
Additionally, this also removes the unimplemented SplitWalletPath
function.
4da76ca247 test: Test migration of tx with both spendable and watchonly (Ava Chow)
c62a8d03a8 wallet: Keep txs that belong to both watchonly and migrated wallets (Ava Chow)
71cb28ea8c test: Make sure that migration test does not rescan on reloading (Ava Chow)
78ba0e6748 wallet: Reload the wallet if migration exited early (Ava Chow)
9332c7edda wallet: Write bestblock to watchonly and solvable wallets (Ava Chow)
Pull request description:
A transaction does not necessarily have to belong to either the migrated wallet (with the private keys) and the watchonly wallet (with watchonly things), it could have multiple outputs with each isminetype. So we should be putting such transactions in one or the other wallet, but rather putting it in both.
I've added a test for this behavior, however the test also revealed a few other issues. Notably, it revealed that `migratewallet` would have the watchonly wallet rescan from genesis when it is reloaded at the end of migration. This could be a cause for migration appearing to be very slow. This is resolved by first writing best block records to the watchonly and solvable wallets, as well as updating the test to make sure that rescans don't happen.
The change to avoid rescans also found an issue where some of our early exits would result in unloading the wallet even though nothing happened. So there is also a commit to reload the wallet for such early exits.
ACKs for top commit:
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK 4da76ca247. This looks great. The code is actually cleaner than before, two bugs are fixed, and the test checking for rescanning is pretty clever and broadens test coverage.
furszy:
Code review ACK 4da76ca2
Tree-SHA512: 5fc210cff16ca6720d7b2d0616d7e3f295c974147854abc704cf99a3bfaad17572ada084859e7a1b1ca94da647ad130303219678f429b7995f85e040236db35c
3904123da9 tests: Test that descriptors flag is set for migrated blank wallets (Ava Chow)
072d506240 wallet: Make sure that the descriptors flag is set for blank wallets (Ava Chow)
Pull request description:
While rebasing #28710 after #28976 was merged, I realized that although blank wallets were being moved to sqlite, `WALLET_FLAG_DESCRIPTORS` was not being set so those blank wallets would still continue to be treated as legacy wallets.
To fix that, just set the descriptor flags for blank wallets. Also added a test to catch this.
ACKs for top commit:
epiccurious:
Tested ACK 3904123da9.
delta1:
tested ACK 3904123da9
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK 3904123da9
murchandamus:
code review ACK 3904123da9
Tree-SHA512: 9f6fe9c1899ca387ab909b1bb6956cd6bc5acbf941686ddc6c061f9b1ceec2cc9d009ff472486fc86e963f6068f0e2f1ae96282e7c630193797a9734c4f424ab
It is possible for a transaction that has an output that belongs to the
mgirated wallet, and another output that belongs to the watchonly
wallet. Such transaction should appear in both wallets during migration.
Migration will unload loaded wallets prior to beginning. It will then
perform some checks which may exit early. Such unloaded wallets should
be reloaded prior to exiting.
When migrating, we should also be writing the bestblock record to the
watchonly and solvable wallets to avoid rescanning on the reload as that
can be slow.
fad74bbbd0 refactor: Mark prevector iterator with std::contiguous_iterator_tag (MarcoFalke)
fab8a01048 refactor: Fix binary operator+ for prevector iterators (MarcoFalke)
fa44a60b2b refactor: Fix constness for prevector iterators (MarcoFalke)
facaa66b49 refactor: Add missing default constructor to prevector iterators (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
Currently prevector iterators have many issues:
* Forward iterators (and stronger) must be default constructible (https://eel.is/c++draft/forward.iterators#1.2). Otherwise, some functions can not be instantiated, like `std::minmax_element`.
* Various `const` issues with random access iterators. For example, a `const iterator` is different from a `const_iterator`, because the first one holds a mutable reference and must also return it without `const`. Also, `operator+` must be callable regardless of the iterator object's `const`-ness.
* When adding an offset to random access iterators, both `x+n` and `n+x` must be specified, see https://eel.is/c++draft/random.access.iterators#tab:randomaccessiterator
Fix all issues.
Also, upgrade the `std::random_access_iterator_tag` (C++17) to `std::contiguous_iterator_tag` (C++20)
ACKs for top commit:
TheCharlatan:
ACK fad74bbbd0
stickies-v:
ACK fad74bbbd0
willcl-ark:
ACK fad74bbbd0
Tree-SHA512: b1ca778a31602af94b323b8feaf993833ec78be09f1d438a68335485a4ba97f52125fdd977ffb9541b89f8d45be0105076aa07b5726936133519aae832556e0b
b851c5385d fuzz: extend ConsumeNetAddr() to return I2P and CJDNS addresses (Vasil Dimov)
Pull request description:
In the process of doing so, refactor `ConsumeNetAddr()` to generate the addresses from IPv4, IPv6, Tor, I2P and CJDNS networks in the same way - by preparing some random stream and deserializing from it. Similar code was already found in `RandAddr()`.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK b851c5385d
mzumsande:
ACK b851c5385d
brunoerg:
utACK b851c5385d
Tree-SHA512: 9905acff0e996f30ddac0c14e5ee9e1db926c7751472c06d6441111304242b563f7c942b162b209d80e8fb65a97249792eef9ae0a96100419565bf7f59f59676
987a1b51ee init: settings, do not load auto-generated warning msg (furszy)
Pull request description:
Fixes https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/29144#issuecomment-1907071391.
The settings warning message is meant to be used only to discourage users from
modifying the file manually. Therefore, there is no need to keep it in memory.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK 987a1b51ee
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK 987a1b51ee. Seems like a clean, simple fix
Tree-SHA512: 3f2bdcf4b4a9cadb396dcff9b43155211eeed018527a07356970a341d139ad18edbd1a4d369377c8907b8ec1f19ee2ab8aacf85a887379e6d57a8a6db2403d51
c11c404281 tests: Test migration of blank wallets (Andrew Chow)
563b2a60d6 wallet: Better error message when missing LegacySPKM during migration (Andrew Chow)
b1d2c771d4 wallet: Check for descriptors flag before migration (Andrew Chow)
8c127ff1ed wallet: Skip key and script migration for blank wallets (Andrew Chow)
Pull request description:
Blank wallets (wallets without any keys are scripts) are being detected as already being descriptor wallets even though they are not. This is because the check for whether a wallet is already a descriptor wallet uses the presence of a `LegacyScriptPubKeyMan` which is only setup when keys or scripts are found. This PR resolves this issue by checking for the descriptor wallet flag instead and subsequently skipping the keys and scripts part of migration for blank wallets.
Fixes the issue mentioned in https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/28868#issuecomment-1809641110
ACKs for top commit:
furszy:
reACK c11c404281. CI failure is unrelated.
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK c11c404281
Tree-SHA512: 2466fdf1542eb8489c841253191f85dc88365493f0bb3395b67dee3e43709a9993c68b9d7623657b54b779adbe68fc81962d60efef4802c5d461f154167af7f4
ff9039f6ea Remove GetAdjustedTime (dergoegge)
Pull request description:
This picks up parts of #25908.
The use of adjusted time is removed from validation code while the warning to users if their clock is out of sync with the rest of the network remains.
ACKs for top commit:
naumenkogs:
ACK ff9039f6ea
achow101:
ACK ff9039f6ea
maflcko:
lgtm ACK ff9039f6ea🤽
stickies-v:
ACK ff9039f6ea
Tree-SHA512: d1f6b9445c236915503fd2ea828f0d3b92285a5dbc677b168453276115e349972edbad37194d8becd9136d8e7219b576af64ec51c72bdb1923e57e405c0483fc
0bef1042ce net: enable v2transport by default (Pieter Wuille)
Pull request description:
This enables BIP324's v2 transport by default (see #27634):
* Inbound connections will auto-sense whether v1 or v2 is in use.
* Automatic outbound connections will use v2 if `NODE_P2P_V2` was set in addr gossip, but retry with v1 if met with immediate failure.
* Manual outbound connections will default to v2, but retry with v1 if met with immediate failure.
It remains possible to run with `-v2transport=0` to disable all of these, and make all outbound and inbound connections v1. It also remains possible to specify the `v2transport` argument to the `addnode` RPC as `false`, to disable attempting a v2 connection for that particular added node.
ACKs for top commit:
stratospher:
ACK 0bef104.
josibake:
reACK 0bef1042ce
achow101:
ACK 0bef1042ce
naumenkogs:
ACK 0bef1042ce
theStack:
ACK 0bef1042ce
willcl-ark:
crACK 0bef1042ce
BrandonOdiwuor:
utACK 0bef1042ce
pablomartin4btc:
re ACK 0bef1042ce
kristapsk:
utACK 0bef1042ce
Tree-SHA512: 3f17a91e318b9304c40c74a7a5b231149f664ae684d13e9739a05be6c05ba9720f3c3c62da6a73ace0ae8ce733f1c8410b211f9fa15694e6a8d28999ab9882d8
b298242c8d test: sqlite, add coverage for dangling to-be-reverted db txns (furszy)
fc0e747192 sqlite: guard against dangling to-be-reverted db transactions (furszy)
472d2ca981 sqlite: introduce HasActiveTxn method (furszy)
dca874e838 sqlite: add ability to interrupt statements (furszy)
fdf9f66909 test: wallet db, exercise deadlock after write failure (furszy)
Pull request description:
Discovered while was reviewing #29112, specifically https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/29112#pullrequestreview-1821862931.
If the db handler that initiated the database transaction is destroyed,
the ongoing transaction cannot be left dangling when the db txn fails
to abort. It must be forcefully reverted; otherwise, any subsequent
db handler executing a write operation will dump the dangling,
to-be-reverted transaction data to disk.
This not only breaks the isolation property but also results in the
improper storage of incomplete information on disk, impacting
the wallet consistency.
This PR fixes the issue by resetting the db connection, automatically
rolling back the transaction (per https://www.sqlite.org/c3ref/close.html)
when the handler object is being destroyed and the txn abortion failed.
Testing Notes
Can verify the failure by reverting the fix e5217fea and running the test.
It will fail without e5217fea and pass with it.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK b298242c8d
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK b298242c8d. Just fix for exec result codes and comment update since last review.
Tree-SHA512: 44ba0323ab21440e79e9d7791bc1c56a8873c8bd3e8f6a85641b91576e1293011fa8032d8ae5b0580f3fb7a949356f7b9676693d7ceffa617aaad9f6569993eb