This change makes it possible to run geth with JSON-RPC over HTTP and
WebSocket on the same TCP port. The default port for WebSocket
is still 8546.
geth --rpc --rpcport 8545 --ws --wsport 8545
This also removes a lot of deprecated API surface from package rpc.
The rpc package is now purely about serving JSON-RPC and no longer
provides a way to start an HTTP server.
This adds an implementation of the current discovery v5 spec.
There is full integration with cmd/devp2p and enode.Iterator in this
version. In theory we could enable the new protocol as a replacement of
discovery v4 at any time. In practice, there will likely be a few more
changes to the spec and implementation before this can happen.
- Dump stats also for --bench flag.
- From memory stats only show number and size of allocations. This is what `test -bench` shows. I doubt others like number of GC runs are any useful, but can be added if requested.
- Now the mem stats are for single execution in case of --bench.
Turns out the way RDATA limits work is documented after all,
I just didn't search right. The trick to make it work is to
count UPSERTs twice.
This also adds an additional check to ensure TTL changes are
applied on existing records.
* node: expose config in service context
* eth: integrate p2p/dnsdisc
* cmd/geth: add some DNS flags
* eth: remove DNS URLs
* cmd/utils: configure DNS names for testnets
* params: update DNS URLs
* cmd/geth: configure mainnet DNS
* cmd/utils: rename DNS flag and fix flag processing
* cmd/utils: remove debug print
* node: fix test
For longer records and subtree entries, the deployer created two
separate TXT records. This doesn't work as intended because the client
will receive the two records in arbitrary order. The fix is to encode
longer values as "string1""string2" instead of "string1", "string2".
This encoding creates a single record on AWS Route53.
Adds the 'geth dumpgenesis' command, which writes the configured
genesis in JSON format to stdout. This provides a way to generate the
data (structure and content) that can then be used with the 'geth init'
command.
This replaces the JavaScript interpreter used by the console with goja,
which is actively maintained and a lot faster than otto. Clef still uses otto
and eth/tracers still uses duktape, so we are currently dependent on three
different JS interpreters. We're looking to replace the remaining uses of otto
soon though.
* log: delete RotatingFileHandler
We added this for the dashboard, which is gone now. The
handler never really worked well and had data race and file
handling issues.
* internal/debug: remove unused RotatingFileHandler setup code
This change works around the 32k RDATA character limit per change
request and fixes several issues in the deployer which prevented it from
working for our production trees.
* p2p/dnsdisc: add support for enode.Iterator
This changes the dnsdisc.Client API to support the enode.Iterator
interface.
* p2p/dnsdisc: rate-limit DNS requests
* p2p/dnsdisc: preserve linked trees across root updates
This improves the way links are handled when the link root changes.
Previously, sync would simply remove all links from the current tree and
garbage-collect all unreachable trees before syncing the new list of
links.
This behavior isn't great in certain cases: Consider a structure where
trees A, B, and C reference each other and D links to A. If D's link
root changed, the sync code would first remove trees A, B and C, only to
re-sync them later when the link to A was found again.
The fix for this problem is to track the current set of links in each
clientTree and removing old links only AFTER all links are synced.
* p2p/dnsdisc: deflake iterator test
* cmd/devp2p: adapt dnsClient to new p2p/dnsdisc API
* p2p/dnsdisc: tiny comment fix