The clean trie cache is persisted periodically, therefore Geth can
quickly warmup the cache in next restart.
However it will reduce the robustness of system. The assumption is
held in Geth that if the parent trie node is present, then the entire
sub-trie associated with the parent are all prensent.
Imagine the scenario that Geth rewinds itself to a past block and
restart, but Geth finds the root node of "future state" in clean
cache then regard this state is present in disk, while is not in fact.
Another example is offline pruning tool. Whenever an offline pruning
is performed, the clean cache file has to be removed to aviod hitting
the root node of "deleted states" in clean cache.
All in all, compare with the minor performance gain, system robustness
is something we care more.
The state availability is checked during the creation of a state reader.
- In hash-based database, if the specified root node does not exist on disk disk, then
the state reader won't be created and an error will be returned.
- In path-based database, if the specified state layer is not available, then the
state reader won't be created and an error will be returned.
This change also contains a stricter semantics regarding the `Commit` operation: once it has been performed, the trie is no longer usable, and certain operations will return an error.
* all: move main transaction pool into a subpool
* go.mod: remove superfluous updates
* core/txpool: review fixes, handle txs rejected by all subpools
* core/txpool: typos
This PR adds server-side limits for JSON-RPC batch requests. Before this change, batches
were limited only by processing time. The server would pick calls from the batch and
answer them until the response timeout occurred, then stop processing the remaining batch
items.
Here, we are adding two additional limits which can be configured:
- the 'item limit': batches can have at most N items
- the 'response size limit': batches can contain at most X response bytes
These limits are optional in package rpc. In Geth, we set a default limit of 1000 items
and 25MB response size.
When a batch goes over the limit, an error response is returned to the client. However,
doing this correctly isn't always possible. In JSON-RPC, only method calls with a valid
`id` can be responded to. Since batches may also contain non-call messages or
notifications, the best effort thing we can do to report an error with the batch itself is
reporting the limit violation as an error for the first method call in the batch. If a batch is
too large, but contains only notifications and responses, the error will be reported with
a null `id`.
The RPC client was also changed so it can deal with errors resulting from too large
batches. An older client connected to the server code in this PR could get stuck
until the request timeout occurred when the batch is too large. **Upgrading to a version
of the RPC client containing this change is strongly recommended to avoid timeout issues.**
For some weird reason, when writing the original client implementation, @fjl worked off of
the assumption that responses could be distributed across batches arbitrarily. So for a
batch request containing requests `[A B C]`, the server could respond with `[A B C]` but
also with `[A B] [C]` or even `[A] [B] [C]` and it wouldn't make a difference to the
client.
So in the implementation of BatchCallContext, the client waited for all requests in the
batch individually. If the server didn't respond to some of the requests in the batch, the
client would eventually just time out (if a context was used).
With the addition of batch limits into the server, we anticipate that people will hit this
kind of error way more often. To handle this properly, the client now waits for a single
response batch and expects it to contain all responses to the requests.
---------
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
* core/txpool: abstraction prep work for secondary pools (blob pool)
* core/txpool: leave subpool concepts to a followup pr
* les: fix tests using hard coded errors
* core/txpool: use bitmaps instead of maps for tx type filtering
* cmd/evm: make evm blocktest output logs if so instructed
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: Marius van der Wijden <m.vanderwijden@live.de>
---------
Co-authored-by: Marius van der Wijden <m.vanderwijden@live.de>
implements the ability to run several state-tests in one instance. By not providing a statetest path to the `evm statetest` command, the path(s) will instead be read from `stdin`.
* cryto/kzg4844: pull in the C and Go libs for KZG cryptography
* go.mod: pull in the KZG libraries
* crypto/kzg4844: add basic becnhmarks for ballpark numbers
* cmd, crypto: integrate both CKZG and GoKZG all the time, add flag
* cmd/utils, crypto/kzg4844: run library init on startup
* crypto/kzg4844: make linter happy
* crypto/kzg4844: push missing file
* crypto/kzg4844: fully disable CKZG but leave in the sources
* build, crypto/kzg4844, internal: link CKZG by default and with portable mode
* crypto/kzg4844: drop verifying the trusted setup in gokzg
* internal/build: yolo until it works?
* cmd/utils: make flag description friendlier
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
* crypto/ckzg: no need for double availability check
* build: tiny flag cleanup nitpick
---------
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
When block import fails, the error displays the number of the first block past the import batch, not the number of the failing block. This change fixes this problem by identifying which blocks fails and reporting its number.
rename parameter
In this case, the naming of "extapi" might create some confusion. Although it represents an External Signer Backend, its name could be mistaken for an API. In reality, it is a backend instance used for communicating with external signers. A better naming choice could be "extBackend" or "externalBackend" to more accurately describe that it is a backend instance rather than an API.
Makes the `geth account ... ` commands usable even if a geth-process is already executing, since the account commands do not read the chaindata, it was not required for those to use the same locking mechanism.
---
Signed-off-by: jsvisa <delweng@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
Co-authored-by: Sina Mahmoodi <itz.s1na@gmail.com>
Regenerate receipt json code to remove omit empty. Previously, there was a discrepancy between the generated code and the source.
---------
Co-authored-by: lightclient@protonmail.com <lightclient@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
* all: remove notion of trusted checkpoints in the post-merge world
* light: remove unused function
* eth/ethconfig, les: remove unused config option
* les: make linter happy
---------
Co-authored-by: Gary Rong <garyrong0905@gmail.com>
* cmd/utils, node: switch to Pebble as the default db if none exists
* node: fall back to LevelDB on platforms not supporting Pebble
* core/rawdb, node: default to Pebble at the node level
* cmd/geth: fix some tests explicitly using leveldb
* ethdb/pebble: allow double closes, makes tests simpler
Follow-up to #26697, makes the crawler less verbose on route53-based scenarios.
It also changes the loglevel from debug to info on Updates, which are typically the root, and can be interesting to see.
This PR removes the Debug field from vmconfig, making it so that if a tracer is set, debug=true is implied.
---------
Co-authored-by: 0xTylerHolmes <tyler@ethereum.org>
Co-authored-by: Sina Mahmoodi <1591639+s1na@users.noreply.github.com>
Currently the t8n tool uses the same block number for the current block and its parent while calculating the base fee. This causes incorrect base fee calculation for the london fork block. This commit sets the parent block number to be one less than the current block number
With #25287 we made it so that preimages were not recorded by default. This had the side effect that the evm command is no longer able to dump state since it does a preimage lookup to determine the address represented by a key.
This change enables the recording of preimages when the dump command is given.
Here, the core.Message interface turns into a plain struct and
types.Message gets removed.
This is a breaking change to packages core and core/types. While we do
not promise API stability for package core, we do for core/types. An
exception can be made for types.Message, since it doesn't have any
purpose apart from invoking the state transition in package core.
types.Message was also marked deprecated by the same commit it
got added in, 4dca5d4db7 (November 2016).
The core.Message interface was added in December 2014, in commit
db494170dc, for the purpose of 'testing' state transitions. It's the
same change that made transaction struct fields private. Before that,
the state transition used *types.Transaction directly.
Over time, multiple implementations of the interface accrued across
different packages, since constructing a Message is required whenever
one wants to invoke the state transition. These implementations all
looked very similar, a struct with private fields exposing the fields
as accessor methods.
By changing Message into a struct with public fields we can remove all
these useless interface implementations. It will also hopefully
simplify future changes to the type with less updates to apply across
all of go-ethereum when a field is added to Message.
---------
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
This change prints out more information about the problem, in the case where geth detects a gap between leveldb and ancients, so we can determine more exactly where the gap is (what the first missing is). Also prints out more metadata.
---------
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
This change fixes a flaw where, in certain scenarios, the block sealer did not accurately reset the remaining gas after failing to include an invalid transaction. Fixes#26791
The EmptyRootHash and EmptyCodeHash are defined everywhere in the codebase, this PR replaces all of them with unified one defined in core/types package, and also defines constants for TxRoot, WithdrawalsRoot and UncleRoot