Base the task on --preset=dev-mode to ensure maximal coverage and add
the following:
bitcoin-chainstate (experimental) ... ON
libbitcoinkernel (experimental) ..... ON
kernel-test (experimental) .......... ON
Base the task on --preset=dev-mode to ensure maximal coverage and add
the following:
bitcoin-chainstate (experimental) ... ON
libbitcoinkernel (experimental) ..... ON
kernel-test (experimental) .......... ON
The GUI remains disabled explicitly.
Base the task on --preset=dev-mode to ensure maximal coverage and add
the following:
bitcoin-chainstate (experimental) ... ON
libbitcoinkernel (experimental) ..... ON
kernel-test (experimental) .......... ON
The GUI remains disabled explicitly.
Base the task on --preset=dev-mode to ensure maximal coverage and add
the following:
bitcoin-chainstate (experimental) ... ON
libbitcoinkernel (experimental) ..... ON
kernel-test (experimental) .......... ON
Also, shorten the name, for a less cluttered web view.
Base the task on --preset=dev-mode to ensure maximal coverage and add
the following:
bitcoin-chainstate (experimental) ... ON
libbitcoinkernel (experimental) ..... ON
kernel-test (experimental) .......... ON
6c7a34f3b0bd39ef7a1520aac56e12f78e5cc969 kernel: Add Purpose section to header documentation (TheCharlatan)
7e9f00bcc1742932e40426dddd906851b46c24d3 kernel: Allowing reducing exports (TheCharlatan)
7990463b1059ba5fc4ebe37fd1105a9e168ae20d kernel: Add pure kernel bitcoin-chainstate (TheCharlatan)
36ec9a3ea2322adf8d73e711fb17cf2a64f5bcaa Kernel: Add functions for working with outpoints (TheCharlatan)
5eec7fa96aa3042025181c4c4b57263beb869244 kernel: Add block hash type and block tree utility functions to C header (TheCharlatan)
f5d5d1213cc4f4ef8bfe335736c665ed7bc3137d kernel: Add function to read block undo data from disk to C header (TheCharlatan)
09d0f626388a10eed1f264386014665fcae4fa22 kernel: Add functions to read block from disk to C header (TheCharlatan)
a263a4caf2311bc31dc2ef1c04dab9517ee0d28f kernel: Add function for copying block data to C header (TheCharlatan)
b30e15f4329ab0ee6bb5c4c1d1f6067be364c59e kernel: Add functions for the block validation state to C header (TheCharlatan)
aa262da7bcfa9bf3d0105e6f689eae7c6e95a0e5 kernel: Add validation interface to C header (TheCharlatan)
d27e27758d51bc2aa125dc967691aacc4f3811d3 kernel: Add interrupt function to C header (TheCharlatan)
1976b13be9c87baa1229b1573bdc8a1da562db0d kernel: Add import blocks function to C header (TheCharlatan)
a747ca1f516e7ec73758c6017e2eca5635ab2b74 kernel: Add chainstate load options for in-memory dbs in C header (TheCharlatan)
070e77732cdb927cc27ddd39c52dec22c5d717a0 kernel: Add options for reindexing in C header (TheCharlatan)
ad80abc73df38f94d887a905773c4500ca0c2961 kernel: Add block validation to C header (TheCharlatan)
cb1590b05efd090bc2e4be49b5a649f8d248afa0 kernel: Add chainstate loading when instantiating a ChainstateManager (TheCharlatan)
e2c1bd3d713ffe0b8eede711e84f64e0fe4ae836 kernel: Add chainstate manager option for setting worker threads (TheCharlatan)
65571c36a265ec340343b555d1537c58ab335538 kernel: Add chainstate manager object to C header (TheCharlatan)
c62f657ba330572969ab5e86c739712e800bcbcb kernel: Add notifications context option to C header (TheCharlatan)
9e1bac45852d177cf387314a54053a3f7ec8ce99 kernel: Add chain params context option to C header (TheCharlatan)
337ea860dfda12dac084209027a54fba857e7a89 kernel: Add kernel library context object (TheCharlatan)
28d679bad9fda3f180ab0f7d34353e1fa9294d68 kernel: Add logging to kernel library C header (TheCharlatan)
2cf136dec4ce16c8a7c47b35c7c9244dfc3b6da8 kernel: Introduce initial kernel C header API (TheCharlatan)
Pull request description:
This is a first attempt at introducing a C header for the libbitcoinkernel library that may be used by external applications for interfacing with Bitcoin Core's validation logic. It currently is limited to operations on blocks. This is a conscious choice, since it already offers a lot of powerful functionality, but sits just on the cusp of still being reviewable scope-wise while giving some pointers on how the rest of the API could look like.
The current design was informed by the development of some tools using the C header:
* A re-implementation (part of this pull request) of [bitcoin-chainstate](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/master/src/bitcoin-chainstate.cpp).
* A re-implementation of the python [block linearize](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/tree/master/contrib/linearize) scripts: https://github.com/TheCharlatan/bitcoin/tree/kernelLinearize
* A silent payment scanner: https://github.com/josibake/silent-payments-scanner
* An electrs index builder: https://github.com/josibake/electrs/commits/electrs-kernel-integration
* A rust bitcoin node: https://github.com/TheCharlatan/kernel-node
* A reindexer: https://github.com/TheCharlatan/bitcoin/tree/kernelApi_Reindexer
The library has also been used by other developers already:
* A historical block analysis tool: https://github.com/ismaelsadeeq/mining-analysis
* A swiftsync hints generator: https://github.com/theStack/swiftsync-hints-gen
* Fast script validation in floresta: https://github.com/vinteumorg/Floresta/pull/456
* A swiftsync node implementation: https://github.com/2140-dev/swiftsync/tree/master/node
Next to the C++ header also made available in this pull request, bindings for other languages are available here:
* Rust: https://github.com/TheCharlatan/rust-bitcoinkernel
* Python: https://github.com/stickies-v/py-bitcoinkernel
* Go: https://github.com/stringintech/go-bitcoinkernel
* Java: https://github.com/yuvicc/java-bitcoinkernel
The rust bindings include unit and fuzz tests for the API.
The header currently exposes logic for enabling the following functionality:
* Feature-parity with the now deprecated libbitcoin-consensus
* Optimized sha256 implementations that were not available to previous users of libbitcoin-consensus thanks to a static kernel context
* Full support for logging as well as control over categories and severity
* Feature parity with the existing experimental bitcoin-chainstate
* Traversing the block index as well as using block index entries for reading block and undo data.
* Running the chainstate in memory
* Reindexing (both full and chainstate-only)
* Interrupting long-running functions
The pull request introduces a new kernel-only test binary that purely relies on the kernel C header and the C++ standard library. This is intentionally done to show its capabilities without relying on other code inside the project. This may be relaxed to include some of the existing utilities, or even be merged into the existing test suite.
The complete docs for the API as well as some usage examples are hosted on [thecharlatan.ch/kernel-docs](https://thecharlatan.ch/kernel-docs/index.html). The docs are generated from the following repository (which also holds the examples): [github.com/TheCharlatan/kernel-docs](https://github.com/TheCharlatan/kernel-docs).
#### How can I review this PR?
Scrutinize the commit messages, run the tests, write your own little applications using the library, let your favorite code sanitizer loose on it, hook it up to your fuzzing infrastructure, profile the difference between the existing bitcoin-chainstate and the bitcoin-chainstate introduced here, be nitty on the documentation, police the C interface, opine on your own API design philosophy.
To get a feeling for the API, read through the tests, or one of the examples.
To configure this PR for making the shared library and the bitcoin-chainstate and test_kernel utilities available:
```
cmake -B build -DBUILD_KERNEL_LIB=ON -DBUILD_UTIL_CHAINSTATE=ON
```
Once compiled the library is part of the build artifacts that can be installed with:
```
cmake --install build
```
#### Why a C header (and not a C++ header)
* Shipping a shared library with a C++ header is hard, because of name mangling and an unstable ABI.
* Mature and well-supported tooling for integrating C exists for nearly every popular language.
* C offers a reasonably stable ABI
Also see https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/30595#issuecomment-2285719575.
#### What about versioning?
The header and library are still experimental and I would expect this to remain so for some time, so best not to worry about versioning yet.
#### Potential future additions
In future, the C header could be expanded to support (some of these have been roughly implemented):
* Handling transactions, block headers, coins cache, utxo set, meta data, and the mempool
* Adapters for an abstract coins store
* Adapters for an abstract block store
* Adapters for an abstract block tree store
* Allocators and buffers for more efficient memory usage
* An "[io-less](https://sans-io.readthedocs.io/how-to-sans-io.html)" interface
* Hooks for an external mempool, or external policy rules
#### Current drawbacks
* For external applications to read the block index of an existing Bitcoin Core node, Bitcoin Core needs to shut down first, since leveldb does not support reading across multiple processes. Other than migrating away from leveldb, there does not seem to be a solution for this problem. Such a migration is implemented in #32427.
* The fatal error handling through the notifications is awkward. This is partly improved through #29642.
* Handling shared pointers in the interfaces is unfortunate. They make ownership and freeing of the resources fuzzy and poison the interfaces with additional types and complexity. However, they seem to be an artifact of the current code that interfaces with the validation engine. The validation engine itself does not seem to make extensive use of these shared pointers.
* If multiple instances of the same type of objects are used, there is no mechanism for distinguishing the log messages produced by each of them. A potential solution is #30342.
* The background leveldb compaction thread may not finish in time leading to a non-clean exit. There seems to be nothing we can do about this, outside of patching leveldb.
ACKs for top commit:
alexanderwiederin:
re-ACK 6c7a34f3b0
stringintech:
re-ACK 6c7a34f
laanwj:
Code review ACK 6c7a34f3b0bd39ef7a1520aac56e12f78e5cc969
ismaelsadeeq:
reACK 6c7a34f3b0bd39ef7a1520aac56e12f78e5cc969 👾
fanquake:
ACK 6c7a34f3b0bd39ef7a1520aac56e12f78e5cc969 - soon we'll be running bitcoin (kernel)
Tree-SHA512: ffe7d4581facb7017d06da8b685b81f4b5e4840576e878bb6845595021730eab808d8f9780ed0eb0d2b57f2647c85dcb36b6325180caaac469eaf339f7258030
1e6e32fa8a64daa21c9c9de437f7a12745ed4a4e ci: run native fuzz with MSAN job (fanquake)
3784d15bcd500d8707a8b422c406230494458acb ci: use LLVM libcxx 21.1.5 (fanquake)
Pull request description:
I think this job should exist in this repo (not just qa-assets), if the alternative is double-handling changes to the interpreter. #32998 made changes which were then re-changed in #33600, to work around a false positive.
The unchached runtime of this job with `-lg` is `~32m`, with `-md` it's `~43m`.
Timeout is set to 150m, as the slow GHA runners were close to hitting a 120m limit.
ACKs for top commit:
maflcko:
lgtm ACK 1e6e32fa8a64daa21c9c9de437f7a12745ed4a4e
dergoegge:
utACK 1e6e32fa8a64daa21c9c9de437f7a12745ed4a4e
Tree-SHA512: afd4cb0039f4f49ddc23f5553a5bf6d5ceffbc12d91acd6890d5cc40c30b7421b23d04f305983d94c862daa6fc07535b1331d7fa2a8ebfe9f19c20d83d95c692
7632e0ba312a372259897c68fd7c7eb723df3738 ci: fix configure docker action inputs (will)
0b3b8a3be1a0db0dfc634acca1d9305dc0fbfae6 ci: fix lint docker caching (will)
Pull request description:
Fixes: #33735
Correct runner type selection for the lint job.
This was erroneously left-out during refactor of the runner selection mechanism in #33302 causing the lint job to run on GH hosts (and therefore not be able to acces local cirrus caches).
ACKs for top commit:
maflcko:
re-ACK 7632e0ba312a372259897c68fd7c7eb723df3738 📞
hebasto:
ACK 7632e0ba312a372259897c68fd7c7eb723df3738.
Tree-SHA512: b228a79d13ed80c75fc5e51c4fb93c7fad1cb33c00a659afe65033ce09d95e6ac84e01627f2e58e640ff483d798ac1b9e23f14d31a9c045fd99367059ceef5b4
As a first step, implement the equivalent of what was implemented in the
now deprecated libbitcoinconsensus header. Also add a test binary to
exercise the header and library.
Unlike the deprecated libbitcoinconsensus the kernel library can now use
the hardware-accelerated sha256 implementations thanks for its
statically-initialzed context. The functions kept around for
backwards-compatibility in the libbitcoinconsensus header are not ported
over. As a new header, it should not be burdened by previous
implementations. Also add a new error code for handling invalid flag
combinations, which would otherwise cause a crash.
The macros used in the new C header were adapted from the libsecp256k1
header.
To make use of the C header from C++ code, a C++ header is also
introduced for wrapping the C header. This makes it safer and easier to
use from C++ code.
Co-authored-by: stickies-v <stickies-v@protonmail.com>
The options used were wrong in two ways: firstly they were not enforced
as a "choice" (i.e. invalid input valudes could be provided without
error) and one of the options was listed as `gh` when we passed it as
`gha` from ci.yml.
"Fix" this by removing the choice altogether but sanity-testing the
input value against an expected list using a GHA "warning" to notify of
unknown inputs.
Fixes: 33735
Correct runner type selection for the lint job.
This was erroneously left-out during refactor of the runner selection
mechanism in #33302 causing the lint job to run on GH hosts (and
therefore not be able to acces local cirrus caches).
fad5a7101cc3dccbb525cfe9afc105aace8da88e ci: Add macOS cross task for arm64 (MarcoFalke)
fa8c750a0aff9c03270b71a91536639f3922eed8 ci: Refactor get_previous_releases step in win-test-cross task (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
Cross compiling to Intel macOS seems fine, but it would be good to cross compile to arm64-apple-darwin as well.
Further reading:
* https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mac_transition_to_Apple_silicon#Timeline.
* It is harder to find native Intel macOS hardware (E.g. GitHub is in the process of dropping it: https://github.blog/changelog/2025-07-11-upcoming-changes-to-macos-hosted-runners-macos-latest-migration-and-xcode-support-policy-updates/#macos-13-is-closing-down)
ACKs for top commit:
Sjors:
utACK fad5a7101cc3dccbb525cfe9afc105aace8da88e
hodlinator:
crACK fad5a7101cc3dccbb525cfe9afc105aace8da88e
Tree-SHA512: ce96ac9f68f594584dc910555bd34590084e3e45ca02a22d4949e88bb569de3bf87ebf6b5c6718ae82d7750a98212b72f6dab80bddfc9652a57180fbdda97f42
444409ff2b78d8f3e541bd6e883af8da7adfd264 ci: Reduce Alpine musl task to md runner size (MarcoFalke)
fa6b2e9efece2d728bdc257c36c95db03e1a7bc4 ci: Turn centos config into alpine musl config (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
Fixes https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/33437
Historically, the centos task was added to add CI coverage for old packages and 32-bit depends builds, but both are now covered by different tasks.
The CentOS task aligns with Ubuntu/Debian CI tasks in terms of libc usage, but (slightly) differs in package naming and update philosophy. I am not aware of the task ever discovering a centos-related issue, so it seems fine to recycle it into an Alpine Linux task.
The main difference would be that musl libc is now used. Also, busybox is used in Alpine, so in theory the busybox install could be removed from the arm CI task in the future.
Packaging considerations: All packages should roughly be the same (gcc remains at version 14, python remains at version 3.12, etc). Also, all packages are from the Alpine main track, coming with 2 years of support. The only exception is the py3-pip package (https://pkgs.alpinelinux.org/packages?name=py3-pip&branch=v3.22&repo=&arch=riscv64) from the community track, however, I don't expect any issues arising from that.
ACKs for top commit:
janb84:
reACK 444409ff2b78d8f3e541bd6e883af8da7adfd264
willcl-ark:
ACK 444409ff2b78d8f3e541bd6e883af8da7adfd264
Tree-SHA512: fd1a1da0fd766591e44a57dbdb84f9b3b47ca92113a429bba139ee5fef54714b8fe509c321e7b3a470c29b4af7d9eab9786e1660b9effb862ecea52824f458aa
bc706955d740f8a59bec78e44d33e80d1cca373b ci: expose all ACTIONS_* vars (willcl-ark)
Pull request description:
When using `docker buildx build` in conjunction with the `gha` backend cache type (as we do in our CI) it's important to specify the URL and TOKEN needed to authenticate.
On Cirrus runners this is working with only `ACTIONS_CACHE_URL` and `ACTIONS_RUNTIME_TOKEN`, but this is not enough for the GitHub backend.
Fix this by exporting all `ACTIONS_*` variables.
This fixes docker build layer cache restore/save on forks or where GH-hosted runners are being used, and addresses https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/31965#issuecomment-3324707093
ACKs for top commit:
m3dwards:
ACK bc706955d740f8a59bec78e44d33e80d1cca373b
maflcko:
lgtm ACK bc706955d740f8a59bec78e44d33e80d1cca373b
Tree-SHA512: 13e973bb1c1ca5448dd6c3c176fb5ce39c725886ba2012d3253158205309a7038a1430135b37400e1f2f69408a9d0f4e2b3c5f0515154a593ec382ab7db10266
ceeb53adcd0a6a87a65c8ebbb20472c15c502dfd ci: Properly include $FILE_ENV in DEPENDS_HASH (Ava Chow)
Pull request description:
$FILE_ENV has a full relative path already, prepending with ci/test/ results in a non-existent path which means that DEPENDS_HASH was not actually committing to the test's environment file.
ACKs for top commit:
maflcko:
lgtm ACK ceeb53adcd0a6a87a65c8ebbb20472c15c502dfd
Tree-SHA512: 80a7a23676ff8bf2f48a7d3c5897217f11d7d4d4f8a54897d2b7c42689585d2d63e45fad2b8f4c442111f128a87eeb6edeac2b25c79862e6bc035eeb1ebc7f4e
$FILE_ENV has a full relative path already, prepending with ci/test/
results in a non-existent path which means that DEPENDS_HASH was not
actually committing to the test's environment file.
156927903d64297500dd73380908c654b07bfb1a ci: Check windows manifests for all executables (Max Edwards)
e1a1b14c9359751a4d0117a27a303d1f1d3ed30f ci: use a more generic way of finding mt.exe (Max Edwards)
7ae0497eef8f5b37fc1184897a5bbc9f023dfa67 ci: remove 3rd party js from windows dll gha job (Max Edwards)
Pull request description:
The windows job uses the external dependency `ilammy/msvc-dev-cmd` which runs javascript. We use this to put various tools on the path such as `MSBuild.exe` and `mt.exe`. We can remove this dependency and use `vswhere.exe` directly to find these tools and create a "[Developer command prompt](https://github.com/microsoft/vswhere/wiki/Start-Developer-Command-Prompt#using-powershell)" as someone would on their dev machine.
While in this area of the code, this PR also runs some additional manifest checks on the windows binaries.
Fixes: #32508
ACKs for top commit:
davidgumberg:
crACK 156927903d64297
hebasto:
ACK 156927903d64297500dd73380908c654b07bfb1a.
Tree-SHA512: df640dff27579a1c95daddc5a5ba8fd655bbd0a6f2aff74d0f63439c7185c0b18a90abfee3f1f032fe833cd19b822ef71812f44b24c4c044222e46d01c271864
The other executables have manifests and these should be checked in
addition to bitcoind. Skipping fuzz.exe, bench_bitcoin.exe and
test_bitcoin-qt.exe as they do not have manifests.
This sets up a vs developer command prompt and should hopefully should
be more resilient to upstream changes
Co-authored-by: David Gumberg <davidzgumberg@gmail.com>
When using `docker buildx build` in conjunction with the `gha` backend
cache type, it's important to specify the URL and TOKEN needed to
authenticate.
On Cirrus runners this is working with only `ACTIONS_CACHE_URL` and
`ACTIONS_RUNTIME_TOKEN`, but this is not enough for the GitHub backend.
Fix this by exporting all `ACTIONS_*` variables.
This fixes cache restore/save on forks or where GH-hosted runners are
being used.
We can use vswhere.exe directly to create a vs developer
prompt and so can remove this third party dependency.
Co-authored-by: David Gumberg <davidzgumberg@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Max Edwards <youwontforgetthis@gmail.com>
Add an optional matrix field allowing opt-out of configuring cirrus
GHA cache when not using cirrus runners.
This is not needed for the cirruslabs/[save|restore]-cache actions, as
they automatically fallback based on runner type.
fa8f081af31cd99155c7545643e7b10beb26714d ci: Checkout latest merged pulls (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
Currently, the `actions/checkout@v5` checks out pull requests merged against master, which is what we want.
However, it checks out ancient/stale merge commits on a re-run. This is documented (https://docs.github.com/en/actions/how-tos/manage-workflow-runs/re-run-workflows-and-jobs):
> Re-run workflows [...] will also use the same GITHUB_SHA (commit SHA) and GITHUB_REF (git ref) of the original event that triggered the workflow run.
For example:
* https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/actions/runs/17458152407/job/49579638898?pr=29641#step:9:914 compiles with IPC=ON, even though latest master is at ed2ff3c63d83e275b0785a695fa4db38870abf1a
* https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/32989#issuecomment-3133536724 (example explained in comment)
This is problematic, because:
* Unrelated CI failures and intermittent issues, which are fixed or worked around in latest master can not be cleaned by re-running the task. The author has to actively go out and (force-)push the branch, invalidating review.
* It is odd to have a recent CI run, but it uses code and config from the past.
* Detecting silent merge conflicts by re-running the CI task is impossible.
Fix all issues by checking out the latest merged state of the pull request. The behavior is unchanged for non-pull-request actions. This patch changes the "re-run" default behaviour. Forcing it to use the new state instead of running the old state again.
ACKs for top commit:
janb84:
re ACK fa8f081af31cd99155c7545643e7b10beb26714d
hebasto:
ACK fa8f081af31cd99155c7545643e7b10beb26714d.
Tree-SHA512: c22c6f837402f61ec46be46817473e1946424b5312e36ed0e246cadb1ca89c04163bb471f71c309765a3d327f198a83cd83679d231f03828a99a97562a622fdd
5eeb2facbbbbf68a2c30ef9e6747e39c85d7b116 ci: reduce runner sizes on various jobs (will)
Pull request description:
These jobs can likely use reduced runner sizes to avoid wasting our CPU quota, as much of the long-running part of the job is single-threaded.
This will also give us more (job) parallelisem from the same number of CPU that we are using.
Suggested in: https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/32989#discussion_r2321775620
ACKs for top commit:
kevkevinpal:
ACK [5eeb2fa](5eeb2facbb)
m3dwards:
ACK 5eeb2facbbbbf68a2c30ef9e6747e39c85d7b116
janb84:
ACK 5eeb2facbbbbf68a2c30ef9e6747e39c85d7b116
Tree-SHA512: 6fb0352bc40623dd63b9bd6169d753d1ec9667c272445fda7a2db8bbedfa35350a51d08c1adf3fa5e070e84855c3f491668726d3c7ded07a39f2f9c63edacefc
Set new `BitcoinTestFramework.binary_paths.bitcoin_bin` property with path to
the `bitcoin` wrapper binary. This allows new tests for `bitcoin-mine` in
#30437 and `bitcoin-cli` in #32297 to find the `bitcoin` binary and call
`bitcoin -m` to start nodes with IPC support. This way the new tests can run
whenever the ENABLE_IPC build option is enabled, instead of only running when
the `BITCOIN_CMD` environment variable is set to `bitcoin -m`
Previously jobs were running on a large multi-core server where 10 jobs
as default made sense (or may even have been on the low side).
Using hosted runners with fixed (and lower) numbers of vCPUs we should
adapt compilation to match the number of cpus we have dynamically.
This is cross-platform compatible with macos and linux only.