ecc6cf1a3b097b9b5b047282063a0b6779631b83 test: fix creation of std::string objects with \0s (Vasil Dimov)
Pull request description:
A string literal `"abc"` contains a terminating `\0`, so that is 4
bytes. There is no need to write `"abc\0"` unless two terminating
`\0`s are necessary.
`std::string` objects do not internally contain a terminating `\0`, so
`std::string("abc")` creates a string with size 3 and is the same as
`std::string("abc", 3)`.
In `"\01"` the `01` part is interpreted as one number (1) and that is
the same as `"\1"` which is a string like `{1, 0}` whereas `"\0z"` is a
string like `{0, 'z', 0}`. To create a string like `{0, '1', 0}` one
must use `"\0" "1"`.
Adjust the tests accordingly.
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
ACK ecc6cf1a3b097b9b5b047282063a0b6779631b83
practicalswift:
ACK ecc6cf1a3b097b9b5b047282063a0b6779631b83 modulo happily green CI
Tree-SHA512: 5eb489e8533a4199a9324b92f7280041552379731ebf7dfee169f70d5458e20e29b36f8bfaee6f201f48ab2b9d1d0fc4bdf8d6e4c58d6102f399cfbea54a219e
A string literal `"abc"` contains a terminating `\0`, so that is 4
bytes. There is no need to write `"abc\0"` unless two terminating
`\0`s are necessary.
`std::string` objects do not internally contain a terminating `\0`, so
`std::string("abc")` creates a string with size 3 and is the same as
`std::string("abc", 3)`.
In `"\01"` the `01` part is interpreted as one number (1) and that is
the same as `"\1"` which is a string like `{1, 0}` whereas `"\0z"` is a
string like `{0, 'z', 0}`. To create a string like `{0, '1', 0}` one
must use `"\0" "1"`.
Adjust the tests accordingly.
3984b78cd7f49e409377f2175a56e8e4bd71d1d8 test: Add tests for CNode::ConnectedThroughNetwork (Hennadii Stepanov)
49fba9c1aa699d3aa47ea4dafe07b47c8d0aac6e net: Add CNode::ConnectedThroughNetwork member function (Hennadii Stepanov)
d4dde24034d7467883b290111da60527ab8048f8 net: Add CNode::m_inbound_onion data member (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
This PR:
- adds `CNode::ConnectedThroughNetwork` member function
- is based on #19991, and only last two commits belong to it
- is required for https://github.com/bitcoin-core/gui/pull/86 and #20002
ACKs for top commit:
jonatack:
re-ACK 3984b78cd7f49e409377f2175a56e8e4bd71d1d8 per `git diff 3989fcf 3984b78c`
laanwj:
Code review ACK 3984b78cd7f49e409377f2175a56e8e4bd71d1d8
Tree-SHA512: 23a9c8bca8dca75113b5505fe443b294f2d42d03c98c7e34919da12d8396beb8d0ada3a58ae16e3da04b7044395f72cf9c216625afc078256cd6c897ac42bf3d
dcf0cb477699d11afd0ff37c8bfb2b1b4f7f1ee5 tor: make a TORv3 hidden service instead of TORv2 (Vasil Dimov)
353a3fdaad055eea42a0baf7326bdd591f541170 net: advertise support for ADDRv2 via new message (Vasil Dimov)
201a4596d92d640d5eb7e76cc8d959228fa09dbb net: CAddress & CAddrMan: (un)serialize as ADDRv2 (Vasil Dimov)
1d3ec2a1fda7446323786a52da1fd109c01aa6fb Support bypassing range check in ReadCompactSize (Pieter Wuille)
Pull request description:
This PR contains the two remaining commits from #19031 to complete the [BIP155](https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0155.mediawiki) implementation:
`net: CAddress & CAddrMan: (un)serialize as ADDRv2`
`net: advertise support for ADDRv2 via new message`
plus one more commit:
`tor: make a TORv3 hidden service instead of TORv2`
ACKs for top commit:
jonatack:
re-ACK dcf0cb477699d11afd0ff37c8bfb2b1b4f7f1ee5 per `git diff 9b56a68 dcf0cb4` only change since last review is an update to the release notes which partially picked up the suggested text. Running a node on this branch and addnode-ing to 6 other Tor v3 nodes, I see "addrv2" and "sendaddrv2" messages in getpeerinfo in both the "bytesrecv_per_msg" and "bytessent_per_msg" JSON objects.
sipa:
ACK dcf0cb477699d11afd0ff37c8bfb2b1b4f7f1ee5
hebasto:
re-ACK dcf0cb477699d11afd0ff37c8bfb2b1b4f7f1ee5, the node works flawlessly in all of the modes: Tor-only, clearnet-only, mixed.
laanwj:
Edit: I have to retract this ACK for now, I'm having some problems with this PR on a FreeBSD node. It drops all outgoing connections with this dcf0cb477699d11afd0ff37c8bfb2b1b4f7f1ee5 merged on master (12a1c3ad1a43634d2a98717e49e3f02c4acea2fe).
ariard:
Code Review ACK dcf0cb4
Tree-SHA512: 28d4d0d817b8664d2f4b18c0e0f31579b2f0f2d23310ed213f1f436a4242afea14dfbf99e07e15889bc5c5c71ad50056797e9307ff8a90e96704f588a6171308
Introduce a new message `sendaddrv2` to signal support for ADDRv2.
Send the new message immediately after sending the `VERACK` message.
Add support for receiving and parsing ADDRv2 messages.
Send ADDRv2 messages (instead of ADDR) to a peer if he has
advertised support for it.
Co-authored-by: Carl Dong <contact@carldong.me>
Recognizing addresses from those networks allows us to accept and gossip
them, even though we don't know how to connect to them (yet).
Co-authored-by: eriknylund <erik@daychanged.com>
102867c587f5f7954232fb8ed8e85cda78bb4d32 net: change CNetAddr::ip to have flexible size (Vasil Dimov)
1ea57ad67406b3aaaef5254bc2fa7e4134f3a6df net: don't accept non-left-contiguous netmasks (Vasil Dimov)
Pull request description:
(chopped off from #19031 to ease review)
Before this change `CNetAddr::ip` was a fixed-size array of 16 bytes,
not being able to store larger addresses (e.g. TORv3) and encoded
smaller ones as 16-byte IPv6 addresses.
Change its type to `prevector`, so that it can hold larger addresses and
do not disguise non-IPv6 addresses as IPv6. So the IPv4 address
`1.2.3.4` is now encoded as `01020304` instead of
`00000000000000000000FFFF01020304`.
Rename `CNetAddr::ip` to `CNetAddr::m_addr` because it is not an "IP" or
"IP address" (TOR addresses are not IP addresses).
In order to preserve backward compatibility with serialization (where
e.g. `1.2.3.4` is serialized as `00000000000000000000FFFF01020304`)
introduce `CNetAddr` dedicated legacy serialize/unserialize methods.
Adjust `CSubNet` accordingly. Still use `CSubNet::netmask[]` of fixed 16
bytes, but use the first 4 for IPv4 (not the last 4). Do not accept
invalid netmasks that have 0-bits followed by 1-bits and only allow
subnetting for IPv4 and IPv6.
Co-authored-by: Carl Dong <contact@carldong.me>
ACKs for top commit:
sipa:
utACK 102867c587f5f7954232fb8ed8e85cda78bb4d32
MarcoFalke:
Concept ACK 102867c587f5f7954232fb8ed8e85cda78bb4d32
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK 102867c587f5f7954232fb8ed8e85cda78bb4d32. Just many suggested updates since last review. Thanks for following up on everything!
jonatack:
re-ACK 102867c587f5f7954232fb8ed8e85cda78bb4d32 diff review, code review, build/tests/running bitcoind with ipv4/ipv6/onion peers
kallewoof:
ACK 102867c587f5f7954232fb8ed8e85cda78bb4d32
Tree-SHA512: d60bf716cecf8d3e8146d2f90f897ebe956befb16f711a24cfe680024c5afc758fb9e4a0a22066b42f7630d52cf916318bedbcbc069ae07092d5250a11e8f762
Before this change `CNetAddr::ip` was a fixed-size array of 16 bytes,
not being able to store larger addresses (e.g. TORv3) and encoded
smaller ones as 16-byte IPv6 addresses.
Change its type to `prevector`, so that it can hold larger addresses and
do not disguise non-IPv6 addresses as IPv6. So the IPv4 address
`1.2.3.4` is now encoded as `01020304` instead of
`00000000000000000000FFFF01020304`.
Rename `CNetAddr::ip` to `CNetAddr::m_addr` because it is not an "IP" or
"IP address" (TOR addresses are not IP addresses).
In order to preserve backward compatibility with serialization (where
e.g. `1.2.3.4` is serialized as `00000000000000000000FFFF01020304`)
introduce `CNetAddr` dedicated legacy serialize/unserialize methods.
Adjust `CSubNet` accordingly. Still use `CSubNet::netmask[]` of fixed 16
bytes, but use the first 4 for IPv4 (not the last 4). Only allow
subnetting for IPv4 and IPv6.
Co-authored-by: Carl Dong <contact@carldong.me>
1a8f0d5a74d5cc0000456932babf35301f5c1686 [tools] update nNextInvSend to use mockable time (Amiti Uttarwar)
4de630354fc6808b9b13b9e82da1a82f2f50f26a [tools] add PoissonNextSend method that returns mockable time (Amiti Uttarwar)
Pull request description:
Introduce a Poisson helper method that wraps the existing method to return `std::chrono::duration` type, which is mockable.
Needed for https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/16698.
ACKs for top commit:
ajtowns:
ACK 1a8f0d5a74d5cc0000456932babf35301f5c1686
MarcoFalke:
re-ACK 1a8f0d5a74d5cc0000456932babf35301f5c1686
naumenkogs:
ACK 1a8f0d5, and let's merge it and come back to it later.
Tree-SHA512: 7e2325d7c55fc0b4357cb86b83e0c218ba269f678c1786342d8bc380bfd9696373bc24ff124b9ff17a6e761c62b2b44ff5247c3911e2afdc7cc5c20417e8290b
These two methods have had the same meaning, but inverted, since
110b62f06992d0fb989153afff2dc3aea62a674f. Having one name for a single
concept simplifies the code.
a5bca13 Bugfix: Include <memory> for std::unique_ptr (Luke Dashjr)
Pull request description:
Not sure why all these includes were missing, but it's breaking builds for some users:
https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=652142
(Added to all files with a reference to `std::unique_ptr`)
Tree-SHA512: 8a2c67513ca07b9bb52c34e8a20b15e56f8af2530310d9ee9b0a69694dd05e02e7a3683f14101a2685d457672b56addec591a0bb83900a0eb8e2a43d43200509