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
Unit tests
The sources in this directory are unit test cases. Boost includes a unit testing framework, and since Bitcoin Core already uses Boost, it makes sense to simply use this framework rather than require developers to configure some other framework (we want as few impediments to creating unit tests as possible).
The build system is set up to compile an executable called test_bitcoin
that runs all of the unit tests. The main source file for the test library is found in
util/setup_common.cpp.
The examples in this document assume the build directory is named
build. You'll need to adapt them if you named it differently.
Compiling/running unit tests
Unit tests will be automatically compiled if dependencies were met during the generation of the Bitcoin Core build system and tests weren't explicitly disabled.
The unit tests can be run with ctest --test-dir build, which includes unit
tests from subtrees.
Run build/bin/test_bitcoin --list_content for the full list of tests.
To run the unit tests manually, launch build/bin/test_bitcoin. To recompile
after a test file was modified, run cmake --build build and then run the test again. If you
modify a non-test file, use cmake --build build --target test_bitcoin to recompile only what's needed
to run the unit tests.
To add more unit tests, add BOOST_AUTO_TEST_CASE functions to the existing
.cpp files in the test/ directory or add new .cpp files that
implement new BOOST_AUTO_TEST_SUITE sections.
To run the GUI unit tests manually, launch build/bin/test_bitcoin-qt
To add more GUI unit tests, add them to the src/qt/test/ directory and
the src/qt/test/test_main.cpp file.
Running individual tests
The test_bitcoin runner accepts command line arguments from the Boost
framework. To see the list of arguments that may be passed, run:
build/bin/test_bitcoin --help
For example, to run only the tests in the getarg_tests file, with full logging:
build/bin/test_bitcoin --log_level=all --run_test=getarg_tests
or
build/bin/test_bitcoin -l all -t getarg_tests
or to run only the doubledash test in getarg_tests
build/bin/test_bitcoin --run_test=getarg_tests/doubledash
The --log_level= (or -l) argument controls the verbosity of the test output.
The test_bitcoin runner also accepts some of the command line arguments accepted by
bitcoind. Use -- to separate these sets of arguments:
build/bin/test_bitcoin --log_level=all --run_test=getarg_tests -- -printtoconsole=1
The -printtoconsole=1 after the two dashes sends debug logging, which
normally goes only to debug.log within the data directory, to the
standard terminal output as well.
Running test_bitcoin creates a temporary working (data) directory with a randomly
generated pathname within test_common bitcoin/, which in turn is within
the system's temporary directory (see
temp_directory_path).
This data directory looks like a simplified form of the standard bitcoind data
directory. Its content will vary depending on the test, but it will always
have a debug.log file, for example.
The location of the temporary data directory can be specified with the
-testdatadir option. This can make debugging easier. The directory
path used is the argument path appended with
/test_common bitcoin/<test-name>/datadir.
The directory path is created if necessary.
Specifying this argument also causes the data directory
not to be removed after the last test. This is useful for looking at
what the test wrote to debug.log after it completes, for example.
(The directory is removed at the start of the next test run,
so no leftover state is used.)
$ build/bin/test_bitcoin --run_test=getarg_tests/doubledash -- -testdatadir=/somewhere/mydatadir
Test directory (will not be deleted): "/somewhere/mydatadir/test_common bitcoin/getarg_tests/doubledash/datadir"
Running 1 test case...
*** No errors detected
$ ls -l '/somewhere/mydatadir/test_common bitcoin/getarg_tests/doubledash/datadir'
total 8
drwxrwxr-x 2 admin admin 4096 Nov 27 22:45 blocks
-rw-rw-r-- 1 admin admin 1003 Nov 27 22:45 debug.log
If you run an entire test suite, such as --run_test=getarg_tests, or all the test suites
(by not specifying --run_test), a separate directory
will be created for each individual test.
Adding test cases
To add a new unit test file to our test suite, you need
to add the file to either src/test/CMakeLists.txt or
src/wallet/test/CMakeLists.txt for wallet-related tests. The pattern is to create
one test file for each class or source file for which you want to create
unit tests. The file naming convention is <source_filename>_tests.cpp
and such files should wrap their tests in a test suite
called <source_filename>_tests. For an example of this pattern,
see uint256_tests.cpp.
Logging and debugging in unit tests
ctest --test-dir build will write to the log file build/Testing/Temporary/LastTest.log. You can
additionally use the --output-on-failure option to display logs of the failed tests automatically
on failure. For running individual tests verbosely, refer to the section
above.
To write to logs from unit tests you need to use specific message methods
provided by Boost. The simplest is BOOST_TEST_MESSAGE.
For debugging you can launch the test_bitcoin executable with gdb or lldb and
start debugging, just like you would with any other program:
gdb build/bin/test_bitcoin
Segmentation faults
If you hit a segmentation fault during a test run, you can diagnose where the fault
is happening by running gdb ./build/bin/test_bitcoin and then using the bt command
within gdb.
Another tool that can be used to resolve segmentation faults is valgrind.
If for whatever reason you want to produce a core dump file for this fault, you can do
that as well. By default, the boost test runner will intercept system errors and not
produce a core file. To bypass this, add --catch_system_errors=no to the
test_bitcoin arguments and ensure that your ulimits are set properly (e.g. ulimit -c unlimited).
Running the tests and hitting a segmentation fault should now produce a file called core
(on Linux platforms, the file name will likely depend on the contents of
/proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern).
You can then explore the core dump using
gdb build/bin/test_bitcoin core
(gdb) bt # produce a backtrace for where a segfault occurred