5200929bfe26c549d7da92c0adf8adf61e143416 depends: Include GUIX_ENVIRONMENT in id string (Carl Dong)
4c7d41858821e4fecf7cb0cec3fcad002365e6c9 depends: Improve id string robustness (Carl Dong)
b3bdff42b5a7b4b956da700b187a7254daac54ae build: Proper quoting for var printing targets (Carl Dong)
Pull request description:
```
Environment variables and search paths can drastically effect the
operation of build tools.
Include these in our id string to mitigate against false cache hits.
```
Note to builders: This will invalidate all depends output caches in `BASE_CACHE`
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
re-ACK 5200929bfe26c549d7da92c0adf8adf61e143416
Tree-SHA512: e70c98da89cde90dc54bc3be89b925787cf94bbf246e27cc9345816b312073d78a02215448f731f21d8cf033c455234a2377ff1d66c00e1f3db69c9c9687d027
060a2a64d40d75fecb60b7d2b9946a67e46aa6fc ci: remove boost thread installation (fanquake)
06e1d7d81d5a56d136c6fc88f09a2b0654a164f9 build: don't build or use Boost Thread (fanquake)
7097add83c8596f81be9edd66971ffd2486357eb refactor: replace Boost shared_mutex with std shared_mutex in sigcache (fanquake)
8e55981ef834490c438436719f95cbaf888c4914 refactor: replace Boost shared_mutex with std shared_mutex in cuckoocache tests (fanquake)
Pull request description:
This replaces `boost::shared_mutex` and `boost::unique_lock` with [`std::shared_mutex`](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/thread/shared_mutex) & [`std::unique_lock`](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/thread/unique_lock).
Even though [some concerns were raised](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/16684#issuecomment-726214696) in #16684 with regard to `std::shared_mutex` being unsafe to use across some glibc versions, I still think this change is an improvement. As I mentioned in #21022, I also think trying to restrict standard library feature usage based on bugs in glibc is not only hard to do, but it's not currently clear exactly how we do that in practice (does it also extend to patching out use in our dependencies, should we be implementing more runtime checks for features we are using, when do we consider an affected glibc "old enough" not to worry about? etc). If you take a look through the [glibc bug tracker](https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/describecomponents.cgi?product=glibc) you'll no doubt find plenty of (active) bug reports for standard library code we already using. Obviously not to say we shouldn't try and avoid buggy code where possible.
Two other points:
[Cory mentioned in #21022](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/21022#issuecomment-769274179):
> It also seems reasonable to me to worry that boost hits the same underlying glibc bug, and we've just not happened to trigger the right conditions yet.
Moving away from Boost to the standard library also removes the potential for differences related to Boosts configuration. Boost has multiple versions of `shared_mutex`, and what you end up using, and what it's backed by depends on:
* The version of Boost.
* The platform you're building for.
* Which version of `BOOST_THREAD_VERSION` is defined: (2,3,4 or 5) default=2. (see [here](https://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_70_0/doc/html/thread/build.html#thread.build.configuration) for some of the differences).
* Is `BOOST_THREAD_V2_SHARED_MUTEX` defined? (not by default). If so, you might get the ["less performant, but more robust"](https://github.com/boostorg/thread/issues/230#issuecomment-475937761) version of `shared_mutex`.
A lot of these factors are eliminated by our use of depends, but users will have varying configurations. It's also not inconceivable to think that a distro, or some package manager might start defining something like `BOOST_THREAD_VERSION=3`. Boost tried to change the default from 2 to 3 at one point.
With this change, we no longer use Boost Thread, so this PR also removes it from depends, the build system, CI etc.
Previous similar PRs were #19183 & #20922. The authors are included in the commits here.
Also related to #21022 - pthread sanity checking.
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review ACK 060a2a64d40d75fecb60b7d2b9946a67e46aa6fc
vasild:
ACK 060a2a64d40d75fecb60b7d2b9946a67e46aa6fc
Tree-SHA512: 572d14d8c9de20bc434511f20d3f431836393ff915b2fe9de5a47a02dca76805ad5c3fc4cceecb4cd43f3ba939a0508178c4e60e62abdbaaa6b3e8db20b75b03
615ba0eb96cf131364c1ceca9d3dedf006fa1e1c test: add Sock unit tests (Vasil Dimov)
7bd21ce1efc363b3e8ea1d51dd1410ccd66820cb style: rename hSocket to sock (Vasil Dimov)
04ae8469049e1f14585aabfb618ae522150240a7 net: use Sock in InterruptibleRecv() and Socks5() (Vasil Dimov)
ba9d73268f9585d4b9254adcf54708f88222798b net: add RAII socket and use it instead of bare SOCKET (Vasil Dimov)
dec9b5e850c6aad989e814aea5b630b36f55d580 net: move CloseSocket() from netbase to util/sock (Vasil Dimov)
aa17a44551c03b00a47854438afe9f2f89b6ea74 net: move MillisToTimeval() from netbase to util/time (Vasil Dimov)
Pull request description:
Introduce a class to manage the lifetime of a socket - when the object
that contains the socket goes out of scope, the underlying socket will
be closed.
In addition, the new `Sock` class has a `Send()`, `Recv()` and `Wait()`
methods that can be overridden by unit tests to mock the socket
operations.
The `Wait()` method also hides the
`#ifdef USE_POLL poll() #else select() #endif` technique from higher
level code.
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Re-ACK 615ba0eb96cf131364c1ceca9d3dedf006fa1e1c
jonatack:
re-ACK 615ba0eb96cf131364c1ceca9d3dedf006fa1e1c
Tree-SHA512: 3003e6bc0259295ca0265ccdeb1522ee25b4abe66d32e6ceaa51b55e0a999df7ddee765f86ce558a788c1953ee2009bfa149b09d494593f7d799c0d7d930bee8
Move `CloseSocket()` (and `NetworkErrorString()` which it uses) from
`netbase.{h,cpp}` to newly added `src/util/sock.{h,cpp}`.
This is necessary in order to use `CloseSocket()` from a newly
introduced Sock class (which will live in `src/util/sock.{h,cpp}`).
`sock.{h,cpp}` cannot depend on netbase because netbase will depend
on it.
22eb7930a6ae021438aa0b8e750170534944f296 tracing: add tracing framework (William Casarin)
933ab8a720cb9b3341adec4109cffb6dc5b322a5 build: detect sys/sdt.h for eBPF tracing (William Casarin)
Pull request description:
Instead of writing ad-hoc logging everywhere (eg: #19509), we can take advantage of linux user static defined traces, aka. USDTs ( not the stablecoin 😅 )
The linux kernel can hook into these tracepoints at runtime, but otherwise they have little to no performance impact. Traces can pass data which can be printed externally via tools such as bpftrace. For example, here's one that prints incoming and outgoing network messages:
# Examples
## Network Messages
```
#!/usr/bin/env bpftrace
BEGIN
{
printf("bitcoin net msgs\n");
@start = nsecs;
}
usdt:./src/bitcoind:net:push_message
{
$ip = str(arg0);
$peer_id = (int64)arg1;
$command = str(arg2);
$data_len = arg3;
$data = buf(arg3,arg4);
$t = (nsecs - @start) / 100000;
printf("%zu outbound %s %s %zu %d %r\n", $t, $command, $ip, $peer_id, $data_len, $data);
@outbound[$command]++;
}
usdt:./src/bitcoind:net:process_message
{
$ip = str(arg0);
$peer_id = (int64)arg1;
$command = str(arg2);
$data_len = arg3;
$data = buf(arg3,arg4);
$t = (nsecs - @start) / 100000;
printf("%zu inbound %s %s %zu %d %r\n", $t, $command, $ip, $peer_id, $data_len, $data);
@inbound[$ip, $command]++;
}
```
$ sudo bpftrace netmsg.bt
output: https://jb55.com/s/b11312484b601fb3.txt
if you look at the bottom of the output you can see a histogram of all the messages grouped by message type and IP. nice!
## IBD Benchmarking
```
#!/usr/bin/env bpftrace
BEGIN
{
printf("IBD to 500,000 bench\n");
}
usdt:./src/bitcoind:CChainState:ConnectBlock
{
$height = (uint32)arg0;
if ($height == 1) {
printf("block 1 found, starting benchmark\n");
@start = nsecs;
}
if ($height >= 500000) {
@end = nsecs;
@duration = @end - @start;
exit();
}
}
END {
printf("duration %d ms\n", @duration / 1000000)
}
```
This one hooks into ConnectBlock and prints the IBD time to height 500,000 starting from the first call to ConnectBlock
Userspace static tracepoints give lots of flexibility without invasive logging code. It's also more flexible than ad-hoc logging code, allowing you to instrument many different aspects of the system without having to enable per-subsystem logging.
Other ideas: tracepoints for lock contention, threads, what else?
Let me know what ya'll think and if this is worth adding to bitcoin.
## TODO
- [ ] docs?
- [x] Integrate systemtap-std-dev/libsystemtap into build (provides the <sys/sdt.h> header)
- [x] ~dtrace macos support? (is this still a thing?)~ going to focus on linux for now
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Tested ACK 22eb7930a6ae021438aa0b8e750170534944f296
0xB10C:
Tested ACK 22eb7930a6ae021438aa0b8e750170534944f296
Tree-SHA512: 69242242112b679c8a12a22b3bc50252c305894fb3055ae6e13d5f56221d858e58af1d698af55e23b69bdb7abedb5565ac6b45fa5144087b77a17acd04646a75
281fd1a4a032cded7f9ea9857e3e99fc793c714b Replace KeyIDHasher with SaltedSipHasher (Andrew Chow)
210b693db66e7c5b618014b5a287aee15af00045 Add generic SaltedSipHasher (Andrew Chow)
95e61c1cf2a91d041c8025306ba36f0ea2806894 Move Hashers to util/hasher.{cpp/h} (Andrew Chow)
Pull request description:
There are existing `SaltedOutPointHasher` and `SaltedTxidHasher` classes used for `std::unordered_map` and `std::unordered_set` that could be useful in other places in the codebase. So we these to their own `saltedhash.{cpp/h}` file. An existing `KeyIDHasher` is moved there too. Additionally, `ScriptIDHasher`, `SaltedPubkeyHasher`, and `SaltedScriptHasher` are added so that they can be used in future work.
`KeyIDHasher` and `ScriptIDHasher` are not salted so that equality comparisons of maps and sets keyed by `CKeyID` and `CScriptID` will actually work.
Split from #19602 (and a few other PRs/branches I have).
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review ACK 281fd1a4a032cded7f9ea9857e3e99fc793c714b
jonatack:
ACK 281fd1a4a032cded7f9ea9857e3e99fc793c714b, code review, debug build and ran bitcoind after rebasing to master @ dff0f6f753ea
fjahr:
utACK 281fd1a4a032cded7f9ea9857e3e99fc793c714b
Tree-SHA512: bb03b231ccf3c9ecefc997b8da9c3770af4819f9be5b0a72997a103864e84046a2ac39b8eadf0dc9247bdccd53f86f433642e3a098882e6748341a9e7736271b
595a34dbea01954cb0372b0210d2fd64357a1762 contrib/signet: Document miner script in README.md (Anthony Towns)
ff7dbdc08a11e999e7718b6ac7645ecceef81188 contrib/signet: Add script for generating a signet chain (Anthony Towns)
13762bcc9618138dd28b53c2031defdc9d762d26 Add bitcoin-util command line utility (Anthony Towns)
95d5d5e6257825bb385cee318d5681597f7f7646 rpc: allow getblocktemplate for test chains when unconnected or in IBD (Anthony Towns)
81c54dec20891f2627a49b2e3e785fdaf2a1e664 rpc: update getblocktemplate with signet rule, include signet_challenge (Anthony Towns)
Pull request description:
Adds `contrib/signet/miner` for mining signet blocks.
Adds `bitcoin-util` cli utility, with the idea being it can provide bitcoin related functionality that does not rely on the ability to access a running node. Only subcommand currently is "grind" which takes a hex-encoded header and grinds its nonce until its nBits is satisfied.
Updates `getblocktemplate` to include `signet_challenge` field, and makes `getblocktemplate` require the signet rule when invoked on the signet change. Removes connectivity and IBD checks from `getblocktemplate` when applied to a test chain (regtest, testnet, signet).
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
code review ACK 595a34dbea01954cb0372b0210d2fd64357a1762
Tree-SHA512: 8d43297710fdc1edc58acd9b53e1bd1671e5724f7097b40ab73653715dc8becc70534c4496cbba9290f4dd6538a7a3d5830eb85f83391ea31a3bb5b9d3378cc3
a191e23b8e7f0e19fc0359825eb7ca0d47966fa9 doc: Add release notes (Hennadii Stepanov)
ae749d12ddbaf592fbdb65d98ca35a0ff5566992 doc: Add libnatpmp stuff (Hennadii Stepanov)
e28f9be87a0f3c59a9184d602fe7947526df6a97 ci: Add libnatpmp-dev package to some builds (Hennadii Stepanov)
5a0185b6c9c838290103314916190a0330ed9a82 gui: Add NAT-PMP network option (Hennadii Stepanov)
a39f7336a3b493d46a4486c4c94fdca1b3151370 net: Add -natpmp command line option (Hennadii Stepanov)
28acffd9d53ec437e908abb8c84497a4f41b91ed net: Add NAT-PMP to port mapping loop (Hennadii Stepanov)
a8d9f275d0ca64797cc89627f8003b48b3efef63 net: Add libnatpmp support (Hennadii Stepanov)
58e8364dcdc4e57b0caac09f8402e6535301de9b gui: Apply port mapping changes on dialog exit (Hennadii Stepanov)
cf151cc68c95a8943e43e3fa4061e176262779e7 scripted-diff: Rename UPnP stuff (Hennadii Stepanov)
4e91b1e24d96e0cdccdd2a3ed034413f3ba6bae6 net: Add flags for port mapping protocols (Hennadii Stepanov)
8b50d1b5bb29b7d1ea0245ba75a8df3144e312dc net: Keep trying to use UPnP when -upnp=1 (Hennadii Stepanov)
28e2961fd6a2a9101fc08fb748430989291aaf7e refactor: Replace magic number with named constant (Hennadii Stepanov)
02ccf69dd6b772423acb343d16ef2bdbb3e3da03 refactor: Move port mapping code to its own module (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
Close#11902
This PR is an alternative to:
- #12288
- #15717
To compile with NAT-PMP support on Ubuntu [`libnatpmp-dev`](https://packages.ubuntu.com/source/bionic/libnatpmp) should be available.
Log excerpt:
```
2020-02-05T20:12:28Z [mapport] NAT-PMP: public address = 95.164.65.194
2020-02-05T20:12:28Z [mapport] AddLocal(95.164.65.194:18333,3)
2020-02-05T20:12:28Z [mapport] NAT-PMP: port mapping successful.
```
See: [`libnatpmp`](https://miniupnp.tuxfamily.org/libnatpmp.html)
---
Some follow-ups are out of this PR's scope:
- mention NAT-PMP library in the version message
- ~integrate NAT-PMP into the GUI~ (already [added](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/18077#issuecomment-589405068))
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Tested and code review ACK a191e23b8e7f0e19fc0359825eb7ca0d47966fa9
Tree-SHA512: 10e19267c21bf30f20ff1abfc882d526049f0e790b95e12f109dc2bed7c0aef45de03eaf967f4e667e7509be04f1873a5c508087393d947205f3aab2ad6d7cf1
9815332d5158d69a94abeaf465a2c07bd8e43359 test: Change MuHash Python implementation to match cpp version again (Fabian Jahr)
01297fb3ca57e4b8cbc5a89fc7c6367de33b0bc6 fuzz: Add MuHash consistency fuzz test (Fabian Jahr)
b111410914041b72961536c3e4037eba103a8085 test: Add MuHash3072 fuzz test (Fabian Jahr)
c1225273857f9fa2e2276396e3f8b3ea48306df3 bench: Add Muhash benchmarks (Fabian Jahr)
7b1242229d1fcc9277238a3aefb3431061c82bfa test: Add MuHash3072 unit tests (Fabian Jahr)
adc708c98dbf03b1735edc91f813a36580781a95 crypto: Add MuHash3072 implementation (Fabian Jahr)
0b4d290bf5b0a4d156c523431bf89aaa9ffe92e5 crypto: Add Num3072 implementation (Fabian Jahr)
589f958662a2dcaacdb9a66f1088c74828a39577 build: Check for 128 bit integer support (Fabian Jahr)
Pull request description:
This is the first split of #18000 which implements the Muhash algorithm and uses it to calculate the UTXO set hash in `gettxoutsetinfo`.
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review ACK 9815332d5158d69a94abeaf465a2c07bd8e43359
Tree-SHA512: 4bc090738f0e3d80b74bdd8122e24a8ce80121120fd37c7e4335a73e7ba4fcd7643f2a2d559e2eebf54b8e3a3bd5f12cfb27ba61ded135fda210a07a233eae45
a0a771843fc39c3cc2574a51f009c3391e1808e9 contrib: Changes to checks for PowerPC64 (Luke Dashjr)
634f6ec4eb9997d7bd0f8209fad49a4171d42384 contrib: Parse ELF directly for symbol and security checks (Wladimir J. van der Laan)
Pull request description:
Instead of the ever-messier text parsing of the output of the readelf tool (which is clearly meant for human consumption not to be machine parseable), parse the ELF binaries directly.
Add a small dependency-less ELF parser specific to the checks.
This is slightly more secure, too, because it removes potential ambiguity due to misparsing and changes in the output format of `elfread`. It also allows for stricter and more specific ELF format checks in the future.
This removes the build-time dependency for `readelf`.
It passes the test-security-check for me locally, ~~though I haven't checked on all platforms~~. I've checked that this works on the cross-compile output for all ELF platforms supported by Bitcoin Core at the moment, as well as PPC64 LE and BE.
Top commit has no ACKs.
Tree-SHA512: 7f9241fec83ee512642fecf5afd90546964561efd8c8c0f99826dcf6660604a4db2b7255e1afb1e9bb0211fd06f5dbad18a6175dfc03e39761a40025118e7bfc
629a9299b2a7241a3fa7d597cb34abcbe1af9255 Move WalletImpl from interfaces/wallet.cpp to wallet/interfaces.cpp (Russell Yanofsky)
2a26771d8161d30be1853a35acfee588cce03634 Move ChainImpl from interfaces/chain.cpp to node/interfaces.cpp (Russell Yanofsky)
12bd0fc9d70333c54c83ebb08c734272dbd330c2 Move NodeImpl from interfaces/node.cpp to node/interfaces.cpp (Russell Yanofsky)
Pull request description:
This PR is part of the [process separation project](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/projects/10).
---
Move `NodeImpl` from `interfaces/node.cpp` to `node/interfaces.cpp`
Move `ChainImpl` from `interfaces/chain.cpp` to `node/interfaces.cpp`
Move `WalletImpl` from `interfaces/wallet.cpp` to `wallet/interfaces.cpp`
No changes to any classes (can review with `git diff --color-moved=dimmed_zebra`)
Motivation for this change is to move node and wallet code to respective directories where it might fit in better than `src/interfaces/`, but also to remove all unnecessary code from `src/interfaces/` to unblock #19160 review, which has been hung up partially because of code organization. Building on top of this PR, #19160 should now be able to organize interface implementations more understandably in `src/node/` `src/wallet/` `src/ipc/` and `src/init/` directories instead of having so much functionality all in `src/interfaces/`
ACKs for top commit:
promag:
Code review ACK 629a9299b2a7241a3fa7d597cb34abcbe1af9255.
MarcoFalke:
review ACK 629a9299b2a7241a3fa7d597cb34abcbe1af9255 🔺
Tree-SHA512: 87c2b8fd51519bbd4e5ad3539a79debcf88c3bf021eb28c63f3f555186538b62a0c4cc1a3f07cfb4ff13aea8b0b2fdde505d81f22a5e5fd12a6e375b55a92ab8
Instead of the ever-messier text parsing of the output of the readelf
tool (which is clearly meant for human consumption not to be machine
parseable), parse the ELF binaries directly.
Add a small dependency-less ELF parser specific to the checks.
This is slightly more secure, too, because it removes potential
ambiguity due to misparsing and changes in the output format of `elfread`. It
also allows for stricter and more specific ELF format checks in the future.
This removes the build-time dependency for `readelf`.
It passes the test-security-check for me locally, though I haven't
checked on all platforms.
Move the hashers that we use for hash tables to a common place.
Moved hashers:
- SaltedTxidHasher
- SaltedOutpointHasher
- FilterHeaderHasher
- SignatureCacheHasher
- BlockHasher
c4a29d0a90b821c443c10891d9326c534d15cf97 Update wallet_multiwallet.py for descriptor and sqlite wallets (Russell Yanofsky)
310b0fde04639b7446efd5c1d2701caa4b991b86 Run dumpwallet for legacy wallets only in wallet_backup.py (Andrew Chow)
6c6639ac9f6e1677da066cf809f9e3fa4d2e7c32 Include sqlite3 in documentation (Andrew Chow)
f023b7cac0eb16d3c1bf40f1f7898b290de4cc73 wallet: Enforce sqlite serialized threading mode (Andrew Chow)
6173269866306058fcb1cc825b9eb681838678ca Set and check the sqlite user version (Andrew Chow)
9d3d2d263c331e3c77b8f0d01ecc9fea0407dd17 Use network magic as sqlite wallet application ID (Andrew Chow)
9af5de3798c49f86f27bb79396e075fb8c1b2381 Use SQLite for descriptor wallets (Andrew Chow)
9b78f3ce8ed1867c37f6b9fff98f74582d44b789 walletutil: Wallets can also be sqlite (Andrew Chow)
ac38a87225be0f1103ff9629d63980550d2f372b Determine wallet file type based on file magic (Andrew Chow)
6045f77003f167bee9a85e2d53f8fc6ff2e297d8 Implement SQLiteDatabase::MakeBatch (Andrew Chow)
727e6b2a4ee5abb7f2dcbc9f7778291908dc28ad Implement SQLiteDatabase::Verify (Andrew Chow)
b4df8fdb19fcded7e6d491ecf0b705cac0ec76a1 Implement SQLiteDatabase::Rewrite (Andrew Chow)
010e3659069e6f97dd7b24483f50ed71042b84b0 Implement SQLiteDatabase::TxnBegin, TxnCommit, and TxnAbort (Andrew Chow)
ac5c1617e7f4273daf24c24da1f6bc5ef5ab2d2b Implement SQLiteDatabase::Backup (Andrew Chow)
f6f9cd6a64842ef23777312f2465e826ca04b886 Implement SQLiteBatch::StartCursor, ReadAtCursor, and CloseCursor (Andrew Chow)
bf90e033f4fe86cfb90492c7e0962278ea3a146d Implement SQLiteBatch::ReadKey, WriteKey, EraseKey, and HasKey (Andrew Chow)
7aa45620e2f2178145a2eca58ccbab3cecff08fb Add SetupSQLStatements (Andrew Chow)
6636a2608a4e5906ee8092d5731595542261e0ad Implement SQLiteBatch::Close (Andrew Chow)
93825352a36456283bf87e39b5888363ee242f21 Implement SQLiteDatabase::Close (Andrew Chow)
a0de83372be83f59015cd3d61af2303b74fb64b5 Implement SQLiteDatabase::Open (Andrew Chow)
3bfa0fe1259280f8c32b41a798c9453b73f89b02 Initialize and Shutdown sqlite3 globals (Andrew Chow)
5a488b3d77326a0d957c1233493061da1b6ec207 Constructors, destructors, and relevant private fields for SQLiteDatabase/Batch (Andrew Chow)
ca8b7e04ab89f99075b093fa248919fd10acbdf7 Implement SQLiteDatabaseVersion (Andrew Chow)
7577b6e1c88a1a7b45ecf5c7f1735bae6f5a82bf Add SQLiteDatabase and SQLiteBatch dummy classes (Andrew Chow)
e87df8258090138d5c22ac46b8602b618620e8a1 Add sqlite to travis and depends (Andrew Chow)
54729f3f4e6765dfded590af5fb28c88331685f8 Add libsqlite3 (Andrew Chow)
Pull request description:
This PR adds a new class `SQLiteDatabase` which is a subclass of `WalletDatabase`. This provides access to a SQLite database that is used to store the wallet records. To keep compatibility with BDB and to complexity of the change down, we don't make use of many SQLite's features. We use it strictly as a key-value store. We create a table `main` which has two columns, `key` and `value` both with the type `blob`.
For new descriptor wallets, we will create a `SQLiteDatabase` instead of a `BerkeleyDatabase`. There is no requirement that all SQLite wallets are descriptor wallets, nor is there a requirement that all descriptor wallets be SQLite wallets. This allows for existing descriptor wallets to work as well as keeping open the option to migrate existing wallets to SQLite.
We keep the name `wallet.dat` for SQLite wallets. We are able to determine which database type to use by searching for specific magic bytes in the `wallet.dat` file. SQLite begins it's files with a null terminated string `SQLite format 3`. BDB has `0x00053162` at byte 12 (note that the byte order of this integer depends on the system endianness). So when we see that there is a `wallet.dat` file that we want to open, we check for the magic bytes to determine which database system to use.
I decided to keep the `wallet.dat` naming to keep things like backup script to continue to function as they won't need to be modified to look for a different file name. It also simplifies a couple of things in the implementation and the tests as `wallet.dat` is something that is specifically being looked for. If we don't want this behavior, then I do have another branch which creates `wallet.sqlite` files instead, but I find that this direction is easier.
ACKs for top commit:
Sjors:
re-utACK c4a29d0a90b821c443c10891d9326c534d15cf97
promag:
Tested ACK c4a29d0a90b821c443c10891d9326c534d15cf97.
fjahr:
reACK c4a29d0a90b821c443c10891d9326c534d15cf97
S3RK:
Re-review ACK c4a29d0a90b821c443c10891d9326c534d15cf97
meshcollider:
re-utACK c4a29d0a90b821c443c10891d9326c534d15cf97
hebasto:
re-ACK c4a29d0a90b821c443c10891d9326c534d15cf97, only rebased since my [previous](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/19077#pullrequestreview-507743699) review, verified with `git range-diff master d18892dcc c4a29d0a9`.
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK c4a29d0a90b821c443c10891d9326c534d15cf97. I am honestly confused about reasons for locking into `wallet.dat` again when it's so easy now to use a clean format. I assume I'm just very dense, or there's some unstated reason, because the only thing that's been brought up are unrealistic compatibility scenarios (all require actively creating a wallet with non-default descriptor+sqlite option, then trying to using the descriptor+sqlite wallets with old software or scripts and ignoring the results) that we didn't pay attention to with previous PRs like #11687, which did not require any active interfaction.
jonatack:
ACK c4a29d0a90b821c443c10891d9326c534d15cf97, debug builds and test runs after rebase to latest master @ c2c4dbaebd9, some manual testing creating, using, unloading and reloading a few different new sqlite descriptor wallets over several node restarts/shutdowns.
Tree-SHA512: 19145732e5001484947352d3175a660b5102bc6e833f227a55bd41b9b2f4d92737bbed7cead64b75b509decf9e1408cd81c185ab1fb4b90561aee427c4f9751c
This adds a new module (unused for now) which defines TxRequestTracker, a data
structure that maintains all information about transaction requests, and coordinates
requests.
6fe2ef2acb00b1df7f6a0c0dea1a81a1924be0e1 scripted-diff: Rename SendMessage to SendZmqMessage. (Daniel Kraft)
a3ffb6ebebd753cec294c91cef7c603a30cf217e Replace zmqconfig.h by a simple zmqutil. (Daniel Kraft)
7f2ad1b9acef4ccc1b3e1a9f551416235d95cbfd Use std::unique_ptr for CZMQNotifierFactory. (Daniel Kraft)
b93b9d54569145bfcec6cee10968284fe05fe254 Simplify and fix notifier removal on error. (Daniel Kraft)
e15b1cfc310df739b92bd281112dbeb31d3bb30a Various cleanups in zmqnotificationinterface. (Daniel Kraft)
Pull request description:
This contains various small code cleanups that make the ZMQ code easier to read and maintain (at least in my opinion). The only functional change is that a potential memory leak is fixed that would have occured when a notifier is removed from the `notifiers` list after its callback function returned `false` (which is likely not relevant in practice but still a bug).
ACKs for top commit:
instagibbs:
utACK 6fe2ef2acb00b1df7f6a0c0dea1a81a1924be0e1
hebasto:
re-ACK 6fe2ef2acb00b1df7f6a0c0dea1a81a1924be0e1, only the latest commit got a scripted-diff since my [previous](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/13686#pullrequestreview-487649808) review.
Tree-SHA512: 8206f8713bf3698d7cd4cb235f6657dc1c4dd920f50a8c5f371a559dd17ce5ab6d94d6281165eef860a22fc844a6bb25489ada12c83ebc780efd7ccdc0860f70
Note that with this change we are no-longer including PTHREAD_* flags
when building libbitcoinconsensus.
Also note that we are including PTHREAD_LIBS in AM_PTHREAD_FLAGS
zmqconfig.h is currently not really needed anywhere, except that
it declares zmqError (which is then defined in
zmqnotificationinterface.cpp). Note in particular that there is
no need to conditionally include zmq.h only if ZMQ is enabled, because
the place in the core code where the ZMQ library itself is included
(init.cpp) is conditional already on that.
This commit removes zmqconfig.h and replaces it by a much simpler
zmqutil.h library for zmqError. The definition of the function is
moved to the matching (newly created) zmqutil.cpp.
22cb303cf099b430d602384bc92706ce01b4f98d rpc: add missing space in JSON parsing error message, update test (Jon Atack)
bf53ebef061a563cfc4c5857f5d6bc93fb136282 test: add multiwallet tests for bitcoin-cli -generate (Jon Atack)
4b859cfff9965eb07044f4d104398cb0e7ab127e cli: add multiwallet capability to GetNewAddress and -generate (Jon Atack)
18f93545a12db00180cea369a4b5cce7f10cd362 test: add tests for bitcoin-cli -generate (Jon Atack)
4818124137732540383a29835afa2be41aa55ca8 cli: create bitcoin-cli -generate command (Jon Atack)
ff41a3690066081772b172f3c31a63f5fe6ea7ed cli: extract ParseResult() and ParseError() (Jon Atack)
f4185b26d9b2ff2e86c99cdfe3ad9be62bb6299a cli: create GenerateToAddressRequestHandler class (Harris)
f7c65a33508c4bb8e9ed896e150a4fa529a243e5 cli: create GetNewAddress() (Jon Atack)
9be7fd35c5d631c2cc34d3b4fa63ae0a9d5a68ef rpc: make generatetoaddress locals const (Jon Atack)
cb00510dbac99b44f3f2cf6e58bb2e4401c5ef28 rpc: create rpc/mining.h, hoist default max tries values to constant (Jon Atack)
Pull request description:
This PR continues and completes the work begun in #17700 working on issue #16000 to create a client-side version of RPC `generate`.
Basically, `bitcoin-cli -generate` wraps calling `generatenewaddress` followed by `generatetoaddress [nblocks] [maxtries]` and prints the following:
```
$ bitcoin-cli -generate
{
"address": "bcrt1qn4aszr2y2xvpa70y675a76wsu70wlkwvdyyln6"
"blocks": [
"01d2ebcddf663da90b28da7f6805115e2ba7818f16fe747258836646a43a0bb5",
]
}
$ bitcoin-cli -rpcwallet=wallet-name -generate 3 100
{
"address": "bcrt1q4cunfw0gnsj7g7e6mk0v0uuvvau9mwr09dj45l",
"blocks": [
"7a6650ca5e0c614992ee64fb148a7e5e022af842e4b6003f81abd8baf1e75136",
"01d2ebcddf663da90b28da7f6805115e2ba7818f16fe747258836646a43a0bb5",
"3f8795ec40b1ad812b818c177680841be319a3f6753d4e32dc7dfb5bafe5d00e"
]
}
```
Help doc:
```
$ bitcoin-cli -h | grep -A5 "\-generate"
-generate
Generate blocks immediately, equivalent to RPC generatenewaddress
followed by RPC generatetoaddress. Optional positional arguments
are number of blocks to generate (default: 1) and maximum
iterations to try (default: 1000000), equivalent to RPC
generatetoaddress nblocks and maxtries arguments. Example:
bitcoin-cli -generate 4 1000
```
Quite a bit of test coverage turned out to be needed to cover the change and the different cases (arguments, multiwallet mode) and error-handling.
This PR also improves some things that working on these changes brought to light.
Credit to Harris Brakmić for the initial work in #17700.
ACKs for top commit:
adamjonas:
utACK 22cb303cf099b430d602384bc92706ce01b4f98d
meshcollider:
utACK 22cb303cf099b430d602384bc92706ce01b4f98d
Tree-SHA512: 94f67f632fe093d076f614e0ecff09ce7342ac6e424579200d5211a6615260e438d857861767fb788950ec6da0b26ef56dc8268c430012a3b3d4822b24ca6fbf
Replace with RPC request reference to new WalletContext struct similar to the
existing NodeContext struct and reference.
This PR is a followup to 25ad2c623af30056ffb36dcd203a52edda2b170f
https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/18740 removing the g_rpc_node global.
Some later PRs will follow this up and move more wallet globals to the
WalletContext struct.
Co-authored-by: João Barbosa <joao.paulo.barbosa@gmail.com>