Commit Graph

5 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Age Manning
3d99ce25f8 Correct a race condition when dialing peers (#4056)
There is a race condition which occurs when multiple discovery queries return at almost the exact same time and they independently contain a useful peer we would like to connect to.

The condition can occur that we can add the same peer to the dial queue, before we get a chance to process the queue. 
This ends up displaying an error to the user: 
```
ERRO Dialing an already dialing peer
```
Although this error is harmless it's not ideal. 

There are two solutions to resolving this:
1. As we decide to dial the peer, we change the state in the peer-db to dialing (before we add it to the queue) which would prevent other requests from adding to the queue. 
2. We prevent duplicates in the dial queue

This PR has opted for 2. because 1. will complicate the code in that we are changing states in non-intuitive places. Although this technically adds a very slight performance cost, its probably a cleaner solution as we can keep the state-changing logic in one place.
2023-03-16 05:44:54 +00:00
Age Manning
8dd9249177 Enforce a timeout on peer disconnect (#3757)
On heavily crowded networks, we are seeing many attempted connections to our node every second. 

Often these connections come from peers that have just been disconnected. This can be for a number of reasons including: 
- We have deemed them to be not as useful as other peers
- They have performed poorly
- They have dropped the connection with us
- The connection was spontaneously lost
- They were randomly removed because we have too many peers

In all of these cases, if we have reached or exceeded our target peer limit, there is no desire to accept new connections immediately after the disconnect from these peers. In fact, it often costs us resources to handle the established connections and defeats some of the logic of dropping them in the first place. 

This PR adds a timeout, that prevents recently disconnected peers from reconnecting to us.

Technically we implement a ban at the swarm layer to prevent immediate re connections for at least 10 minutes. I decided to keep this light, and use a time-based LRUCache which only gets updated during the peer manager heartbeat to prevent added stress of polling a delay map for what could be a large number of peers.

This cache is bounded in time. An extra space bound could be added should people consider this a risk.

Co-authored-by: Diva M <divma@protonmail.com>
2023-02-14 03:25:42 +00:00
Divma
7366266bd1 keep failed finalized chains to avoid retries (#3142)
## Issue Addressed

In very rare occasions we've seen most if not all our peers in a chain with which we don't agree. Purging these peers can take a very long time: number of retries of the chain. Meanwhile sync is caught in a loop trying the chain again and again. This makes it so that we fast track purging peers via registering the failed chain to prevent retrying for some time (30 seconds). Longer times could be dangerous since a chain can fail if a batch fails to download for example. In this case, I think it's still acceptable to fast track purging peers since they are nor providing the required info anyway 

Co-authored-by: Divma <26765164+divagant-martian@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-04-13 01:10:55 +00:00
Michael Sproul
5e1f8a8480 Update to Rust 1.59 and 2021 edition (#3038)
## Proposed Changes

Lots of lint updates related to `flat_map`, `unwrap_or_else` and string patterns. I did a little more creative refactoring in the op pool, but otherwise followed Clippy's suggestions.

## Additional Info

We need this PR to unblock CI.
2022-02-25 00:10:17 +00:00
Age Manning
3bb30754d9 Keep track of failed head chains and prevent re-lookups (#1534)
## Overview

There are forked chains which get referenced by blocks and attestations on a network. Typically if these chains are very long, we stop looking up the chain and downvote the peer. In extreme circumstances, many peers are on many chains, the chains can be very deep and become time consuming performing lookups. 

This PR adds a cache to known failed chain lookups. This prevents us from starting a parent-lookup (or stopping one half way through) if we have attempted the chain lookup in the past.
2020-08-18 03:54:09 +00:00