## Issue Addressed
Upgrade libp2p to v0.52
## Proposed Changes
- **Workflows**: remove installation of `protoc`
- **Book**: remove installation of `protoc`
- **`Dockerfile`s and `cross`**: remove custom base `Dockerfile` for cross since it's no longer needed. Remove `protoc` from remaining `Dockerfiles`s
- **Upgrade `discv5` to `v0.3.1`:** we have some cool stuff in there: no longer needs `protoc` and faster ip updates on cold start
- **Upgrade `prometheus` to `0.21.0`**, now it no longer needs encoding checks
- **things that look like refactors:** bunch of api types were renamed and need to be accessed in a different (clearer) way
- **Lighthouse network**
- connection limits is now a behaviour
- banned peers no longer exist on the swarm level, but at the behaviour level
- `connection_event_buffer_size` now is handled per connection with a buffer size of 4
- `mplex` is deprecated and was removed
- rpc handler now logs the peer to which it belongs
## Additional Info
Tried to keep as much behaviour unchanged as possible. However, there is a great deal of improvements we can do _after_ this upgrade:
- Smart connection limits: Connection limits have been checked only based on numbers, we can now use information about the incoming peer to decide if we want it
- More powerful peer management: Dial attempts from other behaviours can be rejected early
- Incoming connections can be rejected early
- Banning can be returned exclusively to the peer management: We should not get connections to banned peers anymore making use of this
- TCP Nat updates: We might be able to take advantage of confirmed external addresses to check out tcp ports/ips
Co-authored-by: Age Manning <Age@AgeManning.com>
Co-authored-by: Akihito Nakano <sora.akatsuki@gmail.com>
## Issue Addressed
Closes#3964
## Proposed Changes
Use the `maxperf` profile to build Windows binaries, now that Rust 1.70.0 fixed the underlying issue.
## Issue Addressed
The latest stable version (1.69.0) of Rust was released on 20 April and contains this change:
- [Update the minimum external LLVM to 14.](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust/pull/107573/)
This impacts some of our CI workflows (build and release-test-windows) that uses LLVM 13.0. This PR updates the workflows to install LLVM 15.0.
**UPDATE**: Also updated `h2` to address [this issue](https://github.com/advisories/GHSA-f8vr-r385-rh5r)
## Issue Addressed
Closes https://github.com/sigp/lighthouse/issues/3656
## Proposed Changes
* Replace `set-output` by `$GITHUB_OUTPUT` usage
* Avoid rate-limits when installing `protoc` by making authenticated requests (continuation of https://github.com/sigp/lighthouse/pull/3621)
* Upgrade all Ubuntu 18.04 usage to 22.04 (18.04 is end of life)
* Upgrade macOS-latest to explicit macOS-12 to silence warning
* Use `actions/checkout@v3` and `actions/cache@v3` to avoid deprecated NodeJS v12
## Additional Info
Can't silence the NodeJS warnings entirely due to https://github.com/sigp/lighthouse/issues/3705. Can fix that in future.
## Issue Addressed
The release CI is currently broken due to the addition of the `protoc` dependency. Here's a failure of the release flow running on my fork: https://github.com/michaelsproul/lighthouse/actions/runs/3155541478/jobs/5134317334
## Proposed Changes
- Install `protoc` on Windows and Mac so that it's available for `cargo install`.
- Install an x86_64 binary in the Cross image for the aarch64 platform: we need a binary that runs on the host, _not_ on the target.
- Fix `macos` local testnet CI by using the Github API key to dodge rate limiting (this issue: https://github.com/actions/runner-images/issues/602).
## Proposed Changes
Add a new Cargo compilation profile called `maxperf` which enables more aggressive compiler optimisations at the expense of compilation time.
Some rough initial benchmarks show that this can provide up to a 25% reduction to run time for CPU bound tasks like block processing: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/15jHuZe7lLHhZq9Nw8kc6EL0Qh_N_YAYqkW2NQ_Afmtk/edit
The numbers in that spreadsheet compare the `consensus-context` branch from #3604 to the same branch compiled with the `maxperf` profile using:
```
PROFILE=maxperf make install-lcli
```
## Additional Info
The downsides of the maxperf profile are:
- It increases compile times substantially, which will particularly impact low-spec hardware. Compiling `lcli` is about 3x slower. Compiling Lighthouse is about 5x slower on my 5950X: 17m 38s rather than 3m 28s.
As a result I think we should not enable this everywhere by default.
- **Option 1**: enable by default for our released binaries. This gives the majority of users the fastest version of `lighthouse` possible, at the expense of slowing down our release CI. Source builds will continue to use the default `release` profile unless users opt-in to `maxperf`.
- **Option 2**: enable by default for source builds. This gives users building from source an edge, but makes them pay for it with compilation time.
I think I would prefer Option 1. I'll try doing some benchmarking to see how long a maxperf build of Lighthouse would take on GitHub actions.
Credit to Nicholas Nethercote for documenting these options in the Rust Performance Book: https://nnethercote.github.io/perf-book/build-configuration.html.
## Issue Addressed
NA
## Proposed Changes
Address a CI failure in the release suite.
Example: https://github.com/sigp/lighthouse/actions/runs/1984266187
## Additional Info
I believe we should merge this into `unstable` and `stable`. Then, move the `v2.1.4` commit to target the commit with the updated CI. It's sad that v2.1.4 has two commits, but they're functionally equivalent for users.
## Issue Addressed
N/A
## Proposed Changes
Removes all configurations and hard-coded rules related to the deprecated Pyrmont testnet.
## Additional Info
Pyrmont is deprecated/will be shut down after being used for scenario testing, this PR removes configurations related to it.
Co-authored-by: Zachinquarantine <zachinquarantine@yahoo.com>
## Issue Addressed
NA
## Proposed Changes
Add the "Update Priority" section which has featured in many of our previous releases (e.g., [Poñeta](https://github.com/sigp/lighthouse/releases/v2.1.1)).
Previously this section has been copied in manually.
## Additional Info
NA
## Issue Addressed
Closes#2938
## Proposed Changes
* Build and publish images with a `-modern` suffix which enable CPU optimizations for modern hardware.
* Add docs for the plethora of available images!
* Unify all the Docker workflows in `docker.yml` (including for tagged releases).
## Additional Info
The `Dockerfile` is no longer used by our Docker Hub builds, as we use `cross` and a generic approach for ARM and x86. There's a new CI job `docker-build-from-source` which tests the `Dockerfile` without publishing anything.
## Proposed Changes
Add a new hardcoded spec for the Gnosis Beacon Chain.
Ideally, official Lighthouse executables will be able to connect to the gnosis beacon chain from now on, using `--network gnosis` CLI option.
## Issue Addressed
Resolves#2406
## Proposed Changes
Add windows release binaries to our CI
## Additional Info
Co-authored-by: realbigsean <seananderson33@gmail.com>
## Issue Addressed
NA
## Proposed Changes
Add a checklist to the release draft created by CI. I know @michaelsproul was also working on this and I suspect @realbigsean also might have useful input.
## Additional Info
NA
## Issue Addressed
Our v1.1.0 automated release failed to upload to Github. The `hub` command failed with a `403`, which seems like this issue: https://github.com/github/hub/issues/2149
## Proposed Changes
The suggested fix in that issue is to set the `$GITHUB_USER` environment variable. I can't really test this because this hasn't been failing on my fork, but seems low risk
Co-authored-by: realbigsean <seananderson33@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Paul Hauner <paul@paulhauner.com>
## Issue Addressed
N/A
## Proposed Changes
On any tag formatted `v*`, a full multi-arch docker build will be kicked off and automatically pushed to docker hub with the version tag.
This is a bit repetitive, because the image built will usually be the same as the image built on pushes to `stable`, but it seems like the simplest way to go about it and this will also work if we incorporate a workflow with `vX.X.X-rc` tags.
## Additional Info
This may also need to wait for env variable updates: https://github.com/sigp/lighthouse/pull/2135#issuecomment-754977433
Co-authored-by: realbigsean <seananderson33@gmail.com>
## Issue Addressed
Resolves #2120
## Proposed Changes
This updates github actions to use `cross` when compiling linux x86_64 binaries.
## Additional Info
I think we could alternatively be explicit with the version of macOS or ubuntu we are running actions on and that could solve #2120. I'm not sure which method is preferred here though. Github actions supports Ubuntu 16.04
Co-authored-by: realbigsean <seananderson33@gmail.com>
## Issue Addressed
Resolves#1674
## Proposed Changes
- Whenever a tag is pushed with the prefix `v` this workflow is triggered
- creates portable and non-portable binaries for linux x86_64, linux aarch64, macOS
- an attempt at using github actions caching
- signs each binary using GPG
- auto-generates full changelog based on commit messages since the last release
- creates a **draft** release
- hot new formatting (preview [here](https://github.com/realbigsean/lighthouse/releases/tag/v0.9.23))
- has been taking around 35 minutes
## Additional Info
TODOs:
- Figure out how we should automate dockerhub's version tag.
- It'd be quickest just to tag `latest`, but we'd need to make sure the docker workflow completes before this starts
- we do the same cross-compile in the `docker` workflow, we could try to use the same binary
- integrate a similar flow for unstable binaries (`-rc` tag?)
- improve caching, potentially use sccache
- if we start using a self-hosted runner this'll require some re-working
Need to add the following secrets to Github:
- `GPG_PASSPHRASE`
- ~~`GPG_PUBLIC_KEY`~~ hard-coded this, because it was tough manage as a secret
- `GPG_SIGNING_KEY`
Co-authored-by: realbigsean <seananderson33@gmail.com>