This migrates everything except the `go-car` librairy: https://github.com/ipfs/boxo/issues/218#issuecomment-1529922103
I didn't migrated everything in the previous release because all the boxo code wasn't compatible with the go-ipld-prime one due to a an in flight (/ aftermath) revert of github.com/ipfs/go-block-format. go-block-format has been unmigrated since slight bellow absolutely everything depends on it that would have required everything to be moved on boxo or everything to optin into using boxo which were all deal breakers for different groups.
This worked fine because lotus's codebase could live hapely on the first multirepo setup however boost is now trying to use boxo's code with lotus's (still on multirepo) setup: https://filecoinproject.slack.com/archives/C03AQ3QAUG1/p1685022344779649
The alternative would be for boost to write shim types which just forward calls and return with the different interface definitions.
Btw why is that an issue in the first place is because unlike what go's duck typing model suggest interfaces are not transparent https://github.com/golang/go/issues/58112, interfaces are strongly typed but they have implicit narrowing. The issue is if you return an interface from an interface Go does not have a function definition to insert the implicit conversion thus instead the type checker complains you are not returning the right type.
Stubbing types were reverted https://github.com/ipfs/boxo/issues/218#issuecomment-1478650351
Last time I only migrated `go-bitswap` to `boxo/bitswap` because of the security issues and because we never had the interface return an interface problem (we had concrete wrappers where the implicit conversion took place).
1. Include the builtin-actors in the lotus source tree.
2. Embed the bundle on build instead of downloading at runtime.
3. Avoid reading the bundle whenever possible by including bundle
metadata (the bundle CID, the actor CIDs, etc.).
4. Remove everything related to dependency injection.
1. We're no longer downloading the bundle, so doing anything ahead
of time doesn't really help.
2. We register the manifests on init because, unfortunately, they're
global.
3. We explicitly load the current actors bundle in the genesis
state-tree method.
4. For testing, we just change the in-use bundle with a bit of a
hack. It's not great, but using dependency injection doesn't make
any sense either because, again, the manifest information is
global.
5. Remove the bundle.toml file. Bundles may be overridden by
specifying an override path in the parameters file, or an
environment variable.
fixes#8701
Motivation:
* Run lotus with the race detector enabled (primary motivation).
* Allow multiple lotus nodes in a process (not a high priority).
Previously, the journal was shared between all lotus instances, but it was
initialized for every new node. This caused safety problems in tests (at a
minimum).
This patch explicitly passes the journal to all services that need it.
This configurability is unlocked through the `testground`
build tag, which Project Oni will uses.
Changes in the usage places of these relaxed constants
were required due to the fact that Golang constants are
untyped, but vars aren't.
Read https://blog.golang.org/constants for more info.