* core/blobpool: implement txpool for blob txs
* core/txpool: track address reservations to notice any weird bugs
* core/txpool/blobpool: add support for in-memory operation for tests
* core/txpool/blobpool: fix heap updating after SetGasTip if account is evicted
* core/txpool/blobpool: fix eviction order if cheap leading txs are included
* core/txpool/blobpool: add note as to why the eviction fields are not inited in reinject
* go.mod: pull in inmem billy form upstream
* core/txpool/blobpool: fix review commens
* core/txpool/blobpool: make heap and heap test deterministic
* core/txpool/blobpool: luv u linter
* core/txpool: limit blob transactions to 16 per account
* core/txpool/blobpool: fix rebase errors
* core/txpool/blobpool: luv you linter
* go.mod: revert some strange crypto package dep updates
Add a new flag, `--pluginsdir`, for setting the directory where plugins are stored. The default remains `$datadir/plugins`.
Co-authored-by: Thomas E Lackey <telackey@bozemanpass.com>
Reviewed-on: #1
This change removes PoW header syncing related code from LES and also deletes
duplicated packages les/catalyst, les/downloader and les/fetcher. These package copies
were created because people wanted to make changes in their eth/ counterparts, but weren't
able to adapt LES code to the API changes.
It is usually best to set GOMAXPROCS to the number of available CPU cores. However, setting
it like that does not work well when the process is quota-limited to a certain number of CPUs.
The automaxprocs library configures GOMAXPROCS, taking such limits into account.
This simplifies the code that initializes the discovery a bit, and
adds new flags for enabling/disabling discv4 and discv5 separately.
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Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
This change adds back the 'geth --dev' mode of operation, using a cl-mocker.
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Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
Co-authored-by: rjl493456442 <garyrong0905@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: lightclient <14004106+lightclient@users.noreply.github.com>
This PR adds server-side limits for JSON-RPC batch requests. Before this change, batches
were limited only by processing time. The server would pick calls from the batch and
answer them until the response timeout occurred, then stop processing the remaining batch
items.
Here, we are adding two additional limits which can be configured:
- the 'item limit': batches can have at most N items
- the 'response size limit': batches can contain at most X response bytes
These limits are optional in package rpc. In Geth, we set a default limit of 1000 items
and 25MB response size.
When a batch goes over the limit, an error response is returned to the client. However,
doing this correctly isn't always possible. In JSON-RPC, only method calls with a valid
`id` can be responded to. Since batches may also contain non-call messages or
notifications, the best effort thing we can do to report an error with the batch itself is
reporting the limit violation as an error for the first method call in the batch. If a batch is
too large, but contains only notifications and responses, the error will be reported with
a null `id`.
The RPC client was also changed so it can deal with errors resulting from too large
batches. An older client connected to the server code in this PR could get stuck
until the request timeout occurred when the batch is too large. **Upgrading to a version
of the RPC client containing this change is strongly recommended to avoid timeout issues.**
For some weird reason, when writing the original client implementation, @fjl worked off of
the assumption that responses could be distributed across batches arbitrarily. So for a
batch request containing requests `[A B C]`, the server could respond with `[A B C]` but
also with `[A B] [C]` or even `[A] [B] [C]` and it wouldn't make a difference to the
client.
So in the implementation of BatchCallContext, the client waited for all requests in the
batch individually. If the server didn't respond to some of the requests in the batch, the
client would eventually just time out (if a context was used).
With the addition of batch limits into the server, we anticipate that people will hit this
kind of error way more often. To handle this properly, the client now waits for a single
response batch and expects it to contain all responses to the requests.
---------
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
* core/txpool: abstraction prep work for secondary pools (blob pool)
* core/txpool: leave subpool concepts to a followup pr
* les: fix tests using hard coded errors
* core/txpool: use bitmaps instead of maps for tx type filtering
* cryto/kzg4844: pull in the C and Go libs for KZG cryptography
* go.mod: pull in the KZG libraries
* crypto/kzg4844: add basic becnhmarks for ballpark numbers
* cmd, crypto: integrate both CKZG and GoKZG all the time, add flag
* cmd/utils, crypto/kzg4844: run library init on startup
* crypto/kzg4844: make linter happy
* crypto/kzg4844: push missing file
* crypto/kzg4844: fully disable CKZG but leave in the sources
* build, crypto/kzg4844, internal: link CKZG by default and with portable mode
* crypto/kzg4844: drop verifying the trusted setup in gokzg
* internal/build: yolo until it works?
* cmd/utils: make flag description friendlier
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
* crypto/ckzg: no need for double availability check
* build: tiny flag cleanup nitpick
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Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
* eth: cmd: deprecate personal namespace
* eth: cmd: move deprecation to node
* node: disable toml of enablepersonal
* node: disable personal on ipc as well
* Update node/node.go
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
* console: error -> warn
* node: less roulette
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Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
This PR drops the legacy receipt types, the freezer-migrate command and the startup check. The previous attempt #22852 at this failed because there were users who still had legacy receipts in their db, so it had to be reverted #23247. Since then we added a command to migrate legacy dbs #24028.
As of the last hardforks all users either must have done the migration, or used the --ignore-legacy-receipts flag which will stop working now.
This PR adds a parameter to startup, --synctarget. The synctarget flag is a developer-flag, that can be useful in some scenarios as a replacement for a CL node. It defines a fixed block sync target:
geth --syncmode=full --synctarget=./block_15816882.hex_rlp
The --synctarget is only made available during syncmode=full
This changes the CI build to store the git commit and date into package
internal/version instead of package main. Doing this essentially merges our
two ways of tracking the go-ethereum version into a single place, achieving
two objectives:
- Bad block reports, which use version.Info(), will now have the git commit
information even when geth is built in an environment such as
launchpad.net where git access is unavailable.
- For geth builds created by `go build ./cmd/geth` (i.e. not using `go run
build/ci.go install`), git information stored by the go tool is now used
in the p2p node name as well as in `geth version` and `geth
version-check`.
* cmd/geth: add a verkle subcommand
* fix copyright year
* remove unused command parameters
* check that the output file was successfully written to
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
* cmd/geth: goimports fix
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
This adds a cache for block logs which is shared by all filters. The cache
size of is configurable using the `--cache.blocklogs` flag.
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
This change updates our urfave/cli dependency to the v2 branch of the library.
There are some Go API changes in cli v2:
- Flag values can now be accessed using the methods ctx.Bool,
ctx.Int, ctx.String, ... regardless of whether the flag is 'local' or
'global'.
- v2 has built-in support for flag categories. Our home-grown category
system is removed and the categories of flags are assigned as part of
the flag definition.
For users, there is only one observable difference with cli v2: flags must now
strictly appear before regular arguments. For example, the following command is
now invalid:
geth account import mykey.json --password file.txt
Instead, the command must be invoked as follows:
geth account import --password file.txt mykey.json