This change introduces a breaking change to miner.etherbase is configured.
Previously, users did not need to explicitly set the etherbase address via flag, since 'first' local account was used as etherbase automatically. This change removes the "default first account" feature.
In Proof-of-stake world, the fee recipient address is provided by CL, and not configured in Geth any more - meaning that miner.etherbase is mostly for legacy networks(pow, clique networks etc).
Fixes#26505 where the console crashed when a property getter
raised an exception during autocompletion. I also noticed while fixing this
issue that autocomplete wasn't working for objects/fields with numbers in
them (most importantly web3.<tab><tab>) which is also now fixed.
This PR does a few things.
It fixes a shutdown-order flaw in the chainfreezer. Previously, the chain-freezer would shutdown the freezer backend first, and then signal for the loop to exit. This can lead to a scenario where the freezer tries to fsync closed files, which is an error-conditon that could lead to exit via log.Crit.
It also makes the printout more detailed when truncating 'dangling' items, by showing the exact number instead of approximate MB.
This PR also adds calls to fsync files before closing them, and also makes the `db inspect` command slightly more robust.
* internal/flags: use filepath.Clean instead of path.Clean
* internal/flags: fix windows pipe issue
* internal/flags: modify test for windows
* internal/flags: use backticks, fix test
This PR fixes an issue which might result in data lost in freezer.
Whenever mutation happens in freezer, all data will be written into head data file
and it will be rotated with a new one in case the size of file reaches the threshold.
Theoretically, the rotated old data file should be fsync'd to prevent data loss.
In freezer.Sync function, we only fsync: (1) index file (2) meta file and (3) head
data file. So this PR forcibly fsync the head data file if mutation happens in the
boundary of data file.
Implementation of https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-3860, limit and meter initcode. This PR enables EIP-3860 as part of the Shanghai fork.
Co-authored-by: lightclient@protonmail.com <lightclient@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
Co-authored-by: Marius van der Wijden <m.vanderwijden@live.de>
In legacy (pre-merge) sync mode, headers were contiguously downloaded from the network and when no more headers were available, we checked every few seconds whether there are 64 new blocks to move the pivot.
In beacon (post-merge) sync mode, we don't need to check for new skeleton headers non stop, since those re delivered one by one by the engine API. The missing code snippet from the header fetcher was to actually look at the latest head and move the pivot if it was more than 2*64-8 away. This PR adds the missing movement logic.
This makes non-JS tracers execute all block txs on a single goroutine.
In the previous implementation, we used to prepare every tx pre-state
on one goroutine, and then run the transactions again with tracing enabled.
Native tracers are usually faster, so it is faster overall to use their output as
the pre-state for tracing the next transaction.
Co-authored-by: Sina Mahmoodi <itz.s1na@gmail.com>
This PR removes the notion of fakeStorage from the state objects, and instead, for any state modifications that are needed, it simply makes the changes.
* p2p/discover: add more packet information in logs
This adds more fields to discv5 packet logs. These can be useful when
debugging multi-packet interactions.
The FINDNODE message also gets an additional field, OpID for debugging
purposes. This field is not encoded onto the wire.
I'm also removing topic system related message types in this change.
These will come back in the future, where support for them will be
guarded by a config flag.
* p2p/discover/v5wire: rename 'Total' to 'RespCount'
The new name captures the meaning of this field better.
Alarm is a timer utility that simplifies code where a timer needs to be rescheduled over
and over. Doing this can be tricky with time.Timer or time.AfterFunc because the channel
requires draining in some cases.
Alarm is optimized for use cases where items are tracked in a heap according to their expiry
time, and a goroutine with a for/select loop wants to be woken up whenever the next item expires.
In this application, the timer needs to be rescheduled when an item is added or removed
from the heap. Using a timer naively, these updates will always require synchronization
with the global runtime timer datastructure to update the timer using Reset. Alarm avoids
this by tracking the next expiry time and only modifies the timer if it would need to fire earlier
than already scheduled.
As an example use, I have converted p2p.dialScheduler to use Alarm instead of AfterFunc.