* core/state/snapshot: fix BAD BLOCK error when snapshot is generating
* core/state/snapshot: alternative fix for the snapshot generator
* add comments and minor update
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
This commit adds a ModifyAncients hook that plugins can implement
to more accurately track what Geth is doing under the hood. We
still support the old AppendAncients interface as best we can,
though internal changes may make it so that it does not behave
as it once did.
Notes: the AppendAncient plugin hook is broken by this commit.
This adds CaptureEnter() and CaptureExit() as no-ops for interface
compliance, but these capabilities should be added for plugin tracers
soon.
This doesn't fix all go-critic warnings, just the most serious ones.
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
This removes some code:
- The clique engine calculated the snapshot twice when verifying headers/blocks.
- The method GetBlockHashesFromHash in Header/Block/Lightchain was only used by tests. It
is now removed from the API.
- The method GetTdByHash internally looked up the number before calling GetTd(hash, num).
In many cases, callers already had the number, and used this method just because it has a
shorter name. I have removed the method to make the API surface smaller.
This change removes misuses of sync.WaitGroup in BlockChain. Before this change,
block insertion modified the WaitGroup counter in order to ensure that Stop would wait
for pending operations to complete. This was racy and could even lead to crashes
if Stop was called at an unfortunate time. The issue is resolved by adding a specialized
'closable' mutex, which prevents chain modifications after stopping while also
synchronizing writers with each other.
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
This resolves a long-standing TODO. The point of copying the address is
to ensure that all data referenced by types.Transaction is independent of the
data passed into the constructor.
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
* core/types: rm extranous check in test
* core/rawdb: add lightweight types for block logs
* core/rawdb,eth: use lightweight accessor for log filtering
* core/rawdb: add bench for decoding into rlpLogs
This change introduces 2 new optional methods; `enter()` and `exit()` for js tracers, and makes `step()` optiona. The two new methods are invoked when entering and exiting a call frame (but not invoked for the outermost scope, which has it's own methods). Currently these are the data fields passed to each of them:
enter: type (opcode), from, to, input, gas, value
exit: output, gasUsed, error
The PR also comes with a re-write of the callTracer. As a backup we keep the previous tracing script under the name `callTracerLegacy`. Behaviour of both tracers are equivalent for the most part, although there are some small differences (improvements), where the new tracer is more correct / has more information.
This makes several updates to support the blockupdates plugin.
I had to update several hooks that were using the wrong types, and
provide a way to get event.Feed objects into plugins without importing
event.Feed (which I did by having the plugin loader make them
available).
This change is a rewrite of the freezer code.
When writing ancient chain data to the freezer, the previous version first encoded each
individual item to a temporary buffer, then wrote the buffer. For small item sizes (for
example, in the block hash freezer table), this strategy causes a lot of system calls for
writing tiny chunks of data. It also allocated a lot of temporary []byte buffers.
In the new version, we instead encode multiple items into a re-useable batch buffer, which
is then written to the file all at once. This avoids performing a system call for every
inserted item.
To make the internal batching work, the ancient database API had to be changed. While
integrating this new API in BlockChain.InsertReceiptChain, additional optimizations were
also added there.
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>