This adds a new subcommand 'geth prune-history' that removes the pre-merge history
on supported networks. Geth is not fully ready to work in this mode, please do not run
this command on your production node.
---------
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
This PR fixes the broken request error handling of the workload filter
tests. Until now `validateHistoryPruneErr` was invoked with `fq.Err` as
an input which was always nil and a timeout or http error was reported
as a result content mismatch.
Also, in case of `errPrunedHistory` it is wrong to return here without
setting an error because then it will look like a valid empty result and
the check will later fail. So instead `errPrunedHistory` is always
returned now (without printing an error message) and the callers of
`run` should handle this special case (typically ignore silently).
This removes the signer type-train in favor of defining a single object
that can handle all tx types. Supported types are enabled via a map.
Notably, the new signer also supports disabling legacy transactions.
When I'm running `geth import --metrics`, the metrics is different to
normal `geth --metrics`, so the grafana dashboard needs to be updated,
eg: `eth_db_chaindata_disk_read` vs `disk_read`.
So I think we should always set the name to `eth/db/chaindata` for more
convenient.
---------
Signed-off-by: jsvisa <delweng@gmail.com>
This PR implements a new version of the abigen utility (v2) which exists
along with the pre-existing v1 version.
Abigen is a utility command provided by go-ethereum that, given a
solidity contract ABI definition, will generate Go code to transact/call
the contract methods, converting the method parameters/results and
structures defined in the contract into corresponding Go types. This is
useful for preventing the need to write custom boilerplate code for
contract interactions.
Methods in the generated bindings perform encoding between Go types and
Solidity ABI-encoded packed bytecode, as well as some action (e.g.
`eth_call` or creating and submitting a transaction). This limits the
flexibility of how the generated bindings can be used, and prevents
easily adding new functionality, as it will make the generated bindings
larger for each feature added.
Abigen v2 was conceived of by the observation that the only
functionality that generated Go bindings ought to perform is conversion
between Go types and ABI-encoded packed data. Go-ethereum already
provides various APIs which in conjunction with conversion methods
generated in v2 bindings can cover all functionality currently provided
by v1, and facilitate all other previously-desired use-cases.
## Generating Bindings
To generate contract bindings using abigen v2, invoke the `abigen`
command with the `--v2` flag. The functionality of all other flags is
preserved between the v2 and v1 versions.
## What is Generated in the Bindings
The execution of `abigen --v2` generates Go code containing methods
which convert between Go types and corresponding ABI-encoded data
expected by the contract. For each input-accepting contract method and
the constructor, a "packing" method is generated in the binding which
converts from Go types to the corresponding packed solidity expected by
the contract. If a method returns output, an "unpacking" method is
generated to convert this output from ABI-encoded data to the
corresponding Go types.
For contracts which emit events, an unpacking method is defined for each
event to unpack the corresponding raw log to the Go type that it
represents.
Likewise, where custom errors are defined by contracts, an unpack method
is generated to unpack raw error data into a Go type.
## Using the Generated Bindings
For a smooth user-experience, abigen v2 comes with a number of utility
functions to be used in conjunction with the generated bindings for
performing common contract interaction use-cases. These include:
* filtering for historical logs of a given topic
* watching the chain for emission of logs with a given topic
* contract deployment methods
* Call/Transact methods
https://geth.ethereum.org will be updated to include a new tutorial page
for abigen v2 with full code examples. The page currently exists in a
PR: https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/pull/31390 .
There are also extensive examples of interactions with contract bindings
in [test
cases](cc855c7ede/accounts/abi/bind/v2/lib_test.go)
provided with this PR.
---------
Co-authored-by: Sina Mahmoodi <itz.s1na@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
this adds 2 features to improve `geth --dev` experience.
1. we don't need to use `dev_SetFeeRecipient` to set initial coinbase
address. it was a pain.
2. we don't need to unlock keystore if we don't use it. we had it
because of clique.
Fixes `evm statetest` for state test fixtures with multiple fork entries
in their `post` field (e.g.,
[chainId.json](81862e4848/GeneralStateTests/stChainId/chainId.json (L39))).
When these re-activated flags aren't exposed, `statetest` only executes
the fixture for a single fork entry instead of all of the forks as
expected.
This only affects ethereum/tests state test fixtures, not
ethereum/execution-spec-tests (EEST) state tests. EEST writes a separate
fixture/test case (i.e. a separate top-level dict entry in the .json)
for each fork configuration as apposed to combining multiple forks in
one fixture test case: New EEST state tests targeting Prague behavior
are not affected.
Fixes#31093
Here we add some API functions on the UDPv5 object for the purpose of implementing
the Portal Network JSON-RPC API in the shisui client.
---------
Signed-off-by: Chen Kai <281165273grape@gmail.com>
Here I am adding a config option and geth flag (`--history.chain`) for
configuring history pruning. There are two options available:
- `--history.chain all` is the default and will keep all history like
before.
- `--history.chain postmerge` will configure the history cutoff point to
the merge block.
The option doesn't actually do anything right now, but we need it as a
precursor for other history pruning changes.
When I press Ctrl-C during the import of multiple files, the import
process will still attempt to import the subsequent files. However, in
normal circumstances, users would expect the import to stop immediately
upon pressing Ctrl-C.
And because the current file was not finished importing, subsequent
import tasks often fail due to an `unknown ancestor` error.
---------
Signed-off-by: jsvisa <delweng@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
This ensures that if we receive a blob transaction announcement where we cannot
link the tx to the sidecar commitments, we will drop the sending peer. This check
is added in the protocol handler for the PooledTransactions message.
Tests for this have also been added in the cross-client "eth" protocol test suite.
---------
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
This is a not-particularly-important "cleanliness" PR. It removes the
last remnants of the `x/exp` package, where we used the `maps.Keys`
function.
The original returned the keys in a slice, but when it became 'native'
the signature changed to return an iterator, so the new idiom is
`slices.Collect(maps.Keys(theMap))`, unless of course the raw iterator
can be used instead.
In some cases, where we previously collect into slice and then sort, we
can now instead do `slices.SortXX` on the iterator instead, making the
code a bit more concise.
This PR might be _slighly_ less optimal, because the original `x/exp`
implementation allocated the slice at the correct size off the bat,
which I suppose the new code won't.
Putting it up for discussion.
---------
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
Fixed broken or outdated links and improved documentation formatting to
ensure consistency and correct references.
---------
Co-authored-by: Sina M <1591639+s1na@users.noreply.github.com>
Currently, when calculating block's bloom, we loop through all the
receipt logs to calculate the hash value. However, normally, after going
through applyTransaction, the receipt's bloom is already calculated
based on the receipt log, so the block's bloom can be calculated by just
ORing these receipt's blooms.
```
goos: darwin
goarch: arm64
pkg: github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/core/types
cpu: Apple M1 Pro
BenchmarkCreateBloom
BenchmarkCreateBloom/small
BenchmarkCreateBloom/small-10 810922 1481 ns/op 104 B/op 5 allocs/op
BenchmarkCreateBloom/large
BenchmarkCreateBloom/large-10 8173 143764 ns/op 9614 B/op 401 allocs/op
BenchmarkCreateBloom/small-mergebloom
BenchmarkCreateBloom/small-mergebloom-10 5178918 232.0 ns/op 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
BenchmarkCreateBloom/large-mergebloom
BenchmarkCreateBloom/large-mergebloom-10 54110 22207 ns/op 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Gary Rong <garyrong0905@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Zsolt Felfoldi <zsfelfoldi@gmail.com>
This fixes an error where executing `evm run --dump ...` omits preimages
from the dump (because the statedb used for execution is a copy of
another instance).
After recent changes in Geth (removing TD):
39638c81c5 (diff-d70a44d4b7a0e84fe9dcca25d368f626ae6c9bc0b8fe9690074ba92d298bcc0d)
Non-Geth clients are failing many devp2p tests with an error:
`peering failed: status exchange failed: wrong TD in status: have 1 want 0`
Right now only Geth is passing it - all other clients are affected by
this change. I think there should be no validation of TD when checking `Status`
message in hive tests. Now Geth has 0 (and hive tests requires 0) and
all other clients have actual TD. And on real networks there is no validation
of TD when peering
Here we add some more changes for live tracing API v1.1:
- Hook `OnSystemCallStartV2` was introduced with `VMContext` as parameter.
- Hook `OnBlockHashRead` was introduced.
- `GetCodeHash` was added to the state interface
- The new `WrapWithJournal` construction helps with tracking EVM reverts in the tracer.
---------
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
This PR changes the signature of `CalcExcessBlobGas` to take in just
the header timestamp instead of the whole object. It also adds a sanity
check for the parent->child block order to `VerifyEIP4844Header`.
A clarification was made to EIP-7691 stating that at the fork boundary
it is required to use the target blob count associated with the head
block, rather than the parent as implemented here.
See for more: https://github.com/ethereum/EIPs/pull/9249
This PR builds on #29040 and updates it to the new version of the spec.
I filled the EEST tests and they pass.
Link to spec: https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-7623
---------
Co-authored-by: Marius van der Wijden <m.vanderwijden@live.de>
Co-authored-by: lightclient <14004106+lightclient@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: lightclient <lightclient@protonmail.com>
The total difficulty is the sum of all block difficulties from genesis
to a certain block. This value was used in PoW for deciding which chain
is heavier, and thus which chain to select. Since PoS has a different
fork selection algorithm, all blocks since the merge have a difficulty
of 0, and all total difficulties are the same for the past 2 years.
Whilst the TDs are mostly useless nowadays, there was never really a
reason to mess around removing them since they are so tiny. This
reasoning changes when we go down the path of pruned chain history. In
order to reconstruct any TD, we **must** retrieve all the headers from
chain head to genesis and then iterate all the difficulties to compute
the TD.
In a world where we completely prune past chain segments (bodies,
receipts, headers), it is not possible to reconstruct the TD at all. In
a world where we still keep chain headers and prune only the rest,
reconstructing it possible as long as we process (or download) the chain
forward from genesis, but trying to snap sync the head first and
backfill later hits the same issue, the TD becomes impossible to
calculate until genesis is backfilled.
All in all, the TD is a messy out-of-state, out-of-consensus computed
field that is overall useless nowadays, but code relying on it forces
the client into certain modes of operation and prevents other modes or
other optimizations. This PR completely nukes out the TD from the node.
It doesn't compute it, it doesn't operate on it, it's as if it didn't
even exist.
Caveats:
- Whenever we have APIs that return TD (devp2p handshake, tracer, etc.)
we return a TD of 0.
- For era files, we recompute the TD during export time (fairly quick)
to retain the format content.
- It is not possible to "verify" the merge point (i.e. with TD gone, TTD
is useless). Since we're not verifying PoW any more, just blindly trust
it, not verifying but blindly trusting the many year old merge point
seems just the same trust model.
- Our tests still need to be able to generate pre and post merge blocks,
so they need a new way to split the merge without TTD. The PR introduces
a settable ttdBlock field on the consensus object which is used by tests
as the block where originally the TTD happened. This is not needed for
live nodes, we never want to generate old blocks.
- One merge transition consensus test was disabled. With a
non-operational TD, testing how the client reacts to TTD is useless, it
cannot react.
Questions:
- Should we also drop total terminal difficulty from the genesis json?
It's a number we cannot react on any more, so maybe it would be cleaner
to get rid of even more concepts.
---------
Co-authored-by: Gary Rong <garyrong0905@gmail.com>
This implements a basic mechanism to query the node's external IP using
a STUN server. There is a built-in list of public STUN servers for convenience.
The new detection mechanism must be selected explicitly using `--nat=stun`
and is not enabled by default in Geth.
Fixes#30881
---------
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
Refactoring of the `evm` command moved where some commands were valid.
One command, `--bench`, used to work in `evm statetest`. The pluming is
still in place. This PR puts the `--bench` flag in the place the trace
flags were moved, and adds tests to validate the bench flag operates in
`run` and `statetest`
---------
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
As part of trying to make the inputs and outputs of the evm subcommands
more streamlined and aligned, this PR modifies how `evm t8n` manages
output-files.
Previously, we do a kind of wonky thing where between each transaction,
we invoke a `getTracer` closure. In that closure, we create a new
output-file, a tracer, and then make the tracer stream output to the
file. We also fiddle a bit to ensure that the file becomes properly
closed.
It is a kind of hacky solution we have in place. This PR changes it, so
that from the execution-pipeline point of view, we have just a regular
tracer. No fiddling with re-setting it or closing files.
That particular tracer, however, is a bit special: it takes care of
creating new files per transaction (in the tx-start-hook) and closing
(on tx-end-hook). Also instantiating the right type of underlying
tracer, which can be a json-logger or a custom tracer.
---------
Co-authored-by: Gary Rong <garyrong0905@gmail.com>
This PR addresses issue #30768 , which highlights that running
cmd/abigen/abigen --pkg my_package example.json (erroneously omitting
the --abi flag) generates an empty binding, when it should fail
explicitly.
---------
Co-authored-by: jwasinger <j-wasinger@hotmail.com>
This pull request delivers the new version of the state history, where
the raw storage key is used instead of the hash.
Before the cancun fork, it's supported by protocol to destruct a
specific account and therefore, all the storage slot owned by it should
be wiped in the same transition.
Technically, storage wiping should be performed through storage
iteration, and only the storage key hash will be available for traversal
if the state snapshot is not available. Therefore, the storage key hash
is chosen as the identifier in the old version state history.
Fortunately, account self-destruction has been deprecated by the
protocol since the Cancun fork, and there are no empty accounts eligible
for deletion under EIP-158. Therefore, we can conclude that no storage
wiping should occur after the Cancun fork. In this case, it makes no
sense to keep using hash.
Besides, another big reason for making this change is the current format
state history is unusable if verkle is activated. Verkle tree has a
different key derivation scheme (merkle uses keccak256), the preimage of
key hash must be provided in order to make verkle rollback functional.
This pull request is a prerequisite for landing verkle.
Additionally, the raw storage key is more human-friendly for those who
want to manually check the history, even though Solidity already
performs some hashing to derive the storage location.
---
This pull request doesn't bump the database version, as I believe the
database should still be compatible if users degrade from the new geth
version to old one, the only side effect is the persistent new version
state history will be unusable.
---------
Co-authored-by: Zsolt Felfoldi <zsfelfoldi@gmail.com>
This pull request refactors the genesis setup function, the major
changes are highlighted here:
**(a) Triedb is opened in verkle mode if `EnableVerkleAtGenesis` is
configured in chainConfig or the database has been initialized previously with
`EnableVerkleAtGenesis` configured**.
A new config field `EnableVerkleAtGenesis` has been added in the
chainConfig. This field must be configured with True if Geth wants to initialize
the genesis in Verkle mode.
In the verkle devnet-7, the verkle transition is activated at genesis.
Therefore, the verkle rules should be used since the genesis. In production
networks (mainnet and public testnets), verkle activation always occurs after
the genesis block. Therefore, this flag is only made for devnet and should be
deprecated later. Besides, verkle transition at non-genesis block hasn't been
implemented yet, it should be done in the following PRs.
**(b) The genesis initialization condition has been simplified**
There is a special mode supported by the Geth is that: Geth can be
initialized with an existing chain segment, which can fasten the node sync
process by retaining the chain freezer folder.
Originally, if the triedb is regarded as uninitialized and the genesis block can
be found in the chain freezer, the genesis block along with genesis state will be
committed. This condition has been simplified to checking the presence of chain
config in key-value store. The existence of chain config can represent the genesis
has been committed.
This fixes a regression introduced recently. Without this fix, it's not
possible to use statetests without `.json` suffix. This is problematic for
goevmlab `minimizer`, which appends the suffix `.min` during processing.
This PR implements EIP-7702: "Set EOA account code".
Specification: https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-7702
> Add a new transaction type that adds a list of `[chain_id, address,
nonce, y_parity, r, s]` authorization tuples. For each tuple, write a
delegation designator `(0xef0100 ++ address)` to the signing account’s
code. All code reading operations must load the code pointed to by the
designator.
---------
Co-authored-by: Mario Vega <marioevz@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>