This changes the p2p protocol handlers to delay message decoding. It's
the first part of a larger change that will delay decoding all the way
through message processing. For responses, we delay the decoding until
it is confirmed that the response matches an active request and does not
exceed its limits.
In order to make this work, all messages have been changed to use
rlp.RawList instead of a slice of the decoded item type. For block
bodies specifically, the decoding has been delayed all the way until
after verification of the response hash.
The role of p2p/tracker.Tracker changes significantly in this PR. The
Tracker's original purpose was to maintain metrics about requests and
responses in the peer-to-peer protocols. Each protocol maintained a
single global Tracker instance. As of this change, the Tracker is now
always active (regardless of metrics collection), and there is a
separate instance of it for each peer. Whenever a response arrives, it
is first verified that a request exists for it in the tracker. The
tracker is also the place where limits are kept.
The upstream libray has removed the assembly-based implementation of
keccak. We need to maintain our own library to avoid a peformance
regression.
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Co-authored-by: lightclient <lightclient@protonmail.com>
Drop peer if sending the same transaction multiple times in a single message.
Fixes https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/issues/32724
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Signed-off-by: Csaba Kiraly <csaba.kiraly@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Gary Rong <garyrong0905@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Csaba Kiraly <csaba.kiraly@gmail.com>
Remove redundant duplicate test vectors. The two entries were identical
and back-to-back, providing no additional coverage while adding noise.
Keeping a single instance maintains test intent and clarity without
altering behavior.
before:
go test -run=^$ -bench=. ./eth/... 827.57s user 23.80s system 361% cpu
3:55.49 total
after:
go test -run=^$ -bench=. ./eth/... 281.62s user 13.62s system 245% cpu
2:00.49 total
The main purpose of this change is to enforce the version setting when
constructing the blobSidecar, avoiding creating sidecar with wrong/default
version tag.
In this pull request, the original `CacheConfig` has been renamed to `BlockChainConfig`.
Over time, more fields have been added to `CacheConfig` to support
blockchain configuration. Such as `ChainHistoryMode`, which clearly extends
beyond just caching concerns.
Additionally, adding new parameters to the blockchain constructor has
become increasingly complicated, since it’s initialized across multiple
places in the codebase. A natural solution is to consolidate these arguments
into a dedicated configuration struct.
As a result, the existing `CacheConfig` has been redefined as `BlockChainConfig`.
Some parameters, such as `VmConfig`, `TxLookupLimit`, and `ChainOverrides`
have been moved into `BlockChainConfig`. Besides, a few fields in `BlockChainConfig`
were renamed, specifically:
- `TrieCleanNoPrefetch` -> `NoPrefetch`
- `TrieDirtyDisabled` -> `ArchiveMode`
Notably, this change won't affect the command line flags or the toml
configuration file. It's just an internal refactoring and fully backward-compatible.
---------
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
This PR implements eth/69. This protocol version drops the bloom filter
from receipts messages, reducing the amount of data needed for a sync
by ~530GB (2.3B txs * 256 byte) uncompressed. Compressed this will
be reduced to ~100GB
The new version also changes the Status message and introduces the
BlockRangeUpdate message to relay information about the available history
range.
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Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
In this pull request, snapshot generation in pathdb has been ported from
the legacy state snapshot implementation. Additionally, when running in
path mode, legacy state snapshot data is now managed by the pathdb
based snapshot logic.
Note: Existing snapshot data will be re-generated, regardless of whether
it was previously fully constructed.
This pull request introduces two constraints in the blobPool:
(a) If the sender has a pending authorization or delegation, only one
in-flight
executable transaction can be cached.
(b) If the authority address in a SetCode transaction is already
reserved by
the blobPool, the transaction will be rejected.
These constraints mitigate an attack where an attacker spams the pool
with
numerous blob transactions, evicts other transactions, and then cancels
all
pending blob transactions by draining the sender’s funds if they have a
delegation.
Note, because there is no exclusive lock held between different subpools
when processing transactions, it's totally possible the SetCode
transaction
and blob transactions with conflict sender and authorities are accepted
simultaneously. I think it's acceptable as it's very hard to be
exploited.
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Co-authored-by: lightclient <lightclient@protonmail.com>
This is an alternative to #31309
With eth/68, transaction announcement must have transaction type and
size. So in announceTransactions, we need to query the transaction from
transaction pool with its hash. This creates overhead in case of blob
transaction which needs to load data from billy and RLP decode. This
commit creates a lightweight lookup from transaction hash to transaction
size and a function GetMetadata to query transaction type and
transaction size given the transaction hash.
---------
Co-authored-by: Gary Rong <garyrong0905@gmail.com>
Currently, when answering GetPooledTransaction request, txpool.Get() is
used. When the requested hash is blob transaction, blobpool.Get() is
called. This function loads the RLP-encoded transaction from limbo then
decodes and returns. Later, in answerGetPooledTransactions, we need to
RLP encode again. This decode then encode is wasteful. This commit adds
GetRLP to transaction pool interface so that answerGetPooledTransactions
can use the RLP-encoded from limbo directly.
---------
Co-authored-by: Gary Rong <garyrong0905@gmail.com>
This removes the method `TestingTTDBlock` introduced by #30744. It was
added to make the beacon consensus engine aware of the merge block in
tests without relying on the total difficulty. However, tracking the
merge block this way is very annoying. We usually configure forks in the
`ChainConfig`, but the method is on the consensus engine, which isn't
always created in the same place. By sidestepping the `ChainConfig` we
don't get the usual fork-order checking, so it's possible to enable the
merge before the London fork, for example. This in turn can lead to very
hard-to-debug outputs and validation errors.
So here I'm changing the consensus engine to check the
`MergeNetsplitBlock` instead. Alternatively, we assume a network is
merged if it has a `TerminalTotalDifficulty` of zero, which is a very
common configuration in tests.