Fixes an issue where querying logs for block ranges starting from 0 would fail with an irrelevant
error on a pruned node. Now the correct "history is pruned" error will be returned.
This situation was failing quietly for me recently when I had a partial
data corruption issue. Changing the log level to Error would increase
visibility for me.
This PR changes the database access of the base part of filter rows that
are stored in groups of 32 adjacent maps for improved database storage
size and data access efficiency.
Before this grouped storage was introduced, filter rows were not cached
because the access pattern of either the index rendering or the search
does not really benefit from caching. Also no mutex was necessary for
filter row access. Storing adjacent rows in groups complicated the
situation as a search typically required reading all or most of adjacent
rows of a group, so in order to implement the single row read operation
without having to read the entire group up to 32 times, a cache for the
base row groups was added. This also introduced data race issues for
concurrenct read/write in the same group which was avoided by locking
the `indexLock` mutex. Unfortunately this also led to slowed down or
temporarily blocked search operations when indexing was in progress.
This PR returns to the original concept of uncached, no-mutex filter map
access by increasing read efficiency in a better way; similiarly to
write operations that already operate on groups of filter maps, now
`getFilterMapRow` is also replaced by `getFilterMapRows` that accepts a
single `rowIndex` and a list of `mapIndices`. It slightly complicates
`singleMatcherInstance.getMatchesForLayer` which now has to collect
groups of map indices accessed in the same row, but in exchange it
guarantees maximum read efficiency while avoiding read/write mutex
interference.
Note: a follow-up refactoring is WIP that further changes the database
access scheme by prodiving an immutable index view to the matcher, makes
the whole indexer more straightforward with no callbacks, and entirely
removes the concept of matcher syncing with `validBlocks` and the
resulting multiple retry logic in `eth/filters/filter.go`. This might
take a bit longer to finish though and in the meantime this change could
hopefully already solve the blocked request issues.
This implements a backing store for chain history based on era1 files.
The new store is integrated with the freezer. Queries for blocks and receipts
below the current freezer tail are handled by the era store.
---------
Co-authored-by: Gary Rong <garyrong0905@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
Co-authored-by: lightclient <lightclient@protonmail.com>
This changes the API backend to return null for not-found blocks. This behavior
is required by the RPC When `BlockByNumberOrHash` always returned an error
for this case ever since being added in https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/pull/19491.
The backend method has a couple of call sites, and all of them handle a `nil`
block result because `BlockByNumber` returns `nil` for not-found.
The only case where this makes a real difference is for `eth_getBlockReceipts`,
which was changed in #31361 to actually forward the error from `BlockByNumberOrHash`
to the caller.
Release artefact building has been migrated to another system (Gitea),
so we can finally stop using Travis CI. However, in order to have a
fail-safe for the release, I'm leaving the config in and it will still
trigger builds on Travis for tagged releases. That way, if our new
system fails to work for the next release, we will still have the option
of using Travis.
This PR modifies the disclaimer/banner that is printed when starting up
Geth in dev mode:
* if the client is spun up in ephemeral dev mode with a keystore
override, the address of the first (prefunded) account is printed.
* if the client is spun up in ephemeral mode without a keystore
override, the genesis allocation contains a single static prefunded EOA
account. It's address and private key are logged.
* the banner is printed at the end of client initialization to make it
more prominent. Previously, it was logged towards the beginning of
client initialization and subsequent logging from startup filled the
terminal, pushing it out of view of the user.
Other change is that we now use a static prefunded dev account instead
of generating a random one when instantiating a new dev mode chain.
This is an example of what the banner looks like:
```
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] You are running Geth in --dev mode. Please note the following:
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475]
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] 1. This mode is only intended for fast, iterative development without assumptions on
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] security or persistence.
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] 2. The database is created in memory unless specified otherwise. Therefore, shutting down
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] your computer or losing power will wipe your entire block data and chain state for
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] your dev environment.
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] 3. A random, pre-allocated developer account will be available and unlocked as
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] eth.coinbase, which can be used for testing. The random dev account is temporary,
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] stored on a ramdisk, and will be lost if your machine is restarted.
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] 4. Mining is enabled by default. However, the client will only seal blocks if transactions
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] are pending in the mempool. The miner's minimum accepted gas price is 1.
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] 5. Networking is disabled; there is no listen-address, the maximum number of peers is set
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] to 0, and discovery is disabled.
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475]
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475]
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] Running in ephemeral mode. The following account has been prefunded in the genesis:
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475]
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] Account
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] ------------------
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] 0x71562b71999873db5b286df957af199ec94617f7 (10^49 ETH)
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475]
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] Private Key
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] ------------------
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475] 0xb71c71a67e1177ad4e901695e1b4b9ee17ae16c6668d313eac2f96dbcda3f291
WARN [05-28|23:05:16.475]
```
closes#31796
---------
Co-authored-by: jwasinger <j-wasinger@hotmail.com>
This pull request introduces a mechanism to improve state lookup
efficiency in pathdb by maintaining a lookup structure that eliminates
unnecessary iteration over diff layers.
The core idea is to track a mutation history for each dirty state entry
residing in the diff layers. This history records the state roots of all layers
in which the entry was modified, sorted from oldest to newest.
During state lookup, this mutation history is queried to find the most
recent layer whose state root either matches the target root or is a
descendant of it. This allows us to quickly identify the layer containing
the relevant data, avoiding the need to iterate through all diff layers from
top to bottom.
Besides, the overhead for state lookup is constant, no matter how many
diff layers are retained in the pathdb, which unlocks the potential to hold
more diff layers.
Of course, maintaining this lookup structure introduces some overhead.
For each state transition, we need to:
(a) update the mutation records for the modified state entries, and
(b) remove stale mutation records associated with outdated layers.
On our benchmark machine, it will introduce around 1ms overhead which is
acceptable.
This adds support for the Github actions environment in the build tool.
Information from environment variables, like the build number and
branch/tag name, is used to make decisions about uploads and package
filenames.
Updated reference URL in accumulator.go comment to point to the correct
location of the historical-hashes-accumulator documentation in the
Ethereum portal network specs
We deleted outdated pectra-devnet-6@v1.0.0 release by mistake, so this
PR updates the referenced EEST release to the correct latest version.
@s1na I removed the TODO comment because I think this solves it, unless
it meant something else.
---------
Co-authored-by: MariusVanDerWijden <m.vanderwijden@live.de>
This PR introduces a new native tracer for AA bundlers. Bundlers participating in the alternative
mempool will need to validate userops. This tracer will return sufficient information for them to
decide whether griefing is possible. Resolves#30546
---------
Co-authored-by: Sina M <1591639+s1na@users.noreply.github.com>
Some tests involving transactions near the txMaxSize limit were flaky.
This was due to ECDSA signatures occasionally having leading zeros,
which are omitted during RLP encoding — making the final transaction
size 1 byte smaller than expected.
To address this, a new helper function pricedDataTransactionWithFixedSignature
was added. It ensures both r and s are exactly 32 bytes (i.e., no leading zeros),
producing transactions with deterministic size.
I've updated the broken link to point to the current official Ethereum
JSON-RPC API documentation at
https://ethereum.org/en/developers/docs/apis/json-rpc/. This is the
correct and up-to-date location for the Ethereum Execution Layer APIs
documentation. The link should now work properly.
I added a test for BlockRangeUpdate in #29158 but forgot to enable it.
Here I'm adding two more tests for it. Also applied a small refactoring
to combine calls to `dial()` and `peer()` into a single function, since
these two calls are duplicated in each test.
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.
---------
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 adds a geth subcommand for downloading era1 files and placing them into
the correct location. The tool can be used even while geth is already running
on the datadir. Downloads are checked against a hard-coded list of checksums
for mainnet and sepolia.
```
./geth download-era --server $SERVER --block 333333
./geth download-era --server $SERVER --block 333333-444444
./geth download-era --server $SERVER --epoch 0-10
./geth download-era --server $SERVER --all
```
The implementation reuses the file downloader we already had for
fetching build tools. I've done some refactoring on it to make sure it
can support the new use case, and there are some changes to the build
here as well.
Adding values to the witness introduces a new class of issues for
computing gas: if there is not enough gas to cover adding an item to the
witness, then the item should not be added to the witness.
The problem happens when several items are added together, and that
process runs out of gas. The witness gas computation needs a way to
signal that not enough gas was provided. These values can not be
hardcoded, however, as they are context dependent, i.e. two calls to the
same function with the same parameters can give two different results.
The approach is to return both the gas that was actually consumed, and
the gas that was necessary. If the values don't match, then a witness
update OOG'd. The caller should then charge the `consumed` value
(remaining gas will be 0) and error out.
Why not return a boolean instead of the wanted value? Because when
several items are touched, we want to distinguish which item lacked gas.
---------
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Ballet <3272758+gballet@users.noreply.github.com>