BinaryTrie.DeleteAccount was a no-op, silently ignoring the caller's
deletion request and leaving the old BasicData and CodeHash in the trie.
The GetAccount deletion-detection branch (trie.go:219) already expected
a tombstone convention — "BasicData and CodeHash are 32-byte zero blobs
AND a non-nil 32-byte sentinel is present at a reserved offset" — but
nothing was writing that sentinel, so the check was effectively dead
code.
Implement the deletion as an InsertValuesAtStem that:
- writes a 32-byte zero blob to BasicData (offset 0)
- writes a 32-byte zero blob to CodeHash (offset 1)
- writes a 32-byte zero blob to a deletion sentinel offset in the
EIP-7864 reserved range (offset 10, promoted to the named constant
accountDeletedMarkerKey for cross-referencing with GetAccount)
This matches the bintrie's existing "write zeros to delete" convention
seen in DeleteStorage, keeps GetAccount's deletion branch consistent,
and still distinguishes "deleted" from "never existed" (the latter has
all-nil slots so the empty-account check fires first).
Storage slots and code chunks are intentionally left untouched. Wiping
storage on self-destruct is a separate concern handled at the StateDB
level — the bintrie's unified keyspace has no cheap way to enumerate
every slot of a given account, so a blanket wipe is not possible here.
Regression tests cover:
- round-trip: UpdateAccount -> GetAccount -> DeleteAccount -> GetAccount nil
- delete on missing account: no panic, subsequent read still nil
- unrelated accounts at different stems are preserved
- delete + recreate: second read sees the new values, not the old ones
- main storage slots at different stems survive DeleteAccount
This is an optimization that existed for verkle and the MPT, but that
got dropped during the rebase.
Mark the nodes that were modified as needing recomputation, and skip the
hash computation if this is not needed. Otherwise, the whole tree is
hashed, which kills performance.
GetStorage and DeleteStorage used GetBinaryTreeKey to compute the tree
key, while UpdateStorage used GetBinaryTreeKeyStorageSlot. The latter
applies storage slot remapping (header offset for slots <64, main
storage prefix for the rest), so reads and deletes were targeting
different tree locations than writes.
Replace GetBinaryTreeKey with GetBinaryTreeKeyStorageSlot in both
GetStorage and DeleteStorage to match UpdateStorage. Add a regression
test that verifies the write→read→delete→read round-trip for main
storage slots.
The `Witness` method was not implemented for the binary tree, which
caused `debug_excutionWitness` to panic. This PR fixes that.
Note that the `TransitionTrie` version isn't implemented, and that's on
purpose: more thought must be given to what should go in the global
witness.
In order to reduce the amount of code that is embedded into the keeper
binary, I am removing all the verkle code that uses go-verkle and
go-ipa. This will be followed by further PRs that are more like stubs to
replace code when the keeper build is detected.
I'm keeping the binary tree of course. This means that you will still
see `isVerkle` variables all over the codebase, but they will be renamed
when code is touched (i.e. this is not an invitation for 30+ AI slop
PRs).
---------
Co-authored-by: Gary Rong <garyrong0905@gmail.com>
This is broken off of #31730 to only focus on testing networks that
start with verkle at genesis.
The PR has seen a lot of work since its creation, and it now targets
creating and re-executing tests for a binary tree testnet without the
transition (so it starts at genesis). The transition tree has been moved
to its own package. It also replaces verkle with the binary tree for
this specific application.
---------
Co-authored-by: Gary Rong <garyrong0905@gmail.com>
Implement the binary tree as specified in [eip-7864](https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-7864).
This will gradually replace verkle trees in the codebase. This is only
running the tests and will not be executed in production, but will help
me rebase some of my work, so that it doesn't bitrot as much.
---------
Signed-off-by: Guillaume Ballet
Co-authored-by: Parithosh Jayanthi <parithosh.jayanthi@ethereum.org>
Co-authored-by: rjl493456442 <garyrong0905@gmail.com>