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addrman table entries
352d5eb2a9e89cff4a2815d94a9d81fcc20c4b2c test: getrawaddrman RPC (0xb10c)
da384a286bd84a97e7ebe7a64654c5be20ab2df1 rpc: getrawaddrman for addrman entries (0xb10c)
Pull request description:
Inspired by `getaddrmaninfo` (#27511), this adds a hidden/test-only `getrawaddrman` RPC. The RPC returns information on all addresses in the address manager new and tried tables. Addrman table contents can be used in tests and during development.
The RPC result encodes the `bucket` and `position`, the internal location of addresses in the tables, in the address object's string key. This allows users to choose to consume or to ignore the location information. If the internals of the address manager implementation change, the location encoding might change too.
```
getrawaddrman
EXPERIMENTAL warning: this call may be changed in future releases.
Returns information on all address manager entries for the new and tried tables.
Result:
{ (json object)
"table" : { (json object) buckets with addresses in the address manager table ( new, tried )
"bucket/position" : { (json object) the location in the address manager table (<bucket>/<position>)
"address" : "str", (string) The address of the node
"port" : n, (numeric) The port number of the node
"network" : "str", (string) The network (ipv4, ipv6, onion, i2p, cjdns) of the address
"services" : n, (numeric) The services offered by the node
"time" : xxx, (numeric) The UNIX epoch time when the node was last seen
"source" : "str", (string) The address that relayed the address to us
"source_network" : "str" (string) The network (ipv4, ipv6, onion, i2p, cjdns) of the source address
},
...
},
...
}
Examples:
> bitcoin-cli getrawaddrman
> curl --user myusername --data-binary '{"jsonrpc": "1.0", "id": "curltest", "method": "getrawaddrman", "params": []}' -H 'content-type: text/plain;' http://127.0.0.1:8332/
```
ACKs for top commit:
willcl-ark:
reACK 352d5eb2a9
amitiuttarwar:
reACK 352d5eb2a9e
stratospher:
reACK 352d5eb.
achow101:
ACK 352d5eb2a9e89cff4a2815d94a9d81fcc20c4b2c
Tree-SHA512: cc462666b5c709617c66b0e3e9a17c4c81e9e295f91bdd9572492d1cb6466fc9b6d48ee805ebe82f9f16010798370effe5c8f4db15065b8c7c0d8637675d615e
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Exposing address manager table entries in a hidden RPC allows to introspect
addrman tables in tests and during development.
As response JSON object the following FORMAT1 is choosen:
{
"table": {
"<bucket>/<position>": { "address": "..", "port": .., ... },
"<bucket>/<position>": { "address": "..", "port": .., ... },
"<bucket>/<position>": { "address": "..", "port": .., ... },
...
}
}
An alternative would be FORMAT2
{
"table": {
"bucket": {
"position": { "address": "..", "port": .., ... },
"position": { "address": "..", "port": .., ... },
..
},
"bucket": {
"position": { "address": "..", "port": .., ... },
..
},
}
}
FORMAT1 and FORMAT2 have different encodings for the location of the
address in the address manager. While FORMAT2 might be easier to process
for downstream tools, it also mimics internal addrman mappings, which
might change at some point. Users not interested in the address location
can ignore the location key. They don't have to adapt to a new RPC
response format, when the internal addrman layout changes. Additionally,
FORMAT1 is also slightly easier to to iterate in downstream tools. The
RPC response-building implemenation complexcity is lower with FORMAT1
as we can more easily build a "<bucket>/<position>" key than a multiple
"bucket" objects with multiple "position" objects (FORMAT2).
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Co-authored-by: Ryan Ofsky <ryan@ofsky.org>
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Co-authored-by: Sebastian Falbesoner <sebastian.falbesoner@gmail.com>
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new/tried table address count
28bac81a346c0b68273fa73af924f7096cb3f41d test: add functional test for getaddrmaninfo (stratospher)
c8eb8dae51039aa1938e7040001a149210e87275 rpc: Introduce getaddrmaninfo for count of addresses stored in new/tried table (stratospher)
Pull request description:
implements https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/26907. split off from #26988 to keep RPC, CLI discussions separate.
This PR introduces a new RPC `getaddrmaninfo`which returns the count of addresses in the new/tried table of a node's addrman broken down by network type. This would be useful for users who want to see the distribution of addresses from different networks across new/tried table in the addrman.
```jsx
$ getaddrmaninfo
Result:
{ (json object) json object with network type as keys
"network" : { (json object) The network (ipv4, ipv6, onion, i2p, cjdns)
"new" : n, (numeric) number of addresses in new table
"tried" : n, (numeric) number of addresses in tried table
"total" : n (numeric) total number of addresses in both new/tried tables from a network
},
...
}
```
### additional context from [original PR](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/26988)
1. network coverage tests were skipped because there’s a small chance that addresses from different networks could hash to the same bucket and cause count of different network addresses in the tests to fail. see https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/26988#discussion_r1137596851.
2. #26988 uses this RPC in -addrinfo CLI. Slight preference for keeping the RPC hidden since this info will mostly be useful to only super users. see https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/26988#discussion_r1173964808.
ACKs for top commit:
0xB10C:
ACK 28bac81a346c0b68273fa73af924f7096cb3f41d
willcl-ark:
reACK 28bac81a346c0b68273fa73af924f7096cb3f41d
achow101:
ACK 28bac81a346c0b68273fa73af924f7096cb3f41d
brunoerg:
reACK 28bac81a346c0b68273fa73af924f7096cb3f41d
theStack:
Code-review ACK 28bac81a346c0b68273fa73af924f7096cb3f41d
Tree-SHA512: 346390167e1ebed7ca5c79328ea452633736aff8b7feefea77460e04d4489059334ae78a3f757f32f5fb7827b309d7186bebab3c3760b3dfb016d564a647371a
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This rpc can be used when we want a node to send a message, but
cannot use a python P2P object, for example for testing of low-level
net transport behavior.
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test_importmempool_union contributed by glozow
Co-authored-by: glozow <gloriajzhao@gmail.com>
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-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
ren() { sed --regexp-extended -i "s|$1|$2|g" $(git grep -l --extended-regexp "$1"); }
# Replace FUZZ_TARGET_INIT
ren 'FUZZ_TARGET_INIT\((.+), (.+)\)' 'FUZZ_TARGET(\1, .init = \2)'
# Delete unused FUZZ_TARGET_INIT
sed -i -e '37,39d' src/test/fuzz/fuzz.h
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
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Also, fix a few bugs:
* Error: RPC command "enumeratesigners" not found in RPC_COMMANDS_SAFE_FOR_FUZZING or RPC_COMMANDS_NOT_SAFE_FOR_FUZZING. Please update test/fuzz/rpc.cpp.
* in run_once: ...format(" ".join(result.args), ... TypeError: sequence item 2: expected str instance, PosixPath found
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delete a mapDeltas entry when delta==0
67b7fecacd0489809690982c89ba2d0acdca938c [mempool] clear mapDeltas entry if prioritisetransaction sets delta to 0 (glozow)
c1061acb9d502cdf8c6996c818d9a8a281cbe40c [functional test] prioritisation is not removed during replacement and expiry (glozow)
0e5874f0b06114d9b077e0ff582915e4f83059e6 [functional test] getprioritisedtransactions RPC (glozow)
99f8046829f699ff2eace266aa8cea1d9f7cb65a [rpc] add getprioritisedtransactions (glozow)
9e9ca36c80013749faaf2aa777d52bd07d9d24ec [mempool] add GetPrioritisedTransactions (glozow)
Pull request description:
Add an RPC to get prioritised transactions (also tells you whether the tx is in mempool or not), helping users clean up `mapDeltas` manually. When `CTxMemPool::PrioritiseTransaction` sets a delta to 0, remove the entry from `mapDeltas`.
Motivation / Background
- `mapDeltas` entries are never removed from mapDeltas except when the tx is mined in a block or conflicted.
- Mostly it is a feature to allow `prioritisetransaction` for a tx that isn't in the mempool {yet, anymore}. A user can may resbumit a tx and it retains its priority, or mark a tx as "definitely accept" before it is seen.
- Since #8448, `mapDeltas` is persisted to mempool.dat and loaded on restart. This is also good, otherwise we lose prioritisation on restart.
- Note the removal due to block/conflict is only done when `removeForBlock` is called, i.e. when the block is received. If you load a mempool.dat containing `mapDeltas` with transactions that were mined already (e.g. the file was saved prior to the last few blocks), you don't delete them.
- Related: #4818 and #6464.
- There is no way to query the node for not-in-mempool `mapDeltas`. If you add a priority and forget what the value was, the only way to get that information is to inspect mempool.dat.
- Calling `prioritisetransaction` with an inverse value does not remove it from `mapDeltas`, it just sets the value to 0. It disappears on a restart (`LoadMempool` checks if delta is 0), but that might not happen for a while.
Added together, if a user calls `prioritisetransaction` very regularly and not all those transactions get mined/conflicted, `mapDeltas` might keep lots of entries of delta=0 around. A user should clean up the not-in-mempool prioritisations, but that's currently difficult without keeping track of what those txids/amounts are.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK 67b7fecacd0489809690982c89ba2d0acdca938c
theStack:
Code-review ACK 67b7fecacd0489809690982c89ba2d0acdca938c
instagibbs:
code review ACK 67b7fecacd0489809690982c89ba2d0acdca938c
ajtowns:
ACK 67b7fecacd0489809690982c89ba2d0acdca938c code review only, some nits
Tree-SHA512: 9df48b622ef27f33db1a2748f682bb3f16abe8172fcb7ac3c1a3e1654121ffb9b31aeaad5570c4162261f7e2ff5b5912ddc61a1b8beac0e9f346a86f5952260a
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1bce12acd3e271a7c88d9400b4e3a5645bc8a911 test: add test for `descriptorprocesspsbt` RPC (ishaanam)
fb2a3a70e860aa87fb7a21f6554ed9f3ce901e2d rpc: add descriptorprocesspsbt rpc (ishaanam)
Pull request description:
This PR implements an RPC called `descriptorprocesspsbt`. This RPC is based off of `walletprocesspsbt`, but instead of interacting with the wallet to update, sign and finalize a psbt, it instead accepts an array of output descriptors and uses that information along with information from the mempool, txindex, and the utxo set to do so. `utxoupdatepsbt` also updates a psbt in this manner, but doesn't sign or finalize it. Because of this overlap, a helper function that is added in this PR is called by both `utxoupdatepsbt` and `descriptorprocesspsbt`. Whether or not the helper function signs a psbt is dictated by if the HidingSigningProvider passed to it contains any private information. There is also a test added in this PR for this new RPC that uses p2wsh, p2wpkh, and legacy outputs.
Edit: see https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/25796#issuecomment-1228830963
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
re-ACK 1bce12acd3e271a7c88d9400b4e3a5645bc8a911
instagibbs:
reACK https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/25796/commits/1bce12acd3e271a7c88d9400b4e3a5645bc8a911
Tree-SHA512: e1d0334739943e71f2ee68b4db7637ebe725da62e7aa4be071f71c7196d2a5970a31ece96d91e372d34454cde8509e95ab0eebd2c8edb94f7d5a781a84f8fc5d
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This allows the user to see prioritisation for not-in-mempool
transactions.
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-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
sed --regexp-extended -i 's/find_value\(([^ ,]+), /\1.find_value(/g' $(git grep -l find_value)
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
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This commit effectively moves the definition of these constants
out of the chainparamsbase to their own file.
Using the ChainType enums provides better type safety compared to
passing around strings.
The commit is part of an ongoing effort to decouple the libbitcoinkernel
library from the ArgsManager and other functionality that should not be
part of the kernel library.
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This RPC can be the Updater, Signer, and optionally the Input
Finalizer for a psbt, and has no interaction with the Bitcoin
Core wallet.
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-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
./contrib/devtools/copyright_header.py update ./
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
Commits of previous years:
- 2021: f47dda2c58b5d8d623e0e7ff4e74bc352dfa83d7
- 2020: fa0074e2d82928016a43ca408717154a1c70a4db
- 2019: aaaaad6ac95b402fe18d019d67897ced6b316ee0
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It could be unsafe/confusing to create an actual mainnet interface while
package relay doesn't exist. However, a regtest-only interface allows
wallet/application devs to test current package policies.
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We add an RPC to fetch the mempool transactions spending given outpoints.
Without this RPC, application developers would need to first call
`getrawmempool` which returns a long list of `txid`, then fetch each of
these txs individually to check whether they spend the given outpoint(s).
This RPC can later be enriched to also find confirmed transactions instead
of being restricted to mempool transactions.
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a3809228917b8f750090c8bfec8e283391dbb524 Release notes for getdeploymentinfo rpc (Anthony Towns)
240cad09baefcf363cce36a4b2795122adfce27f rpc: getdeploymentinfo: include signalling info (Anthony Towns)
376c0c6dae2bebbb3e1352377e71fb1996d09f64 rpc: getdeploymentinfo: include block hash/height (Anthony Towns)
a7469bcd35692d56f57e91b3f21d30855bdf6531 rpc: getdeploymentinfo: change stats to always refer to current period (Anthony Towns)
7f15c1841b98de6931a7ac68e16635a05d3e96cf rpc: getdeploymentinfo: allow specifying a blockhash other than tip (Anthony Towns)
fd826130a0a4e67fdc26f8064f4ecb4ff79b3333 rpc: move softfork info from getblockchaininfo to getdeploymentinfo (Anthony Towns)
Pull request description:
The aim of this PR is to improve the ability to monitor soft fork status. It first moves the softfork section from getblockchaininfo into a new RPC named getdeploymentinfo, which is then also able to query the status of forks at an arbitrary block rather than only at the tip. In addition, bip9 status is changed to indicate the status of the given block, rather than just for the next block, and an additional field is included to indicate whether each block in the signalling period signaled.
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review and lightly tested ACK a3809228917b8f750090c8bfec8e283391dbb524
Sjors:
tACK a3809228917b8f750090c8bfec8e283391dbb524
fjahr:
tACK a3809228917b8f750090c8bfec8e283391dbb524
Tree-SHA512: 7417d733b47629f229c5128586569909250481a3e94356c52fe67a03fd42cd81745246e384b98c4115fb61587714c879e4bc3e5f5c74407d9f8f6773472a33cb
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This switches .read() and .write() to take spans of bytes.
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dce8c4c38111556ca480aa0e63c46b71f66b508f rpc: getblockfrompeer (Sjors Provoost)
b884ababc29ce963826d8a4327ed6a5e629ff175 rpc: move Ensure* helpers to server_util.h (Sjors Provoost)
Pull request description:
This adds an RPC method to fetch a block directly from a peer. This can used to fetch stale blocks with lower proof of work that are normally ignored by the node (`headers-only` in `getchaintips`).
Usage:
```
bitcoin-cli getblockfrompeer HASH peer_n
```
Closes #20155
Limitations:
* you have to specify which peer to fetch the block from
* the node must already have the header
ACKs for top commit:
jnewbery:
ACK dce8c4c38111556ca480aa0e63c46b71f66b508f
fjahr:
re-ACK dce8c4c38111556ca480aa0e63c46b71f66b508f
Tree-SHA512: 843ba2b7a308f640770d624d0aa3265fdc5c6ea48e8db32269b96a082b7420f7953d1d8d1ef2e6529392c7172dded9d15639fbc9c24e7bfa5cfb79e13a5498c8
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Co-authored-by: John Newbery <john@johnnewbery.com>
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Blindly chose a cap of 10000 iterations for every loop, except for
the two in script_ops.cpp and scriptnum_ops.cpp which appeared to
(sometimes) be deserializing individual bytes; capped those to one
million to ensure that sometimes we try working with massive scripts.
There was also one fuzzer-controlled loop in timedata.cpp which was
already capped, so I left that alone.
git grep 'while (fuzz' should now run clean except for timedata.cpp
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conditionally available RPC commands (such as wallet commands) without the fragility of #ifdef forests
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of fuzzed RPC commands.
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