Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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This test can now be run even with the Bitcoin Core wallet disabled.
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-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
git grep -l "self.setup_clean_chain = False" test/functional/*.py | xargs sed -i "/self.setup_clean_chain = False/d";
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
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Ensure we will disconnect if the peer sends us a transaction & we don't
announce transactions to the peer.
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This is in preparation for use in the next commit.
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blocktool helper.
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-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
./contrib/devtools/copyright_header.py update ./
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confusing Test_Node.p2p property
10d61505fe77880d6989115defa5e08417f3de2d [test] remove confusing p2p property (gzhao408)
549d30faf04612d9589c81edf9770c99e3221885 scripted-diff: replace p2p with p2ps[0] in p2p_invalid_tx (gzhao408)
7a0de46aeafb351cffa3410e1aae9809fd4698ad [doc] sample code for test framework p2p objects (gzhao408)
784f757994c1306bb6584b14c0c78617d6248432 [refactor] clarify tests by referencing p2p objects directly (gzhao408)
Pull request description:
The `TestNode` has a `p2p` property which is an alias for `p2ps[0]`.
I think this should be removed because it can be confusing and misleading (to both the test writer and reviewer), especially if a TestNode has multiple p2ps connected (which is the case for many tests).
Another example is when a test has multiple subtests that connect 1 p2p and use the `p2p` property to reference it. If the subtests don't completely clean up after themselves, the subtests may affect one another.
The best way to refer to a connected p2p is use the object returned by `add_p2p_connection` like this:
```py
p2p_conn = node.add_p2p_connection(P2PInterface())
```
A good example is [p2p_invalid_locator.py](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/master/test/functional/p2p_invalid_locator.py), which cleans up after itself (waits in both `wait_for_disconnect` and in `disconnect_p2ps`) but wouldn't need so much complexity if it just referenced the connections directly.
If there is only one connected, it's not really that tedious to just use `node.p2ps[0]` instead of `node.p2p` (and it can always be aliased inside the test itself).
ACKs for top commit:
robot-dreams:
utACK 10d61505fe77880d6989115defa5e08417f3de2d
jnewbery:
utACK 10d61505fe77880d6989115defa5e08417f3de2d
guggero:
Concept ACK 10d61505.
Tree-SHA512: 5965548929794ec660dae03467640cb2156d7d826cefd26d3a126472cbc2494b855c1d26bbb7b412281fbdc92b9798b9765a85c27bc1a97f7798f27f64db6f13
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As discussed in https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/19943, this
test may be a bit misleading to newcomers.
We underscore the fact that our peer needs to run a modified version of
Bitcoin Core to actually relay transactions to a `blocksonly` node and
benefit from the `whitelistforcerelay` parameter.
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Use object returned from add_p2p_connection to refer to
p2ps. Add a test class attribute if it needs to be used across
many methods. Don't use the p2p property.
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-BEGIN VERIFY SCRIPT-
sed -i 's/\.mininode/\.p2p/g' $(git grep -l "mininode")
git mv test/functional/test_framework/mininode.py test/functional/test_framework/p2p.py
-END VERIFY SCRIPT-
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If we set fRelay=false in our VERSION message, and a peer sends an INV or TX
message anyway, disconnect. Since we use fRelay=false to minimize bandwidth,
we should not tolerate remaining connected to a peer violating the protocol.
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