The block index now tracks the set of dirty block nodes with status
changes that haven't been persisted and flushes the changes to the DB
at the appropriate times.
Currently only the blocks in the active chain are loaded into the
block index on initialization. This instead iterates over the entire
block index bucket in LevelDB and loads all nodes.
The bucket contains block headers keyed by the block height encoded as
big-endian concatenated with the block hash. This allows block headers
to be fetched from the DB in height order with a cursor.
These method allows safe concurrent access to reading and modifying
block node statuses. When block statuses get persisted in a later
change, the setter methods can be used to mark block nodes as dirty.
Each node in the block index records some flags about its validation
state. This is just stored in memory for now, but can save effort if
attempting to reconnect a block that failed validation or was
disconnected.
This was only used to test block proposals, which has been changed to
instead use CheckConnectBlockTemplate. The flag complicated the
implementation of some chain processing routines and would be
difficult to implement with headers-first syncing.
This renames CheckConnectBlock to CheckConnectBlockTemplate and
modifies it to be easily consumable by the getblocktemplate RPC
handler. Performs full block validation now instead of partial
validation.
This propagates the interrupt channel through to blockchain and the
indexers so that it is possible to interrupt long-running operations
such as catching up indexes.
This refactors the code that locates blocks (inventory discovery) out of
server and into blockchain where it can make use of the new much more
efficient chain view and more easily be tested. As an aside, it really
belongs in blockchain anyways since it's purely dealing with the block
index and best chain.
Since the majority of the network has moved to header-based semantics,
this also provides an additional optimization to allow headers to be
located directly versus needing to first discover the hashes and then
fetch the headers.
The new functions are named LocateBlocks and LocateHeaders. The former
returns a slice of located hashes and the latter returns a slice of
located headers.
Finally, it also updates the RPC server getheaders call and related
plumbing to use the new LocateHeaders function.
A comprehensive suite of tests is provided to ensure both functions
behave correctly for both correct and incorrect block locators.