lbcd/blockchain/blockindex.go

237 lines
8 KiB
Go

// Copyright (c) 2015-2017 The btcsuite developers
// Use of this source code is governed by an ISC
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package blockchain
import (
"math/big"
"sort"
"sync"
"time"
"github.com/btcsuite/btcd/chaincfg"
"github.com/btcsuite/btcd/chaincfg/chainhash"
"github.com/btcsuite/btcd/database"
"github.com/btcsuite/btcd/wire"
)
// blockNode represents a block within the block chain and is primarily used to
// aid in selecting the best chain to be the main chain. The main chain is
// stored into the block database.
type blockNode struct {
// NOTE: Additions, deletions, or modifications to the order of the
// definitions in this struct should not be changed without considering
// how it affects alignment on 64-bit platforms. The current order is
// specifically crafted to result in minimal padding. There will be
// hundreds of thousands of these in memory, so a few extra bytes of
// padding adds up.
// parent is the parent block for this node.
parent *blockNode
// hash is the double sha 256 of the block.
hash chainhash.Hash
// workSum is the total amount of work in the chain up to and including
// this node.
workSum *big.Int
// height is the position in the block chain.
height int32
// Some fields from block headers to aid in best chain selection and
// reconstructing headers from memory. These must be treated as
// immutable and are intentionally ordered to avoid padding on 64-bit
// platforms.
version int32
bits uint32
nonce uint32
timestamp int64
merkleRoot chainhash.Hash
}
// initBlockNode initializes a block node from the given header and height. The
// node is completely disconnected from the chain and the workSum value is just
// the work for the passed block. The work sum must be updated accordingly when
// the node is inserted into a chain.
//
// This function is NOT safe for concurrent access. It must only be called when
// initially creating a node.
func initBlockNode(node *blockNode, blockHeader *wire.BlockHeader, height int32) {
*node = blockNode{
hash: blockHeader.BlockHash(),
workSum: CalcWork(blockHeader.Bits),
height: height,
version: blockHeader.Version,
bits: blockHeader.Bits,
nonce: blockHeader.Nonce,
timestamp: blockHeader.Timestamp.Unix(),
merkleRoot: blockHeader.MerkleRoot,
}
}
// newBlockNode returns a new block node for the given block header. It is
// completely disconnected from the chain and the workSum value is just the work
// for the passed block. The work sum must be updated accordingly when the node
// is inserted into a chain.
func newBlockNode(blockHeader *wire.BlockHeader, height int32) *blockNode {
var node blockNode
initBlockNode(&node, blockHeader, height)
return &node
}
// Header constructs a block header from the node and returns it.
//
// This function is safe for concurrent access.
func (node *blockNode) Header() wire.BlockHeader {
// No lock is needed because all accessed fields are immutable.
prevHash := zeroHash
if node.parent != nil {
prevHash = &node.parent.hash
}
return wire.BlockHeader{
Version: node.version,
PrevBlock: *prevHash,
MerkleRoot: node.merkleRoot,
Timestamp: time.Unix(node.timestamp, 0),
Bits: node.bits,
Nonce: node.nonce,
}
}
// Ancestor returns the ancestor block node at the provided height by following
// the chain backwards from this node. The returned block will be nil when a
// height is requested that is after the height of the passed node or is less
// than zero.
//
// This function is safe for concurrent access.
func (node *blockNode) Ancestor(height int32) *blockNode {
if height < 0 || height > node.height {
return nil
}
n := node
for ; n != nil && n.height != height; n = n.parent {
// Intentionally left blank
}
return n
}
// RelativeAncestor returns the ancestor block node a relative 'distance' blocks
// before this node. This is equivalent to calling Ancestor with the node's
// height minus provided distance.
//
// This function is safe for concurrent access.
func (node *blockNode) RelativeAncestor(distance int32) *blockNode {
return node.Ancestor(node.height - distance)
}
// CalcPastMedianTime calculates the median time of the previous few blocks
// prior to, and including, the block node.
//
// This function is safe for concurrent access.
func (node *blockNode) CalcPastMedianTime() time.Time {
// Create a slice of the previous few block timestamps used to calculate
// the median per the number defined by the constant medianTimeBlocks.
timestamps := make([]int64, medianTimeBlocks)
numNodes := 0
iterNode := node
for i := 0; i < medianTimeBlocks && iterNode != nil; i++ {
timestamps[i] = iterNode.timestamp
numNodes++
iterNode = iterNode.parent
}
// Prune the slice to the actual number of available timestamps which
// will be fewer than desired near the beginning of the block chain
// and sort them.
timestamps = timestamps[:numNodes]
sort.Sort(timeSorter(timestamps))
// NOTE: The consensus rules incorrectly calculate the median for even
// numbers of blocks. A true median averages the middle two elements
// for a set with an even number of elements in it. Since the constant
// for the previous number of blocks to be used is odd, this is only an
// issue for a few blocks near the beginning of the chain. I suspect
// this is an optimization even though the result is slightly wrong for
// a few of the first blocks since after the first few blocks, there
// will always be an odd number of blocks in the set per the constant.
//
// This code follows suit to ensure the same rules are used, however, be
// aware that should the medianTimeBlocks constant ever be changed to an
// even number, this code will be wrong.
medianTimestamp := timestamps[numNodes/2]
return time.Unix(medianTimestamp, 0)
}
// blockIndex provides facilities for keeping track of an in-memory index of the
// block chain. Although the name block chain suggests a single chain of
// blocks, it is actually a tree-shaped structure where any node can have
// multiple children. However, there can only be one active branch which does
// indeed form a chain from the tip all the way back to the genesis block.
type blockIndex struct {
// The following fields are set when the instance is created and can't
// be changed afterwards, so there is no need to protect them with a
// separate mutex.
db database.DB
chainParams *chaincfg.Params
sync.RWMutex
index map[chainhash.Hash]*blockNode
}
// newBlockIndex returns a new empty instance of a block index. The index will
// be dynamically populated as block nodes are loaded from the database and
// manually added.
func newBlockIndex(db database.DB, chainParams *chaincfg.Params) *blockIndex {
return &blockIndex{
db: db,
chainParams: chainParams,
index: make(map[chainhash.Hash]*blockNode),
}
}
// HaveBlock returns whether or not the block index contains the provided hash.
//
// This function is safe for concurrent access.
func (bi *blockIndex) HaveBlock(hash *chainhash.Hash) bool {
bi.RLock()
_, hasBlock := bi.index[*hash]
bi.RUnlock()
return hasBlock
}
// LookupNode returns the block node identified by the provided hash. It will
// return nil if there is no entry for the hash.
//
// This function is safe for concurrent access.
func (bi *blockIndex) LookupNode(hash *chainhash.Hash) *blockNode {
bi.RLock()
node := bi.index[*hash]
bi.RUnlock()
return node
}
// AddNode adds the provided node to the block index. Duplicate entries are not
// checked so it is up to caller to avoid adding them.
//
// This function is safe for concurrent access.
func (bi *blockIndex) AddNode(node *blockNode) {
bi.Lock()
bi.index[node.hash] = node
bi.Unlock()
}
// RemoveNode removes the provided node from the block index. There is no check
// whether another node in the index depends on this one, so it is up to caller
// to avoid that situation.
//
// This function is safe for concurrent access.
func (bi *blockIndex) RemoveNode(node *blockNode) {
bi.Lock()
delete(bi.index, node.hash)
bi.Unlock()
}