lbcd/peer.go
Owain G. Ainsworth 2231456c23 Make it possible to get a notification when a message has been sent.
If a channel is passed in then true will be sent on the provided channel
after the message has successfully sent.
2013-10-17 17:06:41 +01:00

1302 lines
39 KiB
Go

// Copyright (c) 2013 Conformal Systems LLC.
// Use of this source code is governed by an ISC
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package main
import (
"bytes"
"container/list"
"fmt"
"github.com/conformal/btcchain"
"github.com/conformal/btcdb"
"github.com/conformal/btcutil"
"github.com/conformal/btcwire"
"github.com/conformal/go-socks"
"github.com/davecgh/go-spew/spew"
"net"
"strconv"
"sync"
"sync/atomic"
"time"
)
const (
// outputBufferSize is the number of elements the output channels use.
outputBufferSize = 50
// invTrickleSize is the maximum amount of inventory to send in a single
// message when trickling inventory to remote peers.
maxInvTrickleSize = 1000
// maxKnownInventory is the maximum number of items to keep in the known
// inventory cache.
maxKnownInventory = 20000
)
// userAgent is the user agent string used to identify ourselves to other
// bitcoin peers.
var userAgent = fmt.Sprintf("/btcd:%d.%d.%d/", appMajor, appMinor, appPatch)
// zeroHash is the zero value hash (all zeros). It is defined as a convenience.
var zeroHash btcwire.ShaHash
// minUint32 is a helper function to return the minimum of two uint32s.
// This avoids a math import and the need to cast to floats.
func minUint32(a, b uint32) uint32 {
if a < b {
return a
}
return b
}
// newNetAddress attempts to extract the IP address and port from the passed
// net.Addr interface and create a bitcoin NetAddress structure using that
// information.
func newNetAddress(addr net.Addr, services btcwire.ServiceFlag) (*btcwire.NetAddress, error) {
// addr will be a net.TCPAddr when not using a proxy.
if tcpAddr, ok := addr.(*net.TCPAddr); ok {
ip := tcpAddr.IP
port := uint16(tcpAddr.Port)
na := btcwire.NewNetAddressIPPort(ip, port, services)
return na, nil
}
// addr will be a socks.ProxiedAddr when using a proxy.
if proxiedAddr, ok := addr.(*socks.ProxiedAddr); ok {
ip := net.ParseIP(proxiedAddr.Host)
if ip == nil {
ip = net.ParseIP("0.0.0.0")
}
port := uint16(proxiedAddr.Port)
na := btcwire.NewNetAddressIPPort(ip, port, services)
return na, nil
}
// For the most part, addr should be one of the two above cases, but
// to be safe, fall back to trying to parse the information from the
// address string as a last resort.
host, portStr, err := net.SplitHostPort(addr.String())
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
ip := net.ParseIP(host)
port, err := strconv.ParseUint(portStr, 10, 16)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
na := btcwire.NewNetAddressIPPort(ip, uint16(port), services)
return na, nil
}
type outMsg struct {
msg btcwire.Message
doneChan chan bool
}
// peer provides a bitcoin peer for handling bitcoin communications.
type peer struct {
server *server
protocolVersion uint32
btcnet btcwire.BitcoinNet
services btcwire.ServiceFlag
started int32
conn net.Conn
addr string
na *btcwire.NetAddress
timeConnected time.Time
inbound bool
connected int32
disconnect int32 // only to be used atomically
persistent bool
versionKnown bool
knownAddresses map[string]bool
knownInventory *MruInventoryMap
knownInvMutex sync.Mutex
requestedTxns map[btcwire.ShaHash]bool // owned by blockmanager.
requestedBlocks map[btcwire.ShaHash]bool // owned by blockmanager.
lastBlock int32
retrycount int64
prevGetBlocksBegin *btcwire.ShaHash
prevGetBlocksStop *btcwire.ShaHash
prevGetBlockMutex sync.Mutex
requestQueue *list.List
invSendQueue *list.List
continueHash *btcwire.ShaHash
outputQueue chan outMsg
outputInvChan chan *btcwire.InvVect
txProcessed chan bool
blockProcessed chan bool
quit chan bool
}
// String returns the peer's address and directionality as a human-readable
// string.
func (p *peer) String() string {
return fmt.Sprintf("%s (%s)", p.addr, directionString(p.inbound))
}
// isKnownInventory returns whether or not the peer is known to have the passed
// inventory. It is safe for concurrent access.
func (p *peer) isKnownInventory(invVect *btcwire.InvVect) bool {
p.knownInvMutex.Lock()
defer p.knownInvMutex.Unlock()
if p.knownInventory.Exists(invVect) {
return true
}
return false
}
// addKnownInventory adds the passed inventory to the cache of known inventory
// for the peer. It is safe for concurrent access.
func (p *peer) addKnownInventory(invVect *btcwire.InvVect) {
p.knownInvMutex.Lock()
defer p.knownInvMutex.Unlock()
p.knownInventory.Add(invVect)
}
// pushVersionMsg sends a version message to the connected peer using the
// current state.
func (p *peer) pushVersionMsg() error {
_, blockNum, err := p.server.db.NewestSha()
if err != nil {
return err
}
// Create a NetAddress for the local IP. Don't assume any services
// until we know otherwise.
naMe, err := newNetAddress(p.conn.LocalAddr(), 0)
if err != nil {
return err
}
// Create a NetAddress for the remote IP. Don't assume any services
// until we know otherwise.
naYou, err := newNetAddress(p.conn.RemoteAddr(), 0)
if err != nil {
return err
}
// Version message.
msg := btcwire.NewMsgVersion(naMe, naYou, p.server.nonce, userAgent,
int32(blockNum))
// XXX: bitcoind appears to always enable the full node services flag
// of the remote peer netaddress field in the version message regardless
// of whether it knows it supports it or not. Also, bitcoind sets
// the services field of the local peer to 0 regardless of support.
//
// Realistically, this should be set as follows:
// - For outgoing connections:
// - Set the local netaddress services to what the local peer
// actually supports
// - Set the remote netaddress services to 0 to indicate no services
// as they are still unknown
// - For incoming connections:
// - Set the local netaddress services to what the local peer
// actually supports
// - Set the remote netaddress services to the what was advertised by
// by the remote peer in its version message
msg.AddrYou.Services = btcwire.SFNodeNetwork
// Advertise that we're a full node.
msg.Services = btcwire.SFNodeNetwork
p.QueueMessage(msg)
return nil
}
// handleVersionMsg is invoked when a peer receives a version bitcoin message
// and is used to negotiate the protocol version details as well as kick start
// the communications.
func (p *peer) handleVersionMsg(msg *btcwire.MsgVersion) {
// Detect self connections.
if msg.Nonce == p.server.nonce {
log.Debugf("PEER: Disconnecting peer connected to self %s",
p.addr)
p.Disconnect()
return
}
// Limit to one version message per peer.
if p.versionKnown {
p.logError("PEER: Only one version message per peer is allowed %s.",
p.addr)
p.Disconnect()
return
}
// Negotiate the protocol version.
p.protocolVersion = minUint32(p.protocolVersion, uint32(msg.ProtocolVersion))
p.versionKnown = true
log.Debugf("PEER: Negotiated protocol version %d for peer %s",
p.protocolVersion, p.addr)
p.lastBlock = msg.LastBlock
// Set the supported services for the peer to what the remote peer
// advertised.
p.services = msg.Services
// Inbound connections.
if p.inbound {
// Send version.
err := p.pushVersionMsg()
if err != nil {
p.logError("PEER: Can't send version message: %v", err)
p.Disconnect()
return
}
}
// Set up a NetAddress for the peer to be used with AddrManager.
na, err := newNetAddress(p.conn.RemoteAddr(), p.services)
if err != nil {
p.logError("PEER: Can't get remote address: %v", err)
p.Disconnect()
return
}
p.na = na
// Send verack.
p.QueueMessage(btcwire.NewMsgVerAck())
// Outbound connections.
if !p.inbound {
// TODO(davec): Only do this if not doing the initial block
// download and the local address is routable.
if !cfg.DisableListen {
// Advertise the local address.
na, err := newNetAddress(p.conn.LocalAddr(), p.services)
if err != nil {
p.logError("PEER: Can't advertise local "+
"address: %v", err)
p.Disconnect()
return
}
addresses := []*btcwire.NetAddress{na}
p.pushAddrMsg(addresses)
}
// Request known addresses if the server address manager needs
// more and the peer has a protocol version new enough to
// include a timestamp with addresses.
hasTimestamp := p.protocolVersion >= btcwire.NetAddressTimeVersion
if p.server.addrManager.NeedMoreAddresses() && hasTimestamp {
p.QueueMessage(btcwire.NewMsgGetAddr())
}
// Mark the address as a known good address.
p.server.addrManager.Good(p.na)
} else {
// A peer might not be advertising the same address that it
// actually connected from. One example of why this can happen
// is with NAT. Only add the address to the address manager if
// the addresses agree.
if NetAddressKey(&msg.AddrMe) == NetAddressKey(p.na) {
p.server.addrManager.AddAddress(p.na, p.na)
p.server.addrManager.Good(p.na)
}
}
// Signal the block manager this peer is a new sync candidate.
p.server.blockManager.NewPeer(p)
// TODO: Relay alerts.
}
// pushTxMsg sends a tx message for the provided transaction hash to the
// connected peer. An error is returned if the transaction hash is not known.
func (p *peer) pushTxMsg(sha *btcwire.ShaHash) error {
// Attempt to fetch the requested transaction from the pool. A
// call could be made to check for existence first, but simply trying
// to fetch a missing transaction results in the same behavior.
tx, err := p.server.txMemPool.FetchTransaction(sha)
if err != nil {
log.Tracef("PEER: Unable to fetch tx %v from transaction "+
"pool: %v", sha, err)
return err
}
p.QueueMessage(tx)
return nil
}
// pushBlockMsg sends a block message for the provided block hash to the
// connected peer. An error is returned if the block hash is not known.
func (p *peer) pushBlockMsg(sha *btcwire.ShaHash) error {
// What should this function do about the rate limiting the
// number of blocks queued for this peer?
// Current thought is have a counting mutex in the peer
// such that if > N Tx/Block requests are currently in
// the tx queue, wait until the mutex clears allowing more to be
// sent. This prevents 500 1+MB blocks from being loaded into
// memory and sit around until the output queue drains.
// Actually the outputQueue has a limit of 50 in its queue
// but still 50MB to 1.6GB(50 32MB blocks) just setting
// in memory waiting to be sent is pointless.
// I would recommend a getdata request limit of about 5
// outstanding objects.
// Should the tx complete api be a mutex or channel?
blk, err := p.server.db.FetchBlockBySha(sha)
if err != nil {
log.Tracef("PEER: Unable to fetch requested block sha %v: %v",
sha, err)
return err
}
p.QueueMessage(blk.MsgBlock())
// When the peer requests the final block that was advertised in
// response to a getblocks message which requested more blocks than
// would fit into a single message, send it a new inventory message
// to trigger it to issue another getblocks message for the next
// batch of inventory.
if p.continueHash != nil && p.continueHash.IsEqual(sha) {
hash, _, err := p.server.db.NewestSha()
if err == nil {
invMsg := btcwire.NewMsgInv()
iv := btcwire.NewInvVect(btcwire.InvTypeBlock, hash)
invMsg.AddInvVect(iv)
p.QueueMessage(invMsg)
p.continueHash = nil
}
}
return nil
}
// PushGetBlocksMsg sends a getblocks message for the provided block locator
// and stop hash. It will ignore back-to-back duplicate requests.
func (p *peer) PushGetBlocksMsg(locator btcchain.BlockLocator, stopHash *btcwire.ShaHash) error {
p.prevGetBlockMutex.Lock()
defer p.prevGetBlockMutex.Unlock()
// Extract the begin hash from the block locator, if one was specified,
// to use for filtering duplicate getblocks requests.
// request.
var beginHash *btcwire.ShaHash
if len(locator) > 0 {
beginHash = locator[0]
}
// Filter duplicate getblocks requests.
if p.prevGetBlocksStop != nil && p.prevGetBlocksBegin != nil &&
beginHash != nil && stopHash.IsEqual(p.prevGetBlocksStop) &&
beginHash.IsEqual(p.prevGetBlocksBegin) {
log.Tracef("PEER: Filtering duplicate [getblocks] with begin "+
"hash %v, stop hash %v", beginHash, stopHash)
return nil
}
// Construct the getblocks request and queue it to be sent.
msg := btcwire.NewMsgGetBlocks(stopHash)
for _, hash := range locator {
err := msg.AddBlockLocatorHash(hash)
if err != nil {
return err
}
}
p.QueueMessage(msg)
// Update the previous getblocks request information for filtering
// duplicates.
p.prevGetBlocksBegin = beginHash
p.prevGetBlocksStop = stopHash
return nil
}
// handleMemPoolMsg is invoked when a peer receives a mempool bitcoin message.
// It creates and sends an inventory message with the contents of the memory
// pool up to the maximum inventory allowed per message.
func (p *peer) handleMemPoolMsg(msg *btcwire.MsgMemPool) {
// Generate inventory message with the available transactions in the
// transaction memory pool. Limit it to the max allowed inventory
// per message.
invMsg := btcwire.NewMsgInv()
hashes := p.server.txMemPool.TxShas()
for i, hash := range hashes {
iv := btcwire.NewInvVect(btcwire.InvTypeTx, hash)
invMsg.AddInvVect(iv)
if i+1 >= btcwire.MaxInvPerMsg {
break
}
}
// Send the inventory message if there is anything to send.
if len(invMsg.InvList) > 0 {
p.QueueMessage(invMsg)
}
}
// handleTxMsg is invoked when a peer receives a tx bitcoin message. It blocks
// until the bitcoin transaction has been fully processed. Unlock the block
// handler this does not serialize all transactions through a single thread
// transactions don't rely on the previous one in a linear fashion like blocks.
func (p *peer) handleTxMsg(msg *btcwire.MsgTx) {
// Add the transaction to the known inventory for the peer.
hash, err := msg.TxSha()
if err != nil {
log.Errorf("Unable to get transaction hash: %v", err)
return
}
iv := btcwire.NewInvVect(btcwire.InvTypeTx, &hash)
p.addKnownInventory(iv)
// Queue the transaction up to be handled by the block manager and
// intentionally block further receives until the transaction is fully
// processed and known good or bad. This helps prevent a malicious peer
// from queueing up a bunch of bad transactions before disconnecting (or
// being disconnected) and wasting memory.
p.server.blockManager.QueueTx(msg, p)
<-p.txProcessed
}
// handleBlockMsg is invoked when a peer receives a block bitcoin message. It
// blocks until the bitcoin block has been fully processed.
func (p *peer) handleBlockMsg(msg *btcwire.MsgBlock, buf []byte) {
// Convert the raw MsgBlock to a btcutil.Block which
// provides some convience methods and things such as
// hash caching.
block := btcutil.NewBlockFromBlockAndBytes(msg, buf)
// Add the block to the known inventory for the peer.
hash, err := block.Sha()
if err != nil {
log.Errorf("Unable to get block hash: %v", err)
return
}
iv := btcwire.NewInvVect(btcwire.InvTypeBlock, hash)
p.addKnownInventory(iv)
// Queue the block up to be handled by the block
// manager and intentionally block further receives
// until the bitcoin block is fully processed and known
// good or bad. This helps prevent a malicious peer
// from queueing up a bunch of bad blocks before
// disconnecting (or being disconnected) and wasting
// memory. Additionally, this behavior is depended on
// by at least the block acceptance test tool as the
// reference implementation processes blocks in the same
// thread and therefore blocks further messages until
// the bitcoin block has been fully processed.
p.server.blockManager.QueueBlock(block, p)
<-p.blockProcessed
}
// handleInvMsg is invoked when a peer receives an inv bitcoin message and is
// used to examine the inventory being advertised by the remote peer and react
// accordingly. We pass the message down to blockmanager which will call
// QueueMessage with any appropriate responses.
func (p *peer) handleInvMsg(msg *btcwire.MsgInv) {
p.server.blockManager.QueueInv(msg, p)
}
// handleGetData is invoked when a peer receives a getdata bitcoin message and
// is used to deliver block and transaction information.
func (p *peer) handleGetDataMsg(msg *btcwire.MsgGetData) {
notFound := btcwire.NewMsgNotFound()
out:
for _, iv := range msg.InvList {
var err error
switch iv.Type {
case btcwire.InvTypeTx:
err = p.pushTxMsg(&iv.Hash)
case btcwire.InvTypeBlock:
err = p.pushBlockMsg(&iv.Hash)
default:
log.Warnf("PEER: Unknown type in inventory request %d",
iv.Type)
break out
}
if err != nil {
notFound.AddInvVect(iv)
}
}
if len(notFound.InvList) != 0 {
p.QueueMessage(notFound)
}
}
// handleGetBlocksMsg is invoked when a peer receives a getdata bitcoin message.
func (p *peer) handleGetBlocksMsg(msg *btcwire.MsgGetBlocks) {
// Return all block hashes to the latest one (up to max per message) if
// no stop hash was specified.
// Attempt to find the ending index of the stop hash if specified.
endIdx := btcdb.AllShas
if !msg.HashStop.IsEqual(&zeroHash) {
block, err := p.server.db.FetchBlockBySha(&msg.HashStop)
if err == nil {
endIdx = block.Height() + 1
}
}
// Find the most recent known block based on the block locator.
// Use the block after the genesis block if no other blocks in the
// provided locator are known. This does mean the client will start
// over with the genesis block if unknown block locators are provided.
// This mirrors the behavior in the reference implementation.
startIdx := int64(1)
for _, hash := range msg.BlockLocatorHashes {
block, err := p.server.db.FetchBlockBySha(hash)
if err == nil {
// Start with the next hash since we know this one.
startIdx = block.Height() + 1
break
}
}
// Don't attempt to fetch more than we can put into a single message.
autoContinue := false
if endIdx-startIdx > btcwire.MaxBlocksPerMsg {
endIdx = startIdx + btcwire.MaxBlocksPerMsg
autoContinue = true
}
// Generate inventory message.
//
// The FetchBlockBySha call is limited to a maximum number of hashes
// per invocation. Since the maximum number of inventory per message
// might be larger, call it multiple times with the appropriate indices
// as needed.
invMsg := btcwire.NewMsgInv()
for start := startIdx; start < endIdx; {
// Fetch the inventory from the block database.
hashList, err := p.server.db.FetchHeightRange(start, endIdx)
if err != nil {
log.Warnf("PEER: Block lookup failed: %v", err)
return
}
// The database did not return any further hashes. Break out of
// the loop now.
if len(hashList) == 0 {
break
}
// Add block inventory to the message.
for _, hash := range hashList {
hashCopy := hash
iv := btcwire.NewInvVect(btcwire.InvTypeBlock, &hashCopy)
invMsg.AddInvVect(iv)
}
start += int64(len(hashList))
}
// Send the inventory message if there is anything to send.
if len(invMsg.InvList) > 0 {
invListLen := len(invMsg.InvList)
if autoContinue && invListLen == btcwire.MaxBlocksPerMsg {
// Intentionally use a copy of the final hash so there
// is not a reference into the inventory slice which
// would prevent the entire slice from being eligible
// for GC as soon as it's sent.
continueHash := invMsg.InvList[invListLen-1].Hash
p.continueHash = &continueHash
}
p.QueueMessage(invMsg)
}
}
// handleGetBlocksMsg is invoked when a peer receives a getheaders bitcoin
// message.
func (p *peer) handleGetHeadersMsg(msg *btcwire.MsgGetHeaders) {
// Attempt to look up the height of the provided stop hash.
endIdx := btcdb.AllShas
block, err := p.server.db.FetchBlockBySha(&msg.HashStop)
if err == nil {
endIdx = block.Height() + 1
}
// There are no block locators so a specific header is being requested
// as identified by the stop hash.
if len(msg.BlockLocatorHashes) == 0 {
// No blocks with the stop hash were found so there is nothing
// to do. Just return. This behavior mirrors the reference
// implementation.
if endIdx == btcdb.AllShas {
return
}
// Send the requested block header.
headersMsg := btcwire.NewMsgHeaders()
hdr := block.MsgBlock().Header // copy
hdr.TxnCount = 0
headersMsg.AddBlockHeader(&hdr)
p.QueueMessage(headersMsg)
return
}
// Find the most recent known block based on the block locator.
// Use the block after the genesis block if no other blocks in the
// provided locator are known. This does mean the client will start
// over with the genesis block if unknown block locators are provided.
// This mirrors the behavior in the reference implementation.
startIdx := int64(1)
for _, hash := range msg.BlockLocatorHashes {
block, err := p.server.db.FetchBlockBySha(hash)
if err == nil {
// Start with the next hash since we know this one.
startIdx = block.Height() + 1
break
}
}
// Don't attempt to fetch more than we can put into a single message.
if endIdx-startIdx > btcwire.MaxBlockHeadersPerMsg {
endIdx = startIdx + btcwire.MaxBlockHeadersPerMsg
}
// Generate headers message and send it.
//
// The FetchBlockBySha call is limited to a maximum number of hashes
// per invocation. Since the maximum number of headers per message
// might be larger, call it multiple times with the appropriate indices
// as needed.
headersMsg := btcwire.NewMsgHeaders()
for start := startIdx; start < endIdx; {
// Fetch the inventory from the block database.
hashList, err := p.server.db.FetchHeightRange(start, endIdx)
if err != nil {
log.Warnf("PEER: Header lookup failed: %v", err)
return
}
// The database did not return any further hashes. Break out of
// the loop now.
if len(hashList) == 0 {
break
}
// Add headers to the message.
for _, hash := range hashList {
block, err := p.server.db.FetchBlockBySha(&hash)
if err != nil {
log.Warnf("PEER: Lookup of known block hash "+
"failed: %v", err)
continue
}
hdr := block.MsgBlock().Header // copy
hdr.TxnCount = 0
headersMsg.AddBlockHeader(&hdr)
}
// Start at the next block header after the latest one on the
// next loop iteration.
start += int64(len(hashList))
}
p.QueueMessage(headersMsg)
}
// handleGetAddrMsg is invoked when a peer receives a getaddr bitcoin message
// and is used to provide the peer with known addresses from the address
// manager.
func (p *peer) handleGetAddrMsg(msg *btcwire.MsgGetAddr) {
// Get the current known addresses from the address manager.
addrCache := p.server.addrManager.AddressCache()
// Push the addresses.
err := p.pushAddrMsg(addrCache)
if err != nil {
p.logError("PEER: Can't push address message: %v", err)
p.Disconnect()
return
}
}
// pushAddrMsg sends one, or more, addr message(s) to the connected peer using
// the provided addresses.
func (p *peer) pushAddrMsg(addresses []*btcwire.NetAddress) error {
// Nothing to send.
if len(addresses) == 0 {
return nil
}
numAdded := 0
msg := btcwire.NewMsgAddr()
for _, na := range addresses {
// Filter addresses the peer already knows about.
if p.knownAddresses[NetAddressKey(na)] {
continue
}
// Add the address to the message.
err := msg.AddAddress(na)
if err != nil {
return err
}
numAdded++
// Split into multiple messages as needed.
if numAdded > 0 && numAdded%btcwire.MaxAddrPerMsg == 0 {
p.QueueMessage(msg)
msg.ClearAddresses()
}
}
// Send message with remaining addresses if needed.
if numAdded%btcwire.MaxAddrPerMsg != 0 {
p.QueueMessage(msg)
}
return nil
}
// handleAddrMsg is invoked when a peer receives an addr bitcoin message and
// is used to notify the server about advertised addresses.
func (p *peer) handleAddrMsg(msg *btcwire.MsgAddr) {
// Ignore old style addresses which don't include a timestamp.
if p.protocolVersion < btcwire.NetAddressTimeVersion {
return
}
// A message that has no addresses is invalid.
if len(msg.AddrList) == 0 {
p.logError("PEER: Command [%s] from %s does not contain any addresses",
msg.Command(), p.addr)
p.Disconnect()
return
}
for _, na := range msg.AddrList {
// Don't add more address if we're disconnecting.
if atomic.LoadInt32(&p.disconnect) != 0 {
return
}
// Set the timestamp to 5 days ago if it's more than 24 hours
// in the future so this address is one of the first to be
// removed when space is needed.
now := time.Now()
if na.Timestamp.After(now.Add(time.Minute * 10)) {
na.Timestamp = now.Add(-1 * time.Hour * 24 * 5)
}
// Add address to known addresses for this peer.
p.knownAddresses[NetAddressKey(na)] = true
}
// Add addresses to server address manager. The address manager handles
// the details of things such as preventing duplicate addresses, max
// addresses, and last seen updates.
// XXX bitcoind gives a 2 hour time penalty here, do we want to do the
// same?
p.server.addrManager.AddAddresses(msg.AddrList, p.na)
}
// handlePingMsg is invoked when a peer receives a ping bitcoin message. For
// recent clients (protocol version > BIP0031Version), it replies with a pong
// message. For older clients, it does nothing and anything other than failure
// is considered a successful ping.
func (p *peer) handlePingMsg(msg *btcwire.MsgPing) {
// Only Reply with pong is message comes from a new enough client.
if p.protocolVersion > btcwire.BIP0031Version {
// Include nonce from ping so pong can be identified.
p.QueueMessage(btcwire.NewMsgPong(msg.Nonce))
}
}
// readMessage reads the next bitcoin message from the peer with logging.
func (p *peer) readMessage() (msg btcwire.Message, buf []byte, err error) {
msg, buf, err = btcwire.ReadMessage(p.conn, p.protocolVersion, p.btcnet)
if err != nil {
return
}
// Use closures to log expensive operations so they are only run when
// the logging level requires it.
log.Debugf("%v", newLogClosure(func() string {
// Debug summary of message.
summary := messageSummary(msg)
if len(summary) > 0 {
summary = " (" + summary + ")"
}
return fmt.Sprintf("PEER: Received %v%s from %s",
msg.Command(), summary, p.addr)
}))
log.Tracef("%v", newLogClosure(func() string {
return "PEER: " + spew.Sdump(msg)
}))
log.Tracef("%v", newLogClosure(func() string {
return "PEER: " + spew.Sdump(buf)
}))
return
}
// writeMessage sends a bitcoin Message to the peer with logging.
func (p *peer) writeMessage(msg btcwire.Message) {
// Don't do anything if we're disconnecting.
if atomic.LoadInt32(&p.disconnect) != 0 {
return
}
if !p.versionKnown {
switch msg.(type) {
case *btcwire.MsgVersion:
// This is OK.
default:
// We drop all messages other than version if we
// haven't done the handshake already.
return
}
}
// Use closures to log expensive operations so they are only run when
// the logging level requires it.
log.Debugf("%v", newLogClosure(func() string {
// Debug summary of message.
summary := messageSummary(msg)
if len(summary) > 0 {
summary = " (" + summary + ")"
}
return fmt.Sprintf("PEER: Sending %v%s to %s", msg.Command(),
summary, p.addr)
}))
log.Tracef("%v", newLogClosure(func() string {
return "PEER: " + spew.Sdump(msg)
}))
log.Tracef("%v", newLogClosure(func() string {
var buf bytes.Buffer
err := btcwire.WriteMessage(&buf, msg, p.protocolVersion, p.btcnet)
if err != nil {
return err.Error()
}
return "PEER: " + spew.Sdump(buf.Bytes())
}))
// Write the message to the peer.
err := btcwire.WriteMessage(p.conn, msg, p.protocolVersion, p.btcnet)
if err != nil {
p.Disconnect()
p.logError("PEER: Can't send message: %v", err)
return
}
}
// isAllowedByRegression returns whether or not the passed error is allowed by
// regression tests without disconnecting the peer. In particular, regression
// tests need to be allowed to send malformed messages without the peer being
// disconnected.
func (p *peer) isAllowedByRegression(err error) bool {
// Don't allow the error if it's not specifically a malformed message
// error.
if _, ok := err.(*btcwire.MessageError); !ok {
return false
}
// Don't allow the error if it's not coming from localhost or the
// hostname can't be determined for some reason.
host, _, err := net.SplitHostPort(p.addr)
if err != nil {
return false
}
if host != "127.0.0.1" && host != "localhost" {
return false
}
// Allowed if all checks passed.
return true
}
// inHandler handles all incoming messages for the peer. It must be run as a
// goroutine.
func (p *peer) inHandler() {
out:
for atomic.LoadInt32(&p.disconnect) == 0 {
rmsg, buf, err := p.readMessage()
if err != nil {
// In order to allow regression tests with malformed
// messages, don't disconnect the peer when we're in
// regression test mode and the error is one of the
// allowed errors.
if cfg.RegressionTest && p.isAllowedByRegression(err) {
log.Errorf("PEER: Allowed regression test "+
"error: %v", err)
continue
}
// Only log the error if we're not forcibly disconnecting.
if atomic.LoadInt32(&p.disconnect) == 0 {
p.logError("PEER: Can't read message: %v", err)
}
break out
}
// Ensure version message comes first.
if _, ok := rmsg.(*btcwire.MsgVersion); !ok && !p.versionKnown {
p.logError("PEER: A version message must precede all others")
break out
}
// Handle each supported message type.
markConnected := false
switch msg := rmsg.(type) {
case *btcwire.MsgVersion:
p.handleVersionMsg(msg)
markConnected = true
case *btcwire.MsgVerAck:
// Do nothing.
case *btcwire.MsgGetAddr:
p.handleGetAddrMsg(msg)
case *btcwire.MsgAddr:
p.handleAddrMsg(msg)
markConnected = true
case *btcwire.MsgPing:
p.handlePingMsg(msg)
markConnected = true
case *btcwire.MsgPong:
// Don't do anything, but could try to work out network
// timing or similar.
case *btcwire.MsgAlert:
p.server.BroadcastMessage(msg, p)
case *btcwire.MsgMemPool:
p.handleMemPoolMsg(msg)
case *btcwire.MsgTx:
p.handleTxMsg(msg)
case *btcwire.MsgBlock:
p.handleBlockMsg(msg, buf)
case *btcwire.MsgInv:
p.handleInvMsg(msg)
markConnected = true
case *btcwire.MsgNotFound:
// TODO(davec): Ignore this for now, but ultimately
// it should probably be used to detect when something
// we requested needs to be re-requested from another
// peer.
case *btcwire.MsgGetData:
p.handleGetDataMsg(msg)
markConnected = true
case *btcwire.MsgGetBlocks:
p.handleGetBlocksMsg(msg)
case *btcwire.MsgGetHeaders:
p.handleGetHeadersMsg(msg)
default:
log.Debugf("PEER: Received unhandled message of type %v: Fix Me",
rmsg.Command())
}
// Mark the address as currently connected and working as of
// now if one of the messages that trigger it was processed.
if markConnected && atomic.LoadInt32(&p.disconnect) == 0 {
if p.na == nil {
log.Warnf("we're getting stuff before we " +
"got a version message. that's bad")
continue
}
p.server.addrManager.Connected(p.na)
}
}
// Ensure connection is closed and notify server and block manager that
// the peer is done.
p.Disconnect()
p.server.donePeers <- p
// Only tell blockmanager we are gone if we ever told it we existed.
if p.versionKnown {
p.server.blockManager.DonePeer(p)
}
log.Tracef("PEER: Peer input handler done for %s", p.addr)
}
// outHandler handles all outgoing messages for the peer. It must be run as a
// goroutine. It uses a buffered channel to serialize output messages while
// allowing the sender to continue running asynchronously.
func (p *peer) outHandler() {
trickleTicker := time.NewTicker(time.Second * 10)
out:
for {
select {
case msg := <-p.outputQueue:
p.writeMessage(msg.msg)
if msg.doneChan != nil {
msg.doneChan <- true
}
case iv := <-p.outputInvChan:
// No handshake? They'll find out soon enough.
if p.versionKnown {
p.invSendQueue.PushBack(iv)
}
case <-trickleTicker.C:
// Don't send anything if we're disconnecting or there
// is no queued inventory.
if atomic.LoadInt32(&p.disconnect) != 0 ||
p.invSendQueue.Len() == 0 ||
!p.versionKnown {
continue
}
// Create and send as many inv messages as needed to
// drain the inventory send queue.
invMsg := btcwire.NewMsgInv()
for e := p.invSendQueue.Front(); e != nil; e = p.invSendQueue.Front() {
iv := p.invSendQueue.Remove(e).(*btcwire.InvVect)
// Don't send inventory that became known after
// the initial check.
if p.isKnownInventory(iv) {
continue
}
invMsg.AddInvVect(iv)
if len(invMsg.InvList) >= maxInvTrickleSize {
p.writeMessage(invMsg)
invMsg = btcwire.NewMsgInv()
}
// Add the inventory that is being relayed to
// the known inventory for the peer.
p.addKnownInventory(iv)
}
if len(invMsg.InvList) > 0 {
p.writeMessage(invMsg)
}
case <-p.quit:
break out
}
}
// Drain any wait channels before we go away so we don't leave something
// waiting for us.
cleanup:
for {
select {
case msg := <-p.outputQueue:
if msg.doneChan != nil {
msg.doneChan <- false
}
default:
break cleanup
}
}
log.Tracef("PEER: Peer output handler done for %s", p.addr)
}
// QueueMessage adds the passed bitcoin message to the peer send queue. It
// uses a buffered channel to communicate with the output handler goroutine so
// it is automatically rate limited and safe for concurrent access.
func (p *peer) QueueMessage(msg btcwire.Message) {
p.outputQueue <- outMsg{msg: msg}
}
// QueueInventory adds the passed inventory to the inventory send queue which
// might not be sent right away, rather it is trickled to the peer in batches.
// Inventory that the peer is already known to have is ignored. It is safe for
// concurrent access.
func (p *peer) QueueInventory(invVect *btcwire.InvVect) {
// Don't add the inventory to the send queue if the peer is
// already known to have it.
if p.isKnownInventory(invVect) {
return
}
p.outputInvChan <- invVect
}
// Connected returns whether or not the peer is currently connected.
func (p *peer) Connected() bool {
return atomic.LoadInt32(&p.connected) != 0 &&
atomic.LoadInt32(&p.disconnect) == 0
}
// Disconnect disconnects the peer by closing the connection. It also sets
// a flag so the impending shutdown can be detected.
func (p *peer) Disconnect() {
// did we win the race?
if atomic.AddInt32(&p.disconnect, 1) != 1 {
return
}
close(p.quit)
if atomic.LoadInt32(&p.connected) != 0 {
p.conn.Close()
}
}
// Start begins processing input and output messages. It also sends the initial
// version message for outbound connections to start the negotiation process.
func (p *peer) Start() error {
// Already started?
if atomic.AddInt32(&p.started, 1) != 1 {
return nil
}
log.Tracef("PEER: Starting peer %s", p.addr)
// Send an initial version message if this is an outbound connection.
if !p.inbound {
err := p.pushVersionMsg()
if err != nil {
p.logError("PEER: Can't send outbound version "+
"message %v", err)
p.Disconnect()
return err
}
}
// Start processing input and output.
go p.inHandler()
go p.outHandler()
return nil
}
// Shutdown gracefully shuts down the peer by disconnecting it.
func (p *peer) Shutdown() {
log.Tracef("PEER: Shutdown peer %s", p.addr)
p.Disconnect()
}
// newPeerBase returns a new base bitcoin peer for the provided server and
// inbound flag. This is used by the newInboundPeer and newOutboundPeer
// functions to perform base setup needed by both types of peers.
func newPeerBase(s *server, inbound bool) *peer {
p := peer{
server: s,
protocolVersion: btcwire.ProtocolVersion,
btcnet: s.btcnet,
services: btcwire.SFNodeNetwork,
timeConnected: time.Now(),
inbound: inbound,
knownAddresses: make(map[string]bool),
knownInventory: NewMruInventoryMap(maxKnownInventory),
requestedTxns: make(map[btcwire.ShaHash]bool),
requestedBlocks: make(map[btcwire.ShaHash]bool),
requestQueue: list.New(),
invSendQueue: list.New(),
outputQueue: make(chan outMsg, outputBufferSize),
outputInvChan: make(chan *btcwire.InvVect, outputBufferSize),
txProcessed: make(chan bool, 1),
blockProcessed: make(chan bool, 1),
quit: make(chan bool),
}
return &p
}
// newPeer returns a new inbound bitcoin peer for the provided server and
// connection. Use Start to begin processing incoming and outgoing messages.
func newInboundPeer(s *server, conn net.Conn) *peer {
p := newPeerBase(s, true)
p.conn = conn
p.addr = conn.RemoteAddr().String()
atomic.AddInt32(&p.connected, 1)
return p
}
// newOutbountPeer returns a new outbound bitcoin peer for the provided server and
// address and connects to it asynchronously. If the connection is successful
// then the peer will also be started.
func newOutboundPeer(s *server, addr string, persistent bool) *peer {
p := newPeerBase(s, false)
p.addr = addr
p.persistent = persistent
// Setup p.na with a temporary address that we are connecting to with
// faked up service flags. We will replace this with the real one after
// version negotiation is successful. The only failure case here would
// be if the string was incomplete for connection so can't be split
// into address and port, and thus this would be invalid anyway. In
// which case we return nil to be handled by the caller. This must be
// done before we fork off the goroutine because as soon as this
// function returns the peer must have a valid netaddress.
ip, portStr, err := net.SplitHostPort(addr)
if err != nil {
p.logError("Tried to create a new outbound peer with invalid "+
"address %s: %v", addr, err)
return nil
}
port, err := strconv.ParseUint(portStr, 10, 16)
if err != nil {
p.logError("Tried to create a new outbound peer with invalid "+
"port %s: %v", portStr, err)
return nil
}
p.na = btcwire.NewNetAddressIPPort(net.ParseIP(ip), uint16(port), 0)
go func() {
// Select which dial method to call depending on whether or
// not a proxy is configured. Also, add proxy information to
// logged address if needed.
dial := net.Dial
faddr := addr
if cfg.Proxy != "" {
proxy := &socks.Proxy{
Addr: cfg.Proxy,
Username: cfg.ProxyUser,
Password: cfg.ProxyPass,
}
dial = proxy.Dial
faddr = fmt.Sprintf("%s via proxy %s", addr, cfg.Proxy)
}
// Attempt to connect to the peer. If the connection fails and
// this is a persistent connection, retry after the retry
// interval.
for atomic.LoadInt32(&p.disconnect) == 0 {
log.Debugf("SRVR: Attempting to connect to %s", faddr)
conn, err := dial("tcp", addr)
if err != nil {
p.retrycount += 1
log.Debugf("SRVR: Failed to connect to %s: %v",
faddr, err)
if !persistent {
p.server.donePeers <- p
return
}
scaledInterval := connectionRetryInterval.Nanoseconds() * p.retrycount / 2
scaledDuration := time.Duration(scaledInterval)
log.Debugf("SRVR: Retrying connection to %s "+
"in %s", faddr, scaledDuration)
time.Sleep(scaledDuration)
continue
}
// While we were sleeping trying to connect, the server
// may have scheduled a shutdown. In that case ditch
// the peer immediately.
if atomic.LoadInt32(&p.disconnect) == 0 {
p.server.addrManager.Attempt(p.na)
// Connection was successful so log it and start peer.
log.Debugf("SRVR: Connected to %s",
conn.RemoteAddr())
p.conn = conn
atomic.AddInt32(&p.connected, 1)
p.retrycount = 0
p.Start()
}
return
}
}()
return p
}
// logError makes sure that we only log errors loudly on user peers.
func (p *peer) logError(fmt string, args ...interface{}) {
if p.persistent {
log.Errorf(fmt, args...)
} else {
log.Debugf(fmt, args...)
}
}