c1be285 chainparams: make supported service bits option explicit (Cory Fields)
d5c7c1c net: use an internal address for fixed seeds (Cory Fields)
6cdc488 net: switch to dummy internal ip for dns seed source (Cory Fields)
6d0bd5b net: do not allow resolving to an internal address (Cory Fields)
7f31762 net: add an internal subnet for representing unresolved hostnames (Cory Fields)
Tree-SHA512: 9bf1042bef546ac3ef0e0d3a9a5555eb21628ff2674a0cf8c6367194b22bfdab477adf452c0e7c56f44e0fb37debc5e14bdb623452e076fb9c492c7702601d7a
Part of a series of changes to clean up the instantiation of connman
by decoupling the command line arguments.
We also now abort with an error when explicit binds are set with
-listen=0.
We currently do two resolves for dns seeds: one for the results, and one to
serve in addrman as the source for those addresses.
There's no requirement that the source hostname resolves to the stored
identifier, only that the mapping is unique. So rather than incurring the
second lookup, combine a private subnet with a hash of the hostname.
The resulting v6 ip is guaranteed not to be publicy routable, and has only a
negligible chance of colliding with a user's internal network (which would be
of no consequence anyway).
This adds the listening address on which incoming connections were received to the
CNode and CNodeStats structures.
The address is reported in `getpeerinfo`.
This can be useful for distinguishing connections received on different listening ports
(e.g. when using a different listening port for Tor hidden service connections)
or different networks.
b6fbfc2 net: only enforce the services required to connect (Cory Fields)
Tree-SHA512: 88943bff63213a734f3c96c45760cadaeb9ba18287c8a20c279851ebaf058a334c969028fb2180f155508e3eea4b838147382e4f2b655e7a9aa098eadc81d53e
Previously if we didn't have any local addresses, GetLocalAddress would return
0.0.0.0 and then we'd swap in a peer's notion of our address in AdvertiseLocal,
but then nServices would never get set.
0f3471f net: make CNode's id private (Cory Fields)
9ff0a51 scripted-diff: net: Use accessor rather than node's id directly (Cory Fields)
e50c33e devtools: add script to verify scriptable changes (Cory Fields)
Tree-SHA512: a0ff50f4e1d38a2b63109b4996546c91b3e02e00d92c0bf04f48792948f78b1f6d9227a15d25c823fd4723a0277fc6a32c2c1287c7abbb7e50fd82ffb0f8d994
d6732d8 [tests] update disconnect_ban.py test case to work with listbanned (John Newbery)
77c54b2 [net] listbanned RPC and QT should show correct banned subnets (John Newbery)
Tree-SHA512: edd0e43377d456260d2697213c2829f8483630f3a668b6707d52605faefa610d951d10e6f22a95eff483cbd14faa8ac9b69fa7d3c0b5735c5f3df23fd71282e0
This changes the logging categories to boolean flags instead of strings.
This simplifies the acceptance testing by avoiding accessing a scoped
static thread local pointer to a thread local set of strings. It
eliminates the only use of boost::thread_specific_ptr outside of
lockorder debugging.
This change allows log entries to be directed to multiple categories
and makes it easy to change the logging flags at runtime (e.g. via
an RPC, though that isn't done by this commit.)
It also eliminates the fDebug global.
Configuration of unknown logging categories now produces a warning.
a4d1c9f compat: use `unsigned int` instead of `u_int` (Wladimir J. van der Laan)
25da1ee build: cleanup: define MSG_DONTWAIT/MSG_NO_SIGNAL locally (Wladimir J. van der Laan)
c459d50 build: Probe MSG_DONTWAIT in the same way as MSG_NOSIGNAL (Wladimir J. van der Laan)
Tree-SHA512: 60d79d69439bb181465e4244aa5ddc28bbd84f69c0ca0c753956b3798c9022394e29d791bc085fe7ffb1268c64c789a57e24797daad63525bb776088188ff9ae
We previously would block waiting for a CSemaphoreGrant in
ThreadOpenAddedConnections, when we did not need to. This would
block as the posts in CConnman shutdown were both to the wrong
semaphore and in the wrong location.
Define MSG_DONTWAIT and MSG_NO_SIGNAL in the implementation files that
use them (`net.cpp` and `netbase.cpp`), instead of compat.h which is
included all over the place.
This avoids putting them in the global namespace, as defining them as 0
is a hack that works for our specific usage, but it is not a general
solution.
Also makes sure they are defined only once so the `!defined(MSG_x)` guard can go.
66f861a Add a test for P2P inactivity timeouts (Matt Corallo)
b436f92 qa: Expose on-connection to mininode listeners (Matt Corallo)
8aaba7a qa: mininode learns when a socket connects, not its first action (Matt Corallo)
2cbd119 Disconnect peers which we do not receive VERACKs from within 60 sec (Matt Corallo)
These are (afaik) all long-standing races or concurrent accesses. Going
forward, we can clean these up so that they're not all individual atomic
accesses.
- Reintroduce cs_vRecv to guard receive-specific vars
- Lock vRecv/vSend for CNodeStats
- Make some vars atomic.
- Only set the connection time in CNode's constructor so that it doesn't change
618ee92 Further-enforce lockordering by enforcing directly after TRY_LOCKs (Matt Corallo)
2a962d4 Fixup style a bit by moving { to the same line as if statements (Matt Corallo)
8465631 Always enforce lock strict lock ordering (try or not) (Matt Corallo)
fd13eca Lock cs_vSend and cs_inventory in a consistent order even in TRY (Matt Corallo)
0729102 Net: pass interruptMsgProc as const where possible (Jorge Timón)
fc7f2ff Net: Make CNetMsgMaker more const (Jorge Timón)
d45955f Net: CConnman: Make some methods const (Jorge Timón)
Since ForEach* are can be used to send messages to all nodes, the caller may
end up sending a message before the version handshake is complete. To limit
this, filter out these nodes. While we're at it, may as well filter out
disconnected nodes as well.
Delete unused methods rather than updating them.
Once the CNode has been added to vNodes, it is possible that it is
disconnected+deleted in the socket handler thread. However, after
that we now call InitializeNode, which accesses the pnode.
helgrind managed to tickle this case (somehow), but I suspect it
requires in immensely braindead scheduler.
2366180 Do not add to vNodes until fOneShot/fFeeler/fAddNode have been set (Matt Corallo)
3c37dc4 Ensure cs_vNodes is held when using the return value from FindNode (Matt Corallo)
5be0190 Delete some unused (and broken) functions in CConnman (Matt Corallo)
The use of mocktime in test logic means that comparisons between
GetTime() and GetTimeMicros()/1000000 are unreliable since the former
can use mocktime values while the latter always gets the system clock;
this changes the networking code's inactivity checks to consistently
use the system clock for inactivity comparisons.
Also remove some hacks from setmocktime() that are no longer needed,
now that we're using the system clock for nLastSend and nLastRecv.
Technically cs_sendProcessing is entirely useless now because it
is only ever taken on the one MessageHandler thread, but because
there may be multiple of those in the future, it is left in place
cs_vSend is used for two purposes - to lock the datastructures used
to queue messages to place on the wire and to only call
SendMessages once at a time per-node. I believe SendMessages used
to access some of the vSendMsg stuff, but it doesn't anymore, so
these locks do not need to be on the same mutex, and also make
deadlocking much more likely.
e60360e net: remove cs_vRecvMsg (Cory Fields)
991955e net: add a flag to indicate when a node's send buffer is full (Cory Fields)
c6e8a9b net: add a flag to indicate when a node's process queue is full (Cory Fields)
4d712e3 net: add a new message queue for the message processor (Cory Fields)
c5a8b1b net: rework the way that the messagehandler sleeps (Cory Fields)
c72cc88 net: remove useless comments (Cory Fields)
ef7b5ec net: Add a simple function for waking the message handler (Cory Fields)
f5c36d1 net: record bytes written before notifying the message processor (Cory Fields)
60befa3 net: handle message accounting in ReceiveMsgBytes (Cory Fields)
56212e2 net: set message deserialization version when it's actually time to deserialize (Cory Fields)
0e973d9 net: remove redundant max sendbuffer size check (Cory Fields)
6042587 net: wait until the node is destroyed to delete its recv buffer (Cory Fields)
f6315e0 net: only disconnect if fDisconnect has been set (Cory Fields)
5b4a8ac net: make GetReceiveFloodSize public (Cory Fields)
e5bcd9c net: make vRecvMsg a list so that we can use splice() (Cory Fields)
53ad9a1 net: fix typo causing the wrong receive buffer size (Cory Fields)
vRecvMsg is now only touched by the socket handler thread.
The accounting vars (nRecvBytes/nLastRecv/mapRecvBytesPerMsgCmd) are also
only used by the socket handler thread, with the exception of queries from
rpc/gui. These accesses are not threadsafe, but they never were. This needs to
be addressed separately.
Also, update comment describing data flow
Similar to the recv flag, but this one indicates whether or not the net's send
buffer is full.
The socket handler checks the send queue when a new message is added and pauses
if necessary, and possibly unpauses after each message is drained from its buffer.
Messages are dumped very quickly from the socket handler to the processor, so
it's the depth of the processing queue that's interesting.
The socket handler checks the process queue's size during the brief message
hand-off and pauses if necessary, and the processor possibly unpauses each time
a message is popped off of its queue.
In order to sleep accurately, the message handler needs to know if _any_ node
has more processing that it should do before the entire thread sleeps.
Rather than returning a value that represents whether ProcessMessages
encountered a message that should trigger a disconnnect, interpret the return
value as whether or not that node has more work to do.
Also, use a global fProcessWake value that can be set by other threads,
which takes precedence (for one cycle) over the messagehandler's decision.
Note that the previous behavior was to only process one message per loop
(except in the case of a bad checksum or invalid header). That was changed in
PR #3180.
The only change here in that regard is that the current node now falls to the
back of the processing queue for the bad checksum/invalid header cases.
Previously addnodes were in competition with outbound connections
for access to the eight outbound slots.
One result of this is that frequently a node with several addnode
configured peers would end up connected to none of them, because
while the addnode loop was in its two minute sleep the automatic
connection logic would fill any free slots with random peers.
This is particularly unwelcome to users trying to maintain links
to specific nodes for fast block relay or purposes.
Another result is that a group of nine or more nodes which are
have addnode configured towards each other can become partitioned
from the public network.
This commit introduces a new limit of eight connections just for
addnode peers which is not subject to any of the other connection
limitations (including maxconnections).
The choice of eight is sufficient so that under no condition would
a user find themselves connected to fewer addnoded peers than
previously. It is also low enough that users who are confused
about the significance of more connections and have gotten too
copy-and-paste happy will not consume more than twice the slot
usage of a typical user.
Any additional load on the network resulting from this will likely
be offset by a reduction in users applying even more wasteful
workaround for the prior behavior.
The retry delays are reduced to avoid nodes sitting around without
their added peers up, but are still sufficient to prevent overly
aggressive repeated connections. The reduced delays also make
the system much more responsive to the addnode RPC.
Ban-disconnects are also exempted for peers added via addnode since
the outbound addnode logic ignores bans. Previously it would ban
an addnode then immediately reconnect to it.
A minor change was also made to CSemaphoreGrant so that it is
possible to re-acquire via an object whos grant was moved.
Surprisingly this hasn't been causing me any issues while testing, probably
because it requires lots of large blocks to be flying around.
Send/Recv corks need tests!
- Drop the interruption point directly after the pnode allocation. This would
be leaky if hit.
- Rearrange thread creation so that the socket handler comes first
This fixes one of the last major layer violations in the networking stack.
The network side is no longer in charge of message serialization, so it is now
decoupled from Bitcoin structures. Only the header is serialized and attached
to the payload.