lbrycrd/test
Wladimir J. van der Laan 5f7575e263
Merge #12257: [wallet] Use destination groups instead of coins in coin select
232f96f5c8 doc: Add release notes for -avoidpartialspends (Karl-Johan Alm)
e00b4699cc clean-up: Remove no longer used ivars from CInputCoin (Karl-Johan Alm)
43e04d13b1 wallet: Remove deprecated OutputEligibleForSpending (Karl-Johan Alm)
0128121101 test: Add basic testing for wallet groups (Karl-Johan Alm)
59d6f7b4e2 wallet: Switch to using output groups instead of coins in coin selection (Karl-Johan Alm)
87ebce25d6 wallet: Add output grouping (Karl-Johan Alm)
bb629cb9dc Add -avoidpartialspends and m_avoid_partial_spends (Karl-Johan Alm)
65b3eda458 wallet: Add input bytes to CInputCoin (Karl-Johan Alm)
a443d7a0ca moveonly: CoinElegibilityFilter into coinselection.h (Karl-Johan Alm)
173e18a289 utils: Add insert() convenience templates (Karl-Johan Alm)

Pull request description:

  This PR adds an optional (off by default) `-avoidpartialspends` flag, which changes coin select to use output groups rather than outputs, where each output group corresponds to all outputs with the same destination.

  It is a privacy improvement, as each time you spend some output, any other output that is publicly associated with the destination (address) will also be spent at the same time, at the cost of fee increase for cases where coin select without group restriction would find a more optimal set of coins (see example below).

  For regular use without address reuse, this PR should have no effect on the user experience whatsoever; it only affects users who, for some reason, have multiple outputs with the same destination (i.e. address reuse).

  Nodes with this turned off will still try to avoid partial spending, if the fee of the resulting transaction is not greater than the fee of the original transaction.

  Example: a node has four outputs linked to two addresses `A` and `B`:

  * 1.0 btc to `A`
  * 0.5 btc to `A`
  * 1.0 btc to `B`
  * 0.5 btc to `B`

  The node sends 0.2 btc to `C`. Without `-avoidpartialspends`, the following coin selection will occur:
  * 0.5 btc to `A` or `B` is picked
  * 0.2 btc is output to `C`
  * 0.3 - fee is output to (unique change address)

  With `-avoidpartialspends`, the following will instead happen:
  * Both of (0.5, 1.0) btc to `A` or `B` is picked (one or the other pair)
  * 0.2 btc is output to `C`
  * 1.3 - fee is output to (unique change address)

  As noted, the pro here is that, assuming nobody sends to the address after you spend from it, you will only ever use one address once. The con is that the transaction becomes slightly larger in this case, because it is overpicking outputs to adhere to the no partial spending rule.

  This complements #10386, in particular it addresses @luke-jr and @gmaxwell's concerns in https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/10386#issuecomment-300667926 and https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/10386#issuecomment-302361381.

  Together with `-avoidreuse`, this fully addresses the concerns in #10065 I believe.

Tree-SHA512: 24687a4490ba59cf4198ed90052944ff4996653a4257833bb52ed24d058b3e924800c9b3790aeb6be6385b653b49e304453e5d7ff960e64c682fc23bfc447621
2018-07-24 16:34:03 +02:00
..
functional Merge #12257: [wallet] Use destination groups instead of coins in coin select 2018-07-24 16:34:03 +02:00
lint Removes the boost/algorithm/string/join dependency 2018-07-21 01:14:25 +02:00
util bitcoin-tx: Stricter check for valid integers 2018-07-07 14:25:09 +02:00
config.ini.in test: Add rpcauth pair that generated by rpcauth 2018-04-23 06:32:58 +08:00
README.md [tests] Update README after filename change 2018-02-06 17:57:32 +04:00

This directory contains integration tests that test bitcoind and its utilities in their entirety. It does not contain unit tests, which can be found in /src/test, /src/wallet/test, etc.

There are currently two sets of tests in this directory:

  • functional which test the functionality of bitcoind and bitcoin-qt by interacting with them through the RPC and P2P interfaces.
  • util which tests the bitcoin utilities, currently only bitcoin-tx.

The util tests are run as part of make check target. The functional tests are run by the travis continuous build process whenever a pull request is opened. Both sets of tests can also be run locally.

Running tests locally

Build for your system first. Be sure to enable wallet, utils and daemon when you configure. Tests will not run otherwise.

Functional tests

Dependencies

The ZMQ functional test requires a python ZMQ library. To install it:

  • on Unix, run sudo apt-get install python3-zmq
  • on mac OS, run pip3 install pyzmq

Running the tests

Individual tests can be run by directly calling the test script, eg:

test/functional/feature_rbf.py

or can be run through the test_runner harness, eg:

test/functional/test_runner.py feature_rbf.py

You can run any combination (incl. duplicates) of tests by calling:

test/functional/test_runner.py <testname1> <testname2> <testname3> ...

Run the regression test suite with:

test/functional/test_runner.py

Run all possible tests with

test/functional/test_runner.py --extended

By default, up to 4 tests will be run in parallel by test_runner. To specify how many jobs to run, append --jobs=n

The individual tests and the test_runner harness have many command-line options. Run test_runner.py -h to see them all.

Troubleshooting and debugging test failures

Resource contention

The P2P and RPC ports used by the bitcoind nodes-under-test are chosen to make conflicts with other processes unlikely. However, if there is another bitcoind process running on the system (perhaps from a previous test which hasn't successfully killed all its bitcoind nodes), then there may be a port conflict which will cause the test to fail. It is recommended that you run the tests on a system where no other bitcoind processes are running.

On linux, the test_framework will warn if there is another bitcoind process running when the tests are started.

If there are zombie bitcoind processes after test failure, you can kill them by running the following commands. Note that these commands will kill all bitcoind processes running on the system, so should not be used if any non-test bitcoind processes are being run.

killall bitcoind

or

pkill -9 bitcoind
Data directory cache

A pre-mined blockchain with 200 blocks is generated the first time a functional test is run and is stored in test/cache. This speeds up test startup times since new blockchains don't need to be generated for each test. However, the cache may get into a bad state, in which case tests will fail. If this happens, remove the cache directory (and make sure bitcoind processes are stopped as above):

rm -rf cache
killall bitcoind
Test logging

The tests contain logging at different levels (debug, info, warning, etc). By default:

  • when run through the test_runner harness, all logs are written to test_framework.log and no logs are output to the console.
  • when run directly, all logs are written to test_framework.log and INFO level and above are output to the console.
  • when run on Travis, no logs are output to the console. However, if a test fails, the test_framework.log and bitcoind debug.logs will all be dumped to the console to help troubleshooting.

To change the level of logs output to the console, use the -l command line argument.

test_framework.log and bitcoind debug.logs can be combined into a single aggregate log by running the combine_logs.py script. The output can be plain text, colorized text or html. For example:

combine_logs.py -c <test data directory> | less -r

will pipe the colorized logs from the test into less.

Use --tracerpc to trace out all the RPC calls and responses to the console. For some tests (eg any that use submitblock to submit a full block over RPC), this can result in a lot of screen output.

By default, the test data directory will be deleted after a successful run. Use --nocleanup to leave the test data directory intact. The test data directory is never deleted after a failed test.

Attaching a debugger

A python debugger can be attached to tests at any point. Just add the line:

import pdb; pdb.set_trace()

anywhere in the test. You will then be able to inspect variables, as well as call methods that interact with the bitcoind nodes-under-test.

If further introspection of the bitcoind instances themselves becomes necessary, this can be accomplished by first setting a pdb breakpoint at an appropriate location, running the test to that point, then using gdb to attach to the process and debug.

For instance, to attach to self.node[1] during a run:

2017-06-27 14:13:56.686000 TestFramework (INFO): Initializing test directory /tmp/user/1000/testo9vsdjo3

use the directory path to get the pid from the pid file:

cat /tmp/user/1000/testo9vsdjo3/node1/regtest/bitcoind.pid
gdb /home/example/bitcoind <pid>

Note: gdb attach step may require sudo

Util tests

Util tests can be run locally by running test/util/bitcoin-util-test.py. Use the -v option for verbose output.

Writing functional tests

You are encouraged to write functional tests for new or existing features. Further information about the functional test framework and individual tests is found in test/functional.