2015-07-07 03:54:22 +03:00
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// Copyright 2014 The go-ethereum Authors
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2015-07-22 19:48:40 +03:00
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// This file is part of the go-ethereum library.
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2015-07-07 03:54:22 +03:00
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//
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2015-07-23 19:35:11 +03:00
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// The go-ethereum library is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
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2015-07-07 03:54:22 +03:00
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// it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
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// the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
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// (at your option) any later version.
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//
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2015-07-22 19:48:40 +03:00
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// The go-ethereum library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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2015-07-07 03:54:22 +03:00
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// but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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2015-07-22 19:48:40 +03:00
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// MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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2015-07-07 03:54:22 +03:00
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// GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
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//
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// You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
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2015-07-22 19:48:40 +03:00
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// along with the go-ethereum library. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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2015-07-07 03:54:22 +03:00
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2015-07-07 06:08:16 +03:00
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// Package p2p implements the Ethereum p2p network protocols.
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2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
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package p2p
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import (
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all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
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"bytes"
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2015-02-05 04:07:58 +02:00
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"crypto/ecdsa"
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2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
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"encoding/hex"
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2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
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"errors"
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2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
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"fmt"
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2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
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"net"
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"sync"
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2018-06-08 04:50:08 +03:00
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"sync/atomic"
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2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
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"time"
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2017-02-24 11:58:04 +03:00
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"github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/common"
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"github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/common/mclock"
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all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
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"github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/crypto"
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2017-09-25 11:08:07 +03:00
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"github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/event"
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2017-02-22 15:10:07 +03:00
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"github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/log"
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2015-02-05 04:07:58 +02:00
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"github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/p2p/discover"
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all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
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"github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/p2p/enode"
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2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
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"github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/p2p/enr"
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2015-02-11 18:19:31 +02:00
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"github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/p2p/nat"
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2016-11-22 22:51:59 +03:00
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"github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/p2p/netutil"
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2023-06-19 08:48:12 +03:00
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"golang.org/x/exp/slices"
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2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
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)
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const (
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2018-02-22 20:20:28 +03:00
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defaultDialTimeout = 15 * time.Second
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2015-03-04 17:27:37 +02:00
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2019-10-29 18:08:57 +03:00
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// This is the fairness knob for the discovery mixer. When looking for peers, we'll
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// wait this long for a single source of candidates before moving on and trying other
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// sources.
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discmixTimeout = 5 * time.Second
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2018-02-12 15:36:09 +03:00
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// Connectivity defaults.
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defaultMaxPendingPeers = 50
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defaultDialRatio = 3
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2015-04-30 15:06:05 +03:00
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2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
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// This time limits inbound connection attempts per source IP.
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inboundThrottleTime = 30 * time.Second
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2015-05-22 16:38:17 +03:00
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// Maximum time allowed for reading a complete message.
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// This is effectively the amount of time a connection can be idle.
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frameReadTimeout = 30 * time.Second
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// Maximum amount of time allowed for writing a complete message.
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2015-06-09 13:10:40 +03:00
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frameWriteTimeout = 20 * time.Second
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2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
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)
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2023-07-06 17:20:31 +03:00
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var (
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errServerStopped = errors.New("server stopped")
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errEncHandshakeError = errors.New("rlpx enc error")
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errProtoHandshakeError = errors.New("rlpx proto error")
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)
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2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
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2016-05-18 12:31:00 +03:00
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// Config holds Server options.
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type Config struct {
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2015-02-05 04:07:58 +02:00
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// This field must be set to a valid secp256k1 private key.
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2017-04-12 17:27:23 +03:00
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PrivateKey *ecdsa.PrivateKey `toml:"-"`
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2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
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// MaxPeers is the maximum number of peers that can be
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// connected. It must be greater than zero.
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MaxPeers int
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2015-05-04 17:35:49 +03:00
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// MaxPendingPeers is the maximum number of peers that can be pending in the
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// handshake phase, counted separately for inbound and outbound connections.
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// Zero defaults to preset values.
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2017-04-12 17:27:23 +03:00
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MaxPendingPeers int `toml:",omitempty"`
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2015-05-04 17:35:49 +03:00
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2018-02-12 15:36:09 +03:00
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// DialRatio controls the ratio of inbound to dialed connections.
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// Example: a DialRatio of 2 allows 1/2 of connections to be dialed.
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// Setting DialRatio to zero defaults it to 3.
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DialRatio int `toml:",omitempty"`
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2017-04-12 17:27:23 +03:00
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// NoDiscovery can be used to disable the peer discovery mechanism.
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// Disabling is useful for protocol debugging (manual topology).
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NoDiscovery bool
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2015-05-26 19:07:24 +03:00
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2018-08-27 11:49:29 +03:00
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// DiscoveryV5 specifies whether the new topic-discovery based V5 discovery
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2016-11-09 17:35:04 +03:00
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// protocol should be started or not.
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2017-04-12 17:27:23 +03:00
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DiscoveryV5 bool `toml:",omitempty"`
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2016-10-19 14:04:55 +03:00
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2015-02-05 04:07:58 +02:00
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// Name sets the node name of this server.
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2017-04-12 17:27:23 +03:00
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Name string `toml:"-"`
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2015-02-05 04:07:58 +02:00
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2016-11-09 17:35:04 +03:00
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// BootstrapNodes are used to establish connectivity
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2015-02-05 04:07:58 +02:00
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// with the rest of the network.
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all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
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BootstrapNodes []*enode.Node
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2015-02-05 04:07:58 +02:00
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2016-11-09 17:35:04 +03:00
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// BootstrapNodesV5 are used to establish connectivity
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// with the rest of the network using the V5 discovery
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// protocol.
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2021-01-26 23:41:35 +03:00
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BootstrapNodesV5 []*enode.Node `toml:",omitempty"`
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2016-11-09 17:35:04 +03:00
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2015-04-30 19:32:48 +03:00
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// Static nodes are used as pre-configured connections which are always
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// maintained and re-connected on disconnects.
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all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
StaticNodes []*enode.Node
|
2015-04-29 18:04:08 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2015-05-04 13:59:51 +03:00
|
|
|
// Trusted nodes are used as pre-configured connections which are always
|
|
|
|
// allowed to connect, even above the peer limit.
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
TrustedNodes []*enode.Node
|
2015-05-04 13:59:51 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2016-11-22 22:51:59 +03:00
|
|
|
// Connectivity can be restricted to certain IP networks.
|
|
|
|
// If this option is set to a non-nil value, only hosts which match one of the
|
|
|
|
// IP networks contained in the list are considered.
|
2017-04-12 17:27:23 +03:00
|
|
|
NetRestrict *netutil.Netlist `toml:",omitempty"`
|
2016-11-22 22:51:59 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2015-04-24 18:04:41 +03:00
|
|
|
// NodeDatabase is the path to the database containing the previously seen
|
|
|
|
// live nodes in the network.
|
2017-04-12 17:27:23 +03:00
|
|
|
NodeDatabase string `toml:",omitempty"`
|
2015-04-23 18:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
|
|
|
// Protocols should contain the protocols supported
|
|
|
|
// by the server. Matching protocols are launched for
|
|
|
|
// each peer.
|
2022-06-13 17:24:45 +03:00
|
|
|
Protocols []Protocol `toml:"-" json:"-"`
|
2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// If ListenAddr is set to a non-nil address, the server
|
|
|
|
// will listen for incoming connections.
|
|
|
|
//
|
|
|
|
// If the port is zero, the operating system will pick a port. The
|
|
|
|
// ListenAddr field will be updated with the actual address when
|
|
|
|
// the server is started.
|
|
|
|
ListenAddr string
|
|
|
|
|
2022-06-28 18:25:47 +03:00
|
|
|
// If DiscAddr is set to a non-nil value, the server will use ListenAddr
|
|
|
|
// for TCP and DiscAddr for the UDP discovery protocol.
|
|
|
|
DiscAddr string
|
|
|
|
|
2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
|
|
|
// If set to a non-nil value, the given NAT port mapper
|
|
|
|
// is used to make the listening port available to the
|
|
|
|
// Internet.
|
2017-04-12 17:27:23 +03:00
|
|
|
NAT nat.Interface `toml:",omitempty"`
|
2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// If Dialer is set to a non-nil value, the given Dialer
|
|
|
|
// is used to dial outbound peer connections.
|
2017-09-25 11:08:07 +03:00
|
|
|
Dialer NodeDialer `toml:"-"`
|
2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// If NoDial is true, the server will not dial any peers.
|
2017-04-12 17:27:23 +03:00
|
|
|
NoDial bool `toml:",omitempty"`
|
2017-09-25 11:08:07 +03:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// If EnableMsgEvents is set then the server will emit PeerEvents
|
|
|
|
// whenever a message is sent to or received from a peer
|
|
|
|
EnableMsgEvents bool
|
2017-12-01 14:49:04 +03:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Logger is a custom logger to use with the p2p.Server.
|
2018-02-12 15:52:07 +03:00
|
|
|
Logger log.Logger `toml:",omitempty"`
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
clock mclock.Clock
|
2016-05-18 12:31:00 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Server manages all peer connections.
|
|
|
|
type Server struct {
|
|
|
|
// Config fields may not be modified while the server is running.
|
|
|
|
Config
|
2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
|
|
|
|
2015-02-05 04:07:58 +02:00
|
|
|
// Hooks for testing. These are useful because we can inhibit
|
2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
|
|
|
// the whole protocol stack.
|
2020-09-22 11:17:39 +03:00
|
|
|
newTransport func(net.Conn, *ecdsa.PublicKey) transport
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
newPeerHook func(*Peer)
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
listenFunc func(network, addr string) (net.Listener, error)
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
lock sync.Mutex // protects running
|
|
|
|
running bool
|
2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
listener net.Listener
|
2015-02-19 02:52:03 +02:00
|
|
|
ourHandshake *protoHandshake
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
loopWG sync.WaitGroup // loop, listenLoop
|
|
|
|
peerFeed event.Feed
|
|
|
|
log log.Logger
|
|
|
|
|
2019-10-29 18:08:57 +03:00
|
|
|
nodedb *enode.DB
|
|
|
|
localnode *enode.LocalNode
|
|
|
|
ntab *discover.UDPv4
|
2021-01-26 23:41:35 +03:00
|
|
|
DiscV5 *discover.UDPv5
|
2019-10-29 18:08:57 +03:00
|
|
|
discmix *enode.FairMix
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
dialsched *dialScheduler
|
2019-10-29 18:08:57 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
// Channels into the run loop.
|
|
|
|
quit chan struct{}
|
|
|
|
addtrusted chan *enode.Node
|
|
|
|
removetrusted chan *enode.Node
|
|
|
|
peerOp chan peerOpFunc
|
|
|
|
peerOpDone chan struct{}
|
|
|
|
delpeer chan peerDrop
|
|
|
|
checkpointPostHandshake chan *conn
|
|
|
|
checkpointAddPeer chan *conn
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// State of run loop and listenLoop.
|
|
|
|
inboundHistory expHeap
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
type peerOpFunc func(map[enode.ID]*Peer)
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2017-02-24 11:58:04 +03:00
|
|
|
type peerDrop struct {
|
|
|
|
*Peer
|
|
|
|
err error
|
|
|
|
requested bool // true if signaled by the peer
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2018-06-08 04:50:08 +03:00
|
|
|
type connFlag int32
|
2015-02-05 04:07:58 +02:00
|
|
|
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
const (
|
|
|
|
dynDialedConn connFlag = 1 << iota
|
|
|
|
staticDialedConn
|
|
|
|
inboundConn
|
|
|
|
trustedConn
|
|
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// conn wraps a network connection with information gathered
|
|
|
|
// during the two handshakes.
|
|
|
|
type conn struct {
|
|
|
|
fd net.Conn
|
|
|
|
transport
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
node *enode.Node
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
flags connFlag
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
cont chan error // The run loop uses cont to signal errors to SetupConn.
|
|
|
|
caps []Cap // valid after the protocol handshake
|
|
|
|
name string // valid after the protocol handshake
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2015-02-05 04:07:58 +02:00
|
|
|
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
type transport interface {
|
|
|
|
// The two handshakes.
|
2020-09-22 11:17:39 +03:00
|
|
|
doEncHandshake(prv *ecdsa.PrivateKey) (*ecdsa.PublicKey, error)
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
doProtoHandshake(our *protoHandshake) (*protoHandshake, error)
|
|
|
|
// The MsgReadWriter can only be used after the encryption
|
|
|
|
// handshake has completed. The code uses conn.id to track this
|
|
|
|
// by setting it to a non-nil value after the encryption handshake.
|
|
|
|
MsgReadWriter
|
|
|
|
// transports must provide Close because we use MsgPipe in some of
|
|
|
|
// the tests. Closing the actual network connection doesn't do
|
2018-11-08 14:25:14 +03:00
|
|
|
// anything in those tests because MsgPipe doesn't use it.
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
close(err error)
|
2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
func (c *conn) String() string {
|
2017-02-24 11:58:04 +03:00
|
|
|
s := c.flags.String()
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
if (c.node.ID() != enode.ID{}) {
|
|
|
|
s += " " + c.node.ID().String()
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
s += " " + c.fd.RemoteAddr().String()
|
|
|
|
return s
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
func (f connFlag) String() string {
|
|
|
|
s := ""
|
|
|
|
if f&trustedConn != 0 {
|
2017-02-24 11:58:04 +03:00
|
|
|
s += "-trusted"
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if f&dynDialedConn != 0 {
|
2017-02-24 11:58:04 +03:00
|
|
|
s += "-dyndial"
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if f&staticDialedConn != 0 {
|
2017-02-24 11:58:04 +03:00
|
|
|
s += "-staticdial"
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if f&inboundConn != 0 {
|
2017-02-24 11:58:04 +03:00
|
|
|
s += "-inbound"
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if s != "" {
|
|
|
|
s = s[1:]
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return s
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
func (c *conn) is(f connFlag) bool {
|
2018-06-08 04:50:08 +03:00
|
|
|
flags := connFlag(atomic.LoadInt32((*int32)(&c.flags)))
|
|
|
|
return flags&f != 0
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
func (c *conn) set(f connFlag, val bool) {
|
2018-08-06 15:46:30 +03:00
|
|
|
for {
|
|
|
|
oldFlags := connFlag(atomic.LoadInt32((*int32)(&c.flags)))
|
|
|
|
flags := oldFlags
|
|
|
|
if val {
|
|
|
|
flags |= f
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
flags &= ^f
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if atomic.CompareAndSwapInt32((*int32)(&c.flags), int32(oldFlags), int32(flags)) {
|
|
|
|
return
|
|
|
|
}
|
2018-06-08 04:50:08 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2019-07-08 18:53:47 +03:00
|
|
|
// LocalNode returns the local node record.
|
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) LocalNode() *enode.LocalNode {
|
|
|
|
return srv.localnode
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
|
|
|
// Peers returns all connected peers.
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) Peers() []*Peer {
|
|
|
|
var ps []*Peer
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.doPeerOp(func(peers map[enode.ID]*Peer) {
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
for _, p := range peers {
|
|
|
|
ps = append(ps, p)
|
2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
})
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
return ps
|
2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
|
|
|
// PeerCount returns the number of connected peers.
|
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) PeerCount() int {
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
var count int
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.doPeerOp(func(ps map[enode.ID]*Peer) {
|
|
|
|
count = len(ps)
|
|
|
|
})
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
return count
|
2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
// AddPeer adds the given node to the static node set. When there is room in the peer set,
|
|
|
|
// the server will connect to the node. If the connection fails for any reason, the server
|
|
|
|
// will attempt to reconnect the peer.
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) AddPeer(node *enode.Node) {
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.dialsched.addStatic(node)
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
// RemovePeer removes a node from the static node set. It also disconnects from the given
|
|
|
|
// node if it is currently connected as a peer.
|
|
|
|
//
|
|
|
|
// This method blocks until all protocols have exited and the peer is removed. Do not use
|
|
|
|
// RemovePeer in protocol implementations, call Disconnect on the Peer instead.
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) RemovePeer(node *enode.Node) {
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
var (
|
|
|
|
ch chan *PeerEvent
|
|
|
|
sub event.Subscription
|
|
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
// Disconnect the peer on the main loop.
|
|
|
|
srv.doPeerOp(func(peers map[enode.ID]*Peer) {
|
|
|
|
srv.dialsched.removeStatic(node)
|
|
|
|
if peer := peers[node.ID()]; peer != nil {
|
|
|
|
ch = make(chan *PeerEvent, 1)
|
|
|
|
sub = srv.peerFeed.Subscribe(ch)
|
|
|
|
peer.Disconnect(DiscRequested)
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
})
|
|
|
|
// Wait for the peer connection to end.
|
|
|
|
if ch != nil {
|
|
|
|
defer sub.Unsubscribe()
|
|
|
|
for ev := range ch {
|
|
|
|
if ev.Peer == node.ID() && ev.Type == PeerEventTypeDrop {
|
|
|
|
return
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
2016-06-24 23:27:55 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2021-07-29 18:50:18 +03:00
|
|
|
// AddTrustedPeer adds the given node to a reserved trusted list which allows the
|
2018-02-25 23:39:29 +03:00
|
|
|
// node to always connect, even if the slot are full.
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) AddTrustedPeer(node *enode.Node) {
|
2018-02-25 23:39:29 +03:00
|
|
|
select {
|
|
|
|
case srv.addtrusted <- node:
|
|
|
|
case <-srv.quit:
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// RemoveTrustedPeer removes the given node from the trusted peer set.
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) RemoveTrustedPeer(node *enode.Node) {
|
2018-02-25 23:39:29 +03:00
|
|
|
select {
|
|
|
|
case srv.removetrusted <- node:
|
|
|
|
case <-srv.quit:
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2021-06-29 12:14:47 +03:00
|
|
|
// SubscribeEvents subscribes the given channel to peer events
|
2017-09-25 11:08:07 +03:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) SubscribeEvents(ch chan *PeerEvent) event.Subscription {
|
|
|
|
return srv.peerFeed.Subscribe(ch)
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
// Self returns the local node's endpoint information.
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) Self() *enode.Node {
|
2015-04-30 12:41:27 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.lock.Lock()
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
ln := srv.localnode
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.lock.Unlock()
|
2015-05-26 19:16:05 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
if ln == nil {
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
return enode.NewV4(&srv.PrivateKey.PublicKey, net.ParseIP("0.0.0.0"), 0, 0)
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
return ln.Node()
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
// Stop terminates the server and all active peer connections.
|
|
|
|
// It blocks until all active connections have been closed.
|
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) Stop() {
|
|
|
|
srv.lock.Lock()
|
|
|
|
if !srv.running {
|
2018-07-30 12:44:17 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.lock.Unlock()
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
return
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
srv.running = false
|
|
|
|
if srv.listener != nil {
|
|
|
|
// this unblocks listener Accept
|
|
|
|
srv.listener.Close()
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
close(srv.quit)
|
2018-07-30 12:44:17 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.lock.Unlock()
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.loopWG.Wait()
|
2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2018-01-22 15:38:34 +03:00
|
|
|
// sharedUDPConn implements a shared connection. Write sends messages to the underlying connection while read returns
|
|
|
|
// messages that were found unprocessable and sent to the unhandled channel by the primary listener.
|
|
|
|
type sharedUDPConn struct {
|
|
|
|
*net.UDPConn
|
|
|
|
unhandled chan discover.ReadPacket
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2021-01-26 23:41:35 +03:00
|
|
|
// ReadFromUDP implements discover.UDPConn
|
2018-01-22 15:38:34 +03:00
|
|
|
func (s *sharedUDPConn) ReadFromUDP(b []byte) (n int, addr *net.UDPAddr, err error) {
|
|
|
|
packet, ok := <-s.unhandled
|
|
|
|
if !ok {
|
2019-11-19 19:16:08 +03:00
|
|
|
return 0, nil, errors.New("connection was closed")
|
2018-01-22 15:38:34 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
l := len(packet.Data)
|
|
|
|
if l > len(b) {
|
|
|
|
l = len(b)
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
copy(b[:l], packet.Data[:l])
|
|
|
|
return l, packet.Addr, nil
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2021-01-26 23:41:35 +03:00
|
|
|
// Close implements discover.UDPConn
|
2018-01-22 15:38:34 +03:00
|
|
|
func (s *sharedUDPConn) Close() error {
|
|
|
|
return nil
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
|
|
|
// Start starts running the server.
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
// Servers can not be re-used after stopping.
|
2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) Start() (err error) {
|
|
|
|
srv.lock.Lock()
|
|
|
|
defer srv.lock.Unlock()
|
|
|
|
if srv.running {
|
|
|
|
return errors.New("server already running")
|
|
|
|
}
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.running = true
|
2023-04-18 12:57:08 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.log = srv.Logger
|
2017-12-01 14:49:04 +03:00
|
|
|
if srv.log == nil {
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.log = log.Root()
|
2017-12-01 14:49:04 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
if srv.clock == nil {
|
|
|
|
srv.clock = mclock.System{}
|
|
|
|
}
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
if srv.NoDial && srv.ListenAddr == "" {
|
|
|
|
srv.log.Warn("P2P server will be useless, neither dialing nor listening")
|
|
|
|
}
|
2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
|
|
|
|
2015-02-19 18:08:18 +02:00
|
|
|
// static fields
|
2015-02-05 04:07:58 +02:00
|
|
|
if srv.PrivateKey == nil {
|
2018-12-01 00:38:37 +03:00
|
|
|
return errors.New("Server.PrivateKey must be set to a non-nil key")
|
2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
if srv.newTransport == nil {
|
|
|
|
srv.newTransport = newRLPX
|
2015-04-29 18:04:08 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
if srv.listenFunc == nil {
|
|
|
|
srv.listenFunc = net.Listen
|
|
|
|
}
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.quit = make(chan struct{})
|
2017-02-24 11:58:04 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.delpeer = make(chan peerDrop)
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.checkpointPostHandshake = make(chan *conn)
|
|
|
|
srv.checkpointAddPeer = make(chan *conn)
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.addtrusted = make(chan *enode.Node)
|
|
|
|
srv.removetrusted = make(chan *enode.Node)
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.peerOp = make(chan peerOpFunc)
|
|
|
|
srv.peerOpDone = make(chan struct{})
|
2015-02-05 04:07:58 +02:00
|
|
|
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
if err := srv.setupLocalNode(); err != nil {
|
|
|
|
return err
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if srv.ListenAddr != "" {
|
|
|
|
if err := srv.setupListening(); err != nil {
|
2018-01-22 15:38:34 +03:00
|
|
|
return err
|
|
|
|
}
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if err := srv.setupDiscovery(); err != nil {
|
|
|
|
return err
|
|
|
|
}
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.setupDialScheduler()
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
srv.loopWG.Add(1)
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
go srv.run()
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
return nil
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) setupLocalNode() error {
|
|
|
|
// Create the devp2p handshake.
|
|
|
|
pubkey := crypto.FromECDSAPub(&srv.PrivateKey.PublicKey)
|
|
|
|
srv.ourHandshake = &protoHandshake{Version: baseProtocolVersion, Name: srv.Name, ID: pubkey[1:]}
|
|
|
|
for _, p := range srv.Protocols {
|
|
|
|
srv.ourHandshake.Caps = append(srv.ourHandshake.Caps, p.cap())
|
|
|
|
}
|
2023-06-19 08:48:12 +03:00
|
|
|
slices.SortFunc(srv.ourHandshake.Caps, Cap.Less)
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Create the local node.
|
2023-04-18 12:57:08 +03:00
|
|
|
db, err := enode.OpenDB(srv.NodeDatabase)
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
|
|
|
return err
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
srv.nodedb = db
|
|
|
|
srv.localnode = enode.NewLocalNode(db, srv.PrivateKey)
|
|
|
|
srv.localnode.SetFallbackIP(net.IP{127, 0, 0, 1})
|
|
|
|
// TODO: check conflicts
|
|
|
|
for _, p := range srv.Protocols {
|
|
|
|
for _, e := range p.Attributes {
|
|
|
|
srv.localnode.Set(e)
|
2018-01-22 15:38:34 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
switch srv.NAT.(type) {
|
|
|
|
case nil:
|
|
|
|
// No NAT interface, do nothing.
|
|
|
|
case nat.ExtIP:
|
|
|
|
// ExtIP doesn't block, set the IP right away.
|
|
|
|
ip, _ := srv.NAT.ExternalIP()
|
|
|
|
srv.localnode.SetStaticIP(ip)
|
|
|
|
default:
|
|
|
|
// Ask the router about the IP. This takes a while and blocks startup,
|
|
|
|
// do it in the background.
|
|
|
|
srv.loopWG.Add(1)
|
|
|
|
go func() {
|
|
|
|
defer srv.loopWG.Done()
|
|
|
|
if ip, err := srv.NAT.ExternalIP(); err == nil {
|
|
|
|
srv.localnode.SetStaticIP(ip)
|
2018-01-22 15:38:34 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
}()
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return nil
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) setupDiscovery() error {
|
2019-10-29 18:08:57 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.discmix = enode.NewFairMix(discmixTimeout)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Add protocol-specific discovery sources.
|
|
|
|
added := make(map[string]bool)
|
|
|
|
for _, proto := range srv.Protocols {
|
|
|
|
if proto.DialCandidates != nil && !added[proto.Name] {
|
|
|
|
srv.discmix.AddSource(proto.DialCandidates)
|
|
|
|
added[proto.Name] = true
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Don't listen on UDP endpoint if DHT is disabled.
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
if srv.NoDiscovery && !srv.DiscoveryV5 {
|
|
|
|
return nil
|
2018-01-22 15:38:34 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2022-06-28 18:25:47 +03:00
|
|
|
listenAddr := srv.ListenAddr
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Use an alternate listening address for UDP if
|
|
|
|
// a custom discovery address is configured.
|
|
|
|
if srv.DiscAddr != "" {
|
|
|
|
listenAddr = srv.DiscAddr
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
addr, err := net.ResolveUDPAddr("udp", listenAddr)
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
|
|
|
return err
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
conn, err := net.ListenUDP("udp", addr)
|
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
|
|
|
return err
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
realaddr := conn.LocalAddr().(*net.UDPAddr)
|
|
|
|
srv.log.Debug("UDP listener up", "addr", realaddr)
|
|
|
|
if srv.NAT != nil {
|
|
|
|
if !realaddr.IP.IsLoopback() {
|
2020-04-01 19:00:33 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.loopWG.Add(1)
|
|
|
|
go func() {
|
|
|
|
nat.Map(srv.NAT, srv.quit, "udp", realaddr.Port, realaddr.Port, "ethereum discovery")
|
|
|
|
srv.loopWG.Done()
|
|
|
|
}()
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2018-01-22 15:38:34 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.localnode.SetFallbackUDP(realaddr.Port)
|
2018-01-22 15:38:34 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
// Discovery V4
|
|
|
|
var unhandled chan discover.ReadPacket
|
|
|
|
var sconn *sharedUDPConn
|
2017-04-12 17:27:23 +03:00
|
|
|
if !srv.NoDiscovery {
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
if srv.DiscoveryV5 {
|
|
|
|
unhandled = make(chan discover.ReadPacket, 100)
|
|
|
|
sconn = &sharedUDPConn{conn, unhandled}
|
|
|
|
}
|
2018-02-12 15:36:09 +03:00
|
|
|
cfg := discover.Config{
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
PrivateKey: srv.PrivateKey,
|
|
|
|
NetRestrict: srv.NetRestrict,
|
|
|
|
Bootnodes: srv.BootstrapNodes,
|
|
|
|
Unhandled: unhandled,
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
Log: srv.log,
|
2015-05-26 19:07:24 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2021-01-26 23:41:35 +03:00
|
|
|
ntab, err := discover.ListenV4(conn, srv.localnode, cfg)
|
2018-02-12 15:36:09 +03:00
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
2015-12-07 13:06:49 +02:00
|
|
|
return err
|
|
|
|
}
|
2015-05-26 19:07:24 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.ntab = ntab
|
2019-10-29 18:08:57 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.discmix.AddSource(ntab.RandomNodes())
|
2015-02-05 04:07:58 +02:00
|
|
|
}
|
2019-10-29 18:08:57 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
// Discovery V5
|
2016-10-19 14:04:55 +03:00
|
|
|
if srv.DiscoveryV5 {
|
2021-01-26 23:41:35 +03:00
|
|
|
cfg := discover.Config{
|
|
|
|
PrivateKey: srv.PrivateKey,
|
|
|
|
NetRestrict: srv.NetRestrict,
|
|
|
|
Bootnodes: srv.BootstrapNodesV5,
|
|
|
|
Log: srv.log,
|
|
|
|
}
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
var err error
|
2018-01-22 15:38:34 +03:00
|
|
|
if sconn != nil {
|
2021-01-26 23:41:35 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.DiscV5, err = discover.ListenV5(sconn, srv.localnode, cfg)
|
2018-01-22 15:38:34 +03:00
|
|
|
} else {
|
2021-01-26 23:41:35 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.DiscV5, err = discover.ListenV5(conn, srv.localnode, cfg)
|
2018-01-22 15:38:34 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2016-10-19 14:04:55 +03:00
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
|
|
|
return err
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
|
|
|
return nil
|
2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) setupDialScheduler() {
|
|
|
|
config := dialConfig{
|
|
|
|
self: srv.localnode.ID(),
|
|
|
|
maxDialPeers: srv.maxDialedConns(),
|
|
|
|
maxActiveDials: srv.MaxPendingPeers,
|
|
|
|
log: srv.Logger,
|
|
|
|
netRestrict: srv.NetRestrict,
|
|
|
|
dialer: srv.Dialer,
|
|
|
|
clock: srv.clock,
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if srv.ntab != nil {
|
|
|
|
config.resolver = srv.ntab
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if config.dialer == nil {
|
|
|
|
config.dialer = tcpDialer{&net.Dialer{Timeout: defaultDialTimeout}}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
srv.dialsched = newDialScheduler(config, srv.discmix, srv.SetupConn)
|
|
|
|
for _, n := range srv.StaticNodes {
|
|
|
|
srv.dialsched.addStatic(n)
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) maxInboundConns() int {
|
|
|
|
return srv.MaxPeers - srv.maxDialedConns()
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) maxDialedConns() (limit int) {
|
|
|
|
if srv.NoDial || srv.MaxPeers == 0 {
|
|
|
|
return 0
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if srv.DialRatio == 0 {
|
|
|
|
limit = srv.MaxPeers / defaultDialRatio
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
limit = srv.MaxPeers / srv.DialRatio
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
if limit == 0 {
|
|
|
|
limit = 1
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return limit
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) setupListening() error {
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
// Launch the listener.
|
|
|
|
listener, err := srv.listenFunc("tcp", srv.ListenAddr)
|
2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
|
|
|
return err
|
|
|
|
}
|
2015-08-19 22:46:01 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.listener = listener
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.ListenAddr = listener.Addr().String()
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Update the local node record and map the TCP listening port if NAT is configured.
|
|
|
|
if tcp, ok := listener.Addr().(*net.TCPAddr); ok {
|
|
|
|
srv.localnode.Set(enr.TCP(tcp.Port))
|
|
|
|
if !tcp.IP.IsLoopback() && srv.NAT != nil {
|
|
|
|
srv.loopWG.Add(1)
|
|
|
|
go func() {
|
|
|
|
nat.Map(srv.NAT, srv.quit, "tcp", tcp.Port, tcp.Port, "ethereum p2p")
|
|
|
|
srv.loopWG.Done()
|
|
|
|
}()
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2015-02-05 04:07:58 +02:00
|
|
|
srv.loopWG.Add(1)
|
2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
|
|
|
go srv.listenLoop()
|
|
|
|
return nil
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
// doPeerOp runs fn on the main loop.
|
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) doPeerOp(fn peerOpFunc) {
|
|
|
|
select {
|
|
|
|
case srv.peerOp <- fn:
|
|
|
|
<-srv.peerOpDone
|
|
|
|
case <-srv.quit:
|
|
|
|
}
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
// run is the main loop of the server.
|
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) run() {
|
2019-06-07 16:31:00 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.log.Info("Started P2P networking", "self", srv.localnode.Node().URLv4())
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
defer srv.loopWG.Done()
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
defer srv.nodedb.Close()
|
2019-10-29 18:08:57 +03:00
|
|
|
defer srv.discmix.Close()
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
defer srv.dialsched.stop()
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
var (
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
peers = make(map[enode.ID]*Peer)
|
2018-02-12 15:36:09 +03:00
|
|
|
inboundCount = 0
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
trusted = make(map[enode.ID]bool, len(srv.TrustedNodes))
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
// Put trusted nodes into a map to speed up checks.
|
2018-02-25 23:39:29 +03:00
|
|
|
// Trusted peers are loaded on startup or added via AddTrustedPeer RPC.
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
for _, n := range srv.TrustedNodes {
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
trusted[n.ID()] = true
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
running:
|
|
|
|
for {
|
|
|
|
select {
|
|
|
|
case <-srv.quit:
|
|
|
|
// The server was stopped. Run the cleanup logic.
|
|
|
|
break running
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2018-02-25 23:39:29 +03:00
|
|
|
case n := <-srv.addtrusted:
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
// This channel is used by AddTrustedPeer to add a node
|
2018-02-25 23:39:29 +03:00
|
|
|
// to the trusted node set.
|
|
|
|
srv.log.Trace("Adding trusted node", "node", n)
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
trusted[n.ID()] = true
|
|
|
|
if p, ok := peers[n.ID()]; ok {
|
2018-06-08 04:50:08 +03:00
|
|
|
p.rw.set(trustedConn, true)
|
2018-02-25 23:39:29 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2018-02-25 23:39:29 +03:00
|
|
|
case n := <-srv.removetrusted:
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
// This channel is used by RemoveTrustedPeer to remove a node
|
2018-02-25 23:39:29 +03:00
|
|
|
// from the trusted node set.
|
|
|
|
srv.log.Trace("Removing trusted node", "node", n)
|
2019-06-10 14:21:02 +03:00
|
|
|
delete(trusted, n.ID())
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
if p, ok := peers[n.ID()]; ok {
|
2018-06-08 04:50:08 +03:00
|
|
|
p.rw.set(trustedConn, false)
|
2018-02-25 23:39:29 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
case op := <-srv.peerOp:
|
|
|
|
// This channel is used by Peers and PeerCount.
|
|
|
|
op(peers)
|
|
|
|
srv.peerOpDone <- struct{}{}
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
case c := <-srv.checkpointPostHandshake:
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
// A connection has passed the encryption handshake so
|
|
|
|
// the remote identity is known (but hasn't been verified yet).
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
if trusted[c.node.ID()] {
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
// Ensure that the trusted flag is set before checking against MaxPeers.
|
|
|
|
c.flags |= trustedConn
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// TODO: track in-progress inbound node IDs (pre-Peer) to avoid dialing them.
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
c.cont <- srv.postHandshakeChecks(peers, inboundCount, c)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
case c := <-srv.checkpointAddPeer:
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
// At this point the connection is past the protocol handshake.
|
|
|
|
// Its capabilities are known and the remote identity is verified.
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
err := srv.addPeerChecks(peers, inboundCount, c)
|
2017-02-24 11:58:04 +03:00
|
|
|
if err == nil {
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
// The handshakes are done and it passed all checks.
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
p := srv.launchPeer(c)
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
peers[c.node.ID()] = p
|
2020-10-13 14:28:24 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.log.Debug("Adding p2p peer", "peercount", len(peers), "id", p.ID(), "conn", c.flags, "addr", p.RemoteAddr(), "name", p.Name())
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.dialsched.peerAdded(c)
|
|
|
|
if p.Inbound() {
|
|
|
|
inboundCount++
|
2023-07-06 17:20:31 +03:00
|
|
|
serveSuccessMeter.Mark(1)
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
dialSuccessMeter.Mark(1)
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2023-07-06 17:20:31 +03:00
|
|
|
activePeerGauge.Inc(1)
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
c.cont <- err
|
|
|
|
|
2017-02-24 11:58:04 +03:00
|
|
|
case pd := <-srv.delpeer:
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
// A peer disconnected.
|
2017-02-24 11:58:04 +03:00
|
|
|
d := common.PrettyDuration(mclock.Now() - pd.created)
|
|
|
|
delete(peers, pd.ID())
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.log.Debug("Removing p2p peer", "peercount", len(peers), "id", pd.ID(), "duration", d, "req", pd.requested, "err", pd.err)
|
|
|
|
srv.dialsched.peerRemoved(pd.rw)
|
2018-02-12 15:36:09 +03:00
|
|
|
if pd.Inbound() {
|
|
|
|
inboundCount--
|
|
|
|
}
|
2023-07-06 17:20:31 +03:00
|
|
|
activePeerGauge.Dec(1)
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2017-12-01 14:49:04 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.log.Trace("P2P networking is spinning down")
|
2017-02-24 11:58:04 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
// Terminate discovery. If there is a running lookup it will terminate soon.
|
2015-05-26 19:07:24 +03:00
|
|
|
if srv.ntab != nil {
|
|
|
|
srv.ntab.Close()
|
|
|
|
}
|
2016-10-19 14:04:55 +03:00
|
|
|
if srv.DiscV5 != nil {
|
|
|
|
srv.DiscV5.Close()
|
|
|
|
}
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
// Disconnect all peers.
|
|
|
|
for _, p := range peers {
|
|
|
|
p.Disconnect(DiscQuitting)
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Wait for peers to shut down. Pending connections and tasks are
|
|
|
|
// not handled here and will terminate soon-ish because srv.quit
|
|
|
|
// is closed.
|
|
|
|
for len(peers) > 0 {
|
|
|
|
p := <-srv.delpeer
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
p.log.Trace("<-delpeer (spindown)")
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
delete(peers, p.ID())
|
2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
|
|
|
}
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
|
|
|
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) postHandshakeChecks(peers map[enode.ID]*Peer, inboundCount int, c *conn) error {
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
switch {
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
case !c.is(trustedConn) && len(peers) >= srv.MaxPeers:
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
return DiscTooManyPeers
|
2018-02-12 15:36:09 +03:00
|
|
|
case !c.is(trustedConn) && c.is(inboundConn) && inboundCount >= srv.maxInboundConns():
|
|
|
|
return DiscTooManyPeers
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
case peers[c.node.ID()] != nil:
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
return DiscAlreadyConnected
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
case c.node.ID() == srv.localnode.ID():
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
return DiscSelf
|
|
|
|
default:
|
|
|
|
return nil
|
2015-04-22 11:59:15 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2015-04-10 14:25:35 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) addPeerChecks(peers map[enode.ID]*Peer, inboundCount int, c *conn) error {
|
|
|
|
// Drop connections with no matching protocols.
|
|
|
|
if len(srv.Protocols) > 0 && countMatchingProtocols(srv.Protocols, c.caps) == 0 {
|
|
|
|
return DiscUselessPeer
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Repeat the post-handshake checks because the
|
|
|
|
// peer set might have changed since those checks were performed.
|
|
|
|
return srv.postHandshakeChecks(peers, inboundCount, c)
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
// listenLoop runs in its own goroutine and accepts
|
|
|
|
// inbound connections.
|
2014-11-21 22:48:49 +02:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) listenLoop() {
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.log.Debug("TCP listener up", "addr", srv.listener.Addr())
|
2015-04-10 18:24:41 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2020-01-16 15:10:15 +03:00
|
|
|
// The slots channel limits accepts of new connections.
|
2018-02-12 15:36:09 +03:00
|
|
|
tokens := defaultMaxPendingPeers
|
2015-05-04 17:35:49 +03:00
|
|
|
if srv.MaxPendingPeers > 0 {
|
|
|
|
tokens = srv.MaxPendingPeers
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
slots := make(chan struct{}, tokens)
|
|
|
|
for i := 0; i < tokens; i++ {
|
2015-04-10 18:24:41 +03:00
|
|
|
slots <- struct{}{}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2020-01-16 15:10:15 +03:00
|
|
|
// Wait for slots to be returned on exit. This ensures all connection goroutines
|
|
|
|
// are down before listenLoop returns.
|
|
|
|
defer srv.loopWG.Done()
|
|
|
|
defer func() {
|
|
|
|
for i := 0; i < cap(slots); i++ {
|
|
|
|
<-slots
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}()
|
|
|
|
|
2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
|
|
|
for {
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
// Wait for a free slot before accepting.
|
2015-04-10 18:24:41 +03:00
|
|
|
<-slots
|
2015-08-19 15:35:01 +03:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
var (
|
2020-11-20 17:14:25 +03:00
|
|
|
fd net.Conn
|
|
|
|
err error
|
|
|
|
lastLog time.Time
|
2015-08-19 15:35:01 +03:00
|
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
for {
|
|
|
|
fd, err = srv.listener.Accept()
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
if netutil.IsTemporaryError(err) {
|
2020-11-20 17:14:25 +03:00
|
|
|
if time.Since(lastLog) > 1*time.Second {
|
|
|
|
srv.log.Debug("Temporary read error", "err", err)
|
|
|
|
lastLog = time.Now()
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
time.Sleep(time.Millisecond * 200)
|
2015-08-19 15:35:01 +03:00
|
|
|
continue
|
|
|
|
} else if err != nil {
|
2017-12-01 14:49:04 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.log.Debug("Read error", "err", err)
|
2020-01-16 15:10:15 +03:00
|
|
|
slots <- struct{}{}
|
2015-08-19 15:35:01 +03:00
|
|
|
return
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
break
|
2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2016-11-22 22:51:59 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
remoteIP := netutil.AddrIP(fd.RemoteAddr())
|
2021-03-24 15:18:29 +03:00
|
|
|
if err := srv.checkInboundConn(remoteIP); err != nil {
|
|
|
|
srv.log.Debug("Rejected inbound connection", "addr", fd.RemoteAddr(), "err", err)
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
fd.Close()
|
|
|
|
slots <- struct{}{}
|
|
|
|
continue
|
2016-11-22 22:51:59 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
if remoteIP != nil {
|
2023-07-06 17:20:31 +03:00
|
|
|
fd = newMeteredConn(fd)
|
|
|
|
serveMeter.Mark(1)
|
dashboard: send current block to the dashboard client (#19762)
This adds all dashboard changes from the last couple months.
We're about to remove the dashboard, but decided that we should
get all the recent work in first in case anyone wants to pick up this
project later on.
* cmd, dashboard, eth, p2p: send peer info to the dashboard
* dashboard: update npm packages, improve UI, rebase
* dashboard, p2p: remove println, change doc
* cmd, dashboard, eth, p2p: cleanup after review
* dashboard: send current block to the dashboard client
2019-11-13 14:13:13 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.log.Trace("Accepted connection", "addr", fd.RemoteAddr())
|
2018-10-16 01:40:51 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2015-04-10 18:24:41 +03:00
|
|
|
go func() {
|
2017-09-25 11:08:07 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.SetupConn(fd, inboundConn, nil)
|
2015-04-10 18:24:41 +03:00
|
|
|
slots <- struct{}{}
|
|
|
|
}()
|
2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2021-03-24 15:18:29 +03:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) checkInboundConn(remoteIP net.IP) error {
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
if remoteIP == nil {
|
|
|
|
return nil
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Reject connections that do not match NetRestrict.
|
|
|
|
if srv.NetRestrict != nil && !srv.NetRestrict.Contains(remoteIP) {
|
2021-07-29 18:50:18 +03:00
|
|
|
return fmt.Errorf("not in netrestrict list")
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
// Reject Internet peers that try too often.
|
|
|
|
now := srv.clock.Now()
|
|
|
|
srv.inboundHistory.expire(now, nil)
|
|
|
|
if !netutil.IsLAN(remoteIP) && srv.inboundHistory.contains(remoteIP.String()) {
|
|
|
|
return fmt.Errorf("too many attempts")
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
srv.inboundHistory.add(remoteIP.String(), now.Add(inboundThrottleTime))
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
return nil
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2017-09-25 11:08:07 +03:00
|
|
|
// SetupConn runs the handshakes and attempts to add the connection
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
// as a peer. It returns when the connection has been added as a peer
|
|
|
|
// or the handshakes have failed.
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) SetupConn(fd net.Conn, flags connFlag, dialDest *enode.Node) error {
|
2020-09-22 11:17:39 +03:00
|
|
|
c := &conn{fd: fd, flags: flags, cont: make(chan error)}
|
|
|
|
if dialDest == nil {
|
|
|
|
c.transport = srv.newTransport(fd, nil)
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
c.transport = srv.newTransport(fd, dialDest.Pubkey())
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2017-12-01 14:49:04 +03:00
|
|
|
err := srv.setupConn(c, flags, dialDest)
|
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
2023-07-06 17:20:31 +03:00
|
|
|
if !c.is(inboundConn) {
|
|
|
|
markDialError(err)
|
|
|
|
}
|
2017-12-01 14:49:04 +03:00
|
|
|
c.close(err)
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return err
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) setupConn(c *conn, flags connFlag, dialDest *enode.Node) error {
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
// Prevent leftover pending conns from entering the handshake.
|
|
|
|
srv.lock.Lock()
|
|
|
|
running := srv.running
|
|
|
|
srv.lock.Unlock()
|
|
|
|
if !running {
|
2017-12-01 14:49:04 +03:00
|
|
|
return errServerStopped
|
2015-04-30 15:06:05 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
// If dialing, figure out the remote public key.
|
|
|
|
if dialDest != nil {
|
2022-02-14 14:05:48 +03:00
|
|
|
dialPubkey := new(ecdsa.PublicKey)
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
if err := dialDest.Load((*enode.Secp256k1)(dialPubkey)); err != nil {
|
2023-07-06 17:20:31 +03:00
|
|
|
err = fmt.Errorf("%w: dial destination doesn't have a secp256k1 public key", errEncHandshakeError)
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.log.Trace("Setting up connection failed", "addr", c.fd.RemoteAddr(), "conn", c.flags, "err", err)
|
|
|
|
return err
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Run the RLPx handshake.
|
2020-09-22 11:17:39 +03:00
|
|
|
remotePubkey, err := c.doEncHandshake(srv.PrivateKey)
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
2017-12-01 14:49:04 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.log.Trace("Failed RLPx handshake", "addr", c.fd.RemoteAddr(), "conn", c.flags, "err", err)
|
2023-07-06 17:20:31 +03:00
|
|
|
return fmt.Errorf("%w: %v", errEncHandshakeError, err)
|
2015-04-03 04:56:17 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
if dialDest != nil {
|
|
|
|
c.node = dialDest
|
|
|
|
} else {
|
|
|
|
c.node = nodeFromConn(remotePubkey, c.fd)
|
2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
clog := srv.log.New("id", c.node.ID(), "addr", c.fd.RemoteAddr(), "conn", c.flags)
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
err = srv.checkpoint(c, srv.checkpointPostHandshake)
|
2017-12-01 14:49:04 +03:00
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
clog.Trace("Rejected peer", "err", err)
|
2017-12-01 14:49:04 +03:00
|
|
|
return err
|
2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Run the capability negotiation handshake.
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
phs, err := c.doProtoHandshake(srv.ourHandshake)
|
2015-02-05 04:07:58 +02:00
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
clog.Trace("Failed p2p handshake", "err", err)
|
2023-07-06 17:20:31 +03:00
|
|
|
return fmt.Errorf("%w: %v", errProtoHandshakeError, err)
|
2015-02-05 04:07:58 +02:00
|
|
|
}
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
if id := c.node.ID(); !bytes.Equal(crypto.Keccak256(phs.ID), id[:]) {
|
2018-12-01 00:38:37 +03:00
|
|
|
clog.Trace("Wrong devp2p handshake identity", "phsid", hex.EncodeToString(phs.ID))
|
2017-12-01 14:49:04 +03:00
|
|
|
return DiscUnexpectedIdentity
|
2015-03-04 17:27:37 +02:00
|
|
|
}
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
c.caps, c.name = phs.Caps, phs.Name
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
err = srv.checkpoint(c, srv.checkpointAddPeer)
|
2017-12-01 14:49:04 +03:00
|
|
|
if err != nil {
|
2017-02-24 11:58:04 +03:00
|
|
|
clog.Trace("Rejected peer", "err", err)
|
2017-12-01 14:49:04 +03:00
|
|
|
return err
|
2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2017-12-01 14:49:04 +03:00
|
|
|
return nil
|
2015-04-03 04:56:17 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2015-02-19 18:09:33 +02:00
|
|
|
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
func nodeFromConn(pubkey *ecdsa.PublicKey, conn net.Conn) *enode.Node {
|
|
|
|
var ip net.IP
|
|
|
|
var port int
|
|
|
|
if tcp, ok := conn.RemoteAddr().(*net.TCPAddr); ok {
|
|
|
|
ip = tcp.IP
|
|
|
|
port = tcp.Port
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return enode.NewV4(pubkey, ip, port, port)
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
// checkpoint sends the conn to run, which performs the
|
|
|
|
// post-handshake checks for the stage (posthandshake, addpeer).
|
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) checkpoint(c *conn, stage chan<- *conn) error {
|
|
|
|
select {
|
|
|
|
case stage <- c:
|
|
|
|
case <-srv.quit:
|
|
|
|
return errServerStopped
|
2015-05-08 16:54:35 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2019-06-11 13:45:33 +03:00
|
|
|
return <-c.cont
|
2015-05-08 16:54:35 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) launchPeer(c *conn) *Peer {
|
|
|
|
p := newPeer(srv.log, c, srv.Protocols)
|
|
|
|
if srv.EnableMsgEvents {
|
|
|
|
// If message events are enabled, pass the peerFeed
|
|
|
|
// to the peer.
|
|
|
|
p.events = &srv.peerFeed
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
go srv.runPeer(p)
|
|
|
|
return p
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2015-05-16 01:38:28 +03:00
|
|
|
// runPeer runs in its own goroutine for each peer.
|
2015-04-03 04:56:17 +03:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) runPeer(p *Peer) {
|
2015-02-07 01:13:22 +02:00
|
|
|
if srv.newPeerHook != nil {
|
|
|
|
srv.newPeerHook(p)
|
|
|
|
}
|
2017-09-25 11:08:07 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.peerFeed.Send(&PeerEvent{
|
2019-07-05 21:27:13 +03:00
|
|
|
Type: PeerEventTypeAdd,
|
|
|
|
Peer: p.ID(),
|
|
|
|
RemoteAddress: p.RemoteAddr().String(),
|
|
|
|
LocalAddress: p.LocalAddr().String(),
|
2017-09-25 11:08:07 +03:00
|
|
|
})
|
|
|
|
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
// Run the per-peer main loop.
|
2017-02-24 11:58:04 +03:00
|
|
|
remoteRequested, err := p.run()
|
2017-09-25 11:08:07 +03:00
|
|
|
|
2020-02-13 13:10:03 +03:00
|
|
|
// Announce disconnect on the main loop to update the peer set.
|
|
|
|
// The main loop waits for existing peers to be sent on srv.delpeer
|
|
|
|
// before returning, so this send should not select on srv.quit.
|
|
|
|
srv.delpeer <- peerDrop{p, err, remoteRequested}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Broadcast peer drop to external subscribers. This needs to be
|
|
|
|
// after the send to delpeer so subscribers have a consistent view of
|
|
|
|
// the peer set (i.e. Server.Peers() doesn't include the peer when the
|
2023-03-10 12:45:49 +03:00
|
|
|
// event is received).
|
2017-09-25 11:08:07 +03:00
|
|
|
srv.peerFeed.Send(&PeerEvent{
|
2019-07-05 21:27:13 +03:00
|
|
|
Type: PeerEventTypeDrop,
|
|
|
|
Peer: p.ID(),
|
|
|
|
Error: err.Error(),
|
|
|
|
RemoteAddress: p.RemoteAddr().String(),
|
|
|
|
LocalAddress: p.LocalAddr().String(),
|
2017-09-25 11:08:07 +03:00
|
|
|
})
|
2014-10-23 18:57:54 +03:00
|
|
|
}
|
2015-10-27 16:10:30 +03:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// NodeInfo represents a short summary of the information known about the host.
|
|
|
|
type NodeInfo struct {
|
|
|
|
ID string `json:"id"` // Unique node identifier (also the encryption key)
|
|
|
|
Name string `json:"name"` // Name of the node, including client type, version, OS, custom data
|
|
|
|
Enode string `json:"enode"` // Enode URL for adding this peer from remote peers
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
ENR string `json:"enr"` // Ethereum Node Record
|
2015-10-27 16:10:30 +03:00
|
|
|
IP string `json:"ip"` // IP address of the node
|
|
|
|
Ports struct {
|
|
|
|
Discovery int `json:"discovery"` // UDP listening port for discovery protocol
|
|
|
|
Listener int `json:"listener"` // TCP listening port for RLPx
|
|
|
|
} `json:"ports"`
|
|
|
|
ListenAddr string `json:"listenAddr"`
|
|
|
|
Protocols map[string]interface{} `json:"protocols"`
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
2016-09-05 19:07:57 +03:00
|
|
|
// NodeInfo gathers and returns a collection of metadata known about the host.
|
2015-10-27 16:10:30 +03:00
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) NodeInfo() *NodeInfo {
|
|
|
|
// Gather and assemble the generic node infos
|
2018-10-12 12:47:24 +03:00
|
|
|
node := srv.Self()
|
2015-10-27 16:10:30 +03:00
|
|
|
info := &NodeInfo{
|
|
|
|
Name: srv.Name,
|
2019-06-07 16:31:00 +03:00
|
|
|
Enode: node.URLv4(),
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
ID: node.ID().String(),
|
|
|
|
IP: node.IP().String(),
|
2015-10-27 16:10:30 +03:00
|
|
|
ListenAddr: srv.ListenAddr,
|
|
|
|
Protocols: make(map[string]interface{}),
|
|
|
|
}
|
all: new p2p node representation (#17643)
Package p2p/enode provides a generalized representation of p2p nodes
which can contain arbitrary information in key/value pairs. It is also
the new home for the node database. The "v4" identity scheme is also
moved here from p2p/enr to remove the dependency on Ethereum crypto from
that package.
Record signature handling is changed significantly. The identity scheme
registry is removed and acceptable schemes must be passed to any method
that needs identity. This means records must now be validated explicitly
after decoding.
The enode API is designed to make signature handling easy and safe: most
APIs around the codebase work with enode.Node, which is a wrapper around
a valid record. Going from enr.Record to enode.Node requires a valid
signature.
* p2p/discover: port to p2p/enode
This ports the discovery code to the new node representation in
p2p/enode. The wire protocol is unchanged, this can be considered a
refactoring change. The Kademlia table can now deal with nodes using an
arbitrary identity scheme. This requires a few incompatible API changes:
- Table.Lookup is not available anymore. It used to take a public key
as argument because v4 protocol requires one. Its replacement is
LookupRandom.
- Table.Resolve takes *enode.Node instead of NodeID. This is also for
v4 protocol compatibility because nodes cannot be looked up by ID
alone.
- Types Node and NodeID are gone. Further commits in the series will be
fixes all over the the codebase to deal with those removals.
* p2p: port to p2p/enode and discovery changes
This adapts package p2p to the changes in p2p/discover. All uses of
discover.Node and discover.NodeID are replaced by their equivalents from
p2p/enode.
New API is added to retrieve the enode.Node instance of a peer. The
behavior of Server.Self with discovery disabled is improved. It now
tries much harder to report a working IP address, falling back to
127.0.0.1 if no suitable address can be determined through other means.
These changes were needed for tests of other packages later in the
series.
* p2p/simulations, p2p/testing: port to p2p/enode
No surprises here, mostly replacements of discover.Node, discover.NodeID
with their new equivalents. The 'interesting' API changes are:
- testing.ProtocolSession tracks complete nodes, not just their IDs.
- adapters.NodeConfig has a new method to create a complete node.
These changes were needed to make swarm tests work.
Note that the NodeID change makes the code incompatible with old
simulation snapshots.
* whisper/whisperv5, whisper/whisperv6: port to p2p/enode
This port was easy because whisper uses []byte for node IDs and
URL strings in the API.
* eth: port to p2p/enode
Again, easy to port because eth uses strings for node IDs and doesn't
care about node information in any way.
* les: port to p2p/enode
Apart from replacing discover.NodeID with enode.ID, most changes are in
the server pool code. It now deals with complete nodes instead
of (Pubkey, IP, Port) triples. The database format is unchanged for now,
but we should probably change it to use the node database later.
* node: port to p2p/enode
This change simply replaces discover.Node and discover.NodeID with their
new equivalents.
* swarm/network: port to p2p/enode
Swarm has its own node address representation, BzzAddr, containing both
an overlay address (the hash of a secp256k1 public key) and an underlay
address (enode:// URL).
There are no changes to the BzzAddr format in this commit, but certain
operations such as creating a BzzAddr from a node ID are now impossible
because node IDs aren't public keys anymore.
Most swarm-related changes in the series remove uses of
NewAddrFromNodeID, replacing it with NewAddr which takes a complete node
as argument. ToOverlayAddr is removed because we can just use the node
ID directly.
2018-09-25 01:59:00 +03:00
|
|
|
info.Ports.Discovery = node.UDP()
|
|
|
|
info.Ports.Listener = node.TCP()
|
2019-06-07 16:31:00 +03:00
|
|
|
info.ENR = node.String()
|
2015-10-27 16:10:30 +03:00
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// Gather all the running protocol infos (only once per protocol type)
|
|
|
|
for _, proto := range srv.Protocols {
|
|
|
|
if _, ok := info.Protocols[proto.Name]; !ok {
|
|
|
|
nodeInfo := interface{}("unknown")
|
|
|
|
if query := proto.NodeInfo; query != nil {
|
|
|
|
nodeInfo = proto.NodeInfo()
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
info.Protocols[proto.Name] = nodeInfo
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return info
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
// PeersInfo returns an array of metadata objects describing connected peers.
|
|
|
|
func (srv *Server) PeersInfo() []*PeerInfo {
|
|
|
|
// Gather all the generic and sub-protocol specific infos
|
|
|
|
infos := make([]*PeerInfo, 0, srv.PeerCount())
|
|
|
|
for _, peer := range srv.Peers() {
|
|
|
|
if peer != nil {
|
|
|
|
infos = append(infos, peer.Info())
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Sort the result array alphabetically by node identifier
|
|
|
|
for i := 0; i < len(infos); i++ {
|
|
|
|
for j := i + 1; j < len(infos); j++ {
|
|
|
|
if infos[i].ID > infos[j].ID {
|
|
|
|
infos[i], infos[j] = infos[j], infos[i]
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
return infos
|
|
|
|
}
|