This change closes https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/issues/27730 . By using an iterator instead of a slice of transactions, we can better handle the case when an individual transaction (within an otherwise well-formed RLP-list) cannot be decoded.
Fixes a bug where the ethstats omits to report full block contents. This bug was a side-effect of https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/pull/26777, where `CurrentBlock` was changed to return a header instead of a block, leading to a failed type assertion.
A goroutine is used to manage the lifetime of subscriptions managed by
resubscriptions. When the subscription ends with no error, the resub
goroutine ends as well. However, the resub goroutine needs to live
long enough to read from the unsub channel. Otheriwse, an Unsubscribe
call deadlocks when writing to the unsub channel.
This is fixed by adding a buffer to the unsub channel.
* api/bind: Add CallOpts.BlockHash to allow calling contracts at a specific block hash.
* ethclient: Add BalanceAtHash, NonceAtHash and StorageAtHash functions
This change enhances the stacktrie constructor by introducing an option struct. It also simplifies the `Hash` and `Commit` operations, getting rid of the special handling round root node.
This changes fixes a bug in the fetcher, where the timeout for how long to remember underpriced transaction was erroneously compared, and the timeout never hit.
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Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
This change fixes#28355, where eth_getProof failed to return the correct codehash under certain conditions. This PR changes the logic to unconditionally look up the codehash, and also adds some more tests.
During snap-sync, we request ranges of values: either a range of accounts or a range of storage values. For any large trie, e.g. the main account trie or a large storage trie, we cannot fetch everything at once.
Short version; we split it up and request in multiple stages. To do so, we use an origin field, to say "Give me all storage key/values where key > 0x20000000000000000". When the server fulfils this, the server provides the first key after origin, let's say 0x2e030000000000000 -- never providing the exact origin. However, the client-side needs to be able to verify that the 0x2e03.. indeed is the first one after 0x2000.., and therefore the attached proof concerns the origin, not the first key.
So, short-short version: the left-hand side of the proof relates to the origin, and is free-standing from the first leaf.
On the other hand, (pun intended), the right-hand side, there's no such 'gap' between "along what path does the proof walk" and the last provided leaf. The proof must prove the last element (unless there are no elements).
Therefore, we can simplify the semantics for trie.VerifyRangeProof by removing an argument. This doesn't make much difference in practice, but makes it so that we can remove some tests. The reason I am raising this is that the upcoming stacktrie-based verifier does not support such fancy features as standalone right-hand borders.
* build: upgrade to golang 1.21.2
* build: verify checksums via tool
* deps: upgrade go to 1.21.3
* build: move more build metadata into checksum file
* build: move gobootsrc to checksums
This change addresses an issue in snap sync, specifically when the entire sync process can be halted due to an encountered empty storage range.
Currently, on the snap sync client side, the response to an empty (partial) storage range is discarded as a non-delivery. However, this response can be a valid response, when the particular range requested does not contain any slots.
For instance, consider a large contract where the entire key space is divided into 16 chunks, and there are no available slots in the last chunk [0xf] -> [end]. When the node receives a request for this particular range, the response includes:
The proof with origin [0xf]
A nil storage slot set
If we simply discard this response, the finalization of the last range will be skipped, halting the entire sync process indefinitely. The test case TestSyncWithUnevenStorage can reproduce the scenario described above.
In addition, this change also defines the common variables MaxAddress and MaxHash.
* cmd, core: resolve scheme from a read-write database
* cmd, core, eth: move the scheme check in the ethereum constructor
* cmd/geth: dump should in ro mode
* cmd: reverts
This change
- Removes the owner-notion from a stacktrie; the owner is only ever needed for comitting to the database, but the commit-function, the `writeFn` is provided by the caller, so the caller can just set the owner into the `writeFn` instead of having it passed through the stacktrie.
- Removes the `encoding.BinaryMarshaler`/`encoding.BinaryUnmarshaler` interface from stacktrie. We're not using it, and it is doubtful whether anyone downstream is either.