The state availability is checked during the creation of a state reader.
- In hash-based database, if the specified root node does not exist on disk disk, then
the state reader won't be created and an error will be returned.
- In path-based database, if the specified state layer is not available, then the
state reader won't be created and an error will be returned.
This change also contains a stricter semantics regarding the `Commit` operation: once it has been performed, the trie is no longer usable, and certain operations will return an error.
This removes the feature where top nodes of the proof can be elided.
It was intended to be used by the LES server, to save bandwidth
when the client had already fetched parts of the state and only needed
some extra nodes to complete the proof. Alas, it never got implemented
in the client.
* go.mod: update kzg libraries to use big-endian
* go.sum: ran go mod tidy
* core/testdata/precompiles: fix blob verification test
* core/testdata/precompiles: fix blob verification test
Package rpc uses cgo to find the maximum UNIX domain socket path
length. If exceeded, a warning is printed. This is the only use of cgo in this
package. It seems excessive to depend on cgo just for this warning, so
we now hard-code the usual limit for Linux instead.
---------
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
This change ensures Reheap will be called even before the London fork activates.
Since Reheap would otherwise only be called through `SetBaseFee` after London,
the list would just keep growing if the fork was not enabled or not reached yet.
* all: move main transaction pool into a subpool
* go.mod: remove superfluous updates
* core/txpool: review fixes, handle txs rejected by all subpools
* core/txpool: typos
The logs in this function are pulled straight from disk in rawdb.ReadRawReceipts and
also modified in receipts.DeriveFields, so removing the copy should be fine.
We had to do this workaround because it wasn't possible to export typed arrays from
JS to []byte. This was added in dop251/goja@2352993, so we can use the better way now.
This adds two ways to check for subscription support. First, one can now check
whether the transport method (HTTP/WS/etc.) is capable of subscriptions using
the new Client.SupportsSubscriptions method.
Second, the error returned by Subscribe can now reliably be tested using this
pattern:
sub, err := client.Subscribe(...)
if errors.Is(err, rpc.ErrNotificationsUnsupported) {
// no subscription support
}
---------
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>