The clean trie cache is persisted periodically, therefore Geth can
quickly warmup the cache in next restart.
However it will reduce the robustness of system. The assumption is
held in Geth that if the parent trie node is present, then the entire
sub-trie associated with the parent are all prensent.
Imagine the scenario that Geth rewinds itself to a past block and
restart, but Geth finds the root node of "future state" in clean
cache then regard this state is present in disk, while is not in fact.
Another example is offline pruning tool. Whenever an offline pruning
is performed, the clean cache file has to be removed to aviod hitting
the root node of "deleted states" in clean cache.
All in all, compare with the minor performance gain, system robustness
is something we care more.
* core/state, light, les: make signature of ContractCode hash-independent
* push current state for feedback
* les: fix unit test
* core, les, light: fix les unittests
* core/state, trie, les, light: fix state iterator
* core, les: address comments
* les: fix lint
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Co-authored-by: Gary Rong <garyrong0905@gmail.com>
This PR adds a way to subscribe to the _full_ pending transactions, as opposed to just being notified about hashes.
In use cases where client subscribes to newPendingTransactions and gets txhashes only to then request the actual transaction, the caller can now shortcut that flow and obtain the transactions directly.
Co-authored-by: lx <92799281+brilliant-lx@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: lmittmann <lmittmann@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
Verkle trees store the code inside the trie. This PR changes the interface to pass the code, as well as the dirty flag to tell the trie package if the code is dirty and needs to be updated. This is a no-op for the MPT and the odr trie.
In all other UDPv4 methods, the deadline is checked first. It seems weird to me that ping is an exception. Deadline comparison is also less resource intensive.
Co-authored-by: Exca-DK <Exca-DK@users.noreply.github.com>
This changes the eth_getProof method implementation to re-encode the requested
storage keys, canonicalizing them in the response. For backwards-compatibility reasons,
go-ethereum accepts non-canonical hex keys. Accepting them is fine, but we should
not mirror invalid inputs into the output.
Closes#27306
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Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
This is likely the culprit behind several data corruption issues, e.g. where data has been
written to the freezer, but the deletion from pebble does not go through due to process
crash.
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