The amendment increases the maximum sign of an account's signer
list from 8 to 32.
Like all new features, the associated amendment is configured with
a default vote of "no" and server operators will have to vote for
it explicitly if they believe it is useful.
This commit modernizes the `AcceptedLedger` and `AcceptedLedgerTx`
classes, reduces their memory footprint and reduces unnecessary
dynamic memory allocations.
This is a refactor aimed at cleaning up and simplifying the existing
job queue.
As of now, all jobs are cancelled at the same time and in the same
way, so this commit removes the per-job cancellation token. If the
need for such support is demonstrated, support can be re-added.
* Revise documentation for ClosureCounter and Workers.
* Simplify code, removing unnecessary function arguments and
deduplicating expressions
* Restructure job handlers to no longer need to pass a job's
handle to the job.
- Only duplicate records from archive to writable during online_delete.
- Log duration of nodestore reads.
- Include nodestore counters in perf_log output.
- Remove gratuitous nodestore activity counting.
- Report initial sync duration in server_info and perfLog.
- Report state_accounting in perfLog.
- Make state_accounting durations more accurate.
- Parallel ledger loader.
- Config parameter to load ledgers on start.
The performance characteristics of `std::unordered_map` are better
than `std::map` and the former should be preferred when the strict
ordering of the latter is not required.
The existing logic involves every server sending every transaction
that it receives to all its peers (except the one that it received
a transaction from).
This commit instead uses a randomized algorithm, where a node will
randomly select peers to relay a given transaction to, caching the
list of transaction hashes that are not relayed and forwading them
to peers once every second. Peers can then determine whether there
are transactions that they have not seen and can request them from
the node which has them.
It is expected that this feature will further reduce the bandwidth
needed to operate a server.
The legacy functions `cdirFirst` and `dirFirst` were mostly
identical; the differences were only type-related. The same
situation existed with `cdirNext` and `dirNext`.
This commit removes the duplicated code by introducing new
template functions that abstract away the differences that
are present between each pair of functions.
This commit also improves the naming of function arguments,
helping to elucidate their purpose & use and to make the
code self-documenting.
The HardenedValidations amendment introduces additional fields
in validations:
- `sfValidatedHash`, if present, is the hash the of last ledger that
the validator considers to be fully validated.
- `sfCookie`, if present, is a 64-bit cookie (the default
implementation selects it randomly at startup but other
implementations are possible), which can be used to improve the
detection and classification of duplicate validations.
- `sfServerVersion`, if present, reports the version of the software
that the validator is running. By surfacing this information,
server operators gain additional insight about variety of software
on the network.
If merged, this commit fixes#3797 by adding the fields to the
`validations` stream as shown below:
- `sfValidateHash` as `validated_hash`: a 256-bit hex string;
- `sfCookie` as `cookie`: a 64-bit integer as a string; and
- `sfServerVersion` as `server_version`: a 64-bit integer as
a string.
The `[node_size]` configuration parameter is used to tune various
parameters based on the hardware that the code is running on. The
parameter can take five distinct values: `tiny`, `small`, `medium`,
`large` and `huge`.
The default value in the code is `tiny` but the default configuration
file sets the value to `medium`. This commit attempts to detect the
amount of RAM on the system and adjusts the node size default value
based on the amount of RAM and the number of hardware execution
threads on the system.
The decision matrix currently used is:
| | 1 | 2 or 3 | ≥ 4 |
|:-------:|:----:|:------:|:------:|
| > ~8GB | tiny | tiny | tiny |
| > ~12GB | tiny | small | small |
| > ~16GB | tiny | small | medium |
| > ~24GB | tiny | small | large |
| > ~32GB | tiny | small | huge |
Some systems exclude memory reserved by the the hardware, the kernel
or the underlying hypervisor so the automatic detection code may end
up determining the node_size to be one less than "appropriate" given
the above table.
The detection algorithm is simplistic and does not take into account
other relevant factors. Therefore, for production-quality servers it
is recommended that server operators examine the system holistically
and determine what the appropriate size is instead of relying on the
automatic detection code.
To aid server operators, the node size will now be reported in the
`server_info` API as `node_size` when the command is invoked in
'admin' mode.
This commit expands the detection capabilities of the Byzantine
validation detector. Prior to this commit, only validators that
were on a server's UNL were monitored. Now, all the validations
that a server receives are passed through the detector.
* Add a new operating mode to rippled called reporting mode
* Add ETL mechanism for a reporting node to extract data from a p2p node
* Add new gRPC methods to faciliate ETL
* Use Postgres in place of SQLite in reporting mode
* Add Cassandra as a nodestore option
* Update logic of RPC handlers when running in reporting mode
* Add ability to forward RPCs to a p2p node
The existing code attempts to validate the provided node public key
using a function that assumes that the encoded public key is for an
account. This causes the parsing to fail.
This commit fixes#3317 by letting the caller specify the type of
the public key being checked.
The manifest relay code would only ever relay manifests from validators
on a server's UNL which means that the manifests of validators that are
not broadly trusted can fail to propagate across the network, which can
make it difficult to detect and track such validators.
This commit, if merged, propagates all manifests on a best-effort basis
resulting in broader availability of manifests on the network and avoid
the need to introduce on-ledger manifest storage or to establish one or
more manifest repositories.
* Creates a version 2 of the UNL file format allowing publishers to
pre-publish the next UNL while the current one is still valid.
* Version 1 of the UNL file format is still valid and backward
compatible.
* Also causes rippled to lock down if it has no valid UNLs, similar to
being amendment blocked, except reversible.
* Resolves#3548
* Resolves#3470
- Simplify and consolidate code for parsing hex input.
- Replace beast::endian::order with boost::endian::order.
- Simplify CountedObject code.
- Remove pre-C++17 workarounds in favor of C++17 based solutions.
- Improve `base_uint` and simplify its hex-parsing interface by
consolidating the `SexHex` and `SetHexExact` methods into one
API: `parseHex` which forces callers to verify the result of
the operation; as a result some public-facing API endpoints
may now return errors when passed values that were previously
accepted.
- Remove the simple fallback implementations of SHA2 and RIPEMD
introduced to reduce our dependency on OpenSSL. The code is
slow and rarely, if ever, exercised and we rely on OpenSSL
functionality for Boost.ASIO as well.
This commit introduces a new configuration option that server
operators can set. The value is communicated to other servers
and is also reported via the `server_info` API.
The value is meant to allow third-party applications or tools
to group servers together. For example, a tool that visualizes
the network's topology can group servers together.
Similar to the "Domain" field in validator manifests, an operator
can claim any domain. Prior to relying on the value returned, the
domain should be verified by retrieving the xrp-ledger.toml file
from the domain and looking for the server's public key in the
`nodes` array.
Tickets are a mechanism to allow for the "out-of-order" execution of
transactions on the XRP Ledger.
This commit, if merged, reworks the existing support for tickets and
introduces support for 'ticket batching', completing the feature set
needed for tickets.
The code is gated under the newly-introduced `TicketBatch` amendment
and the `Tickets` amendment, which is not presently active on the
network, is being removed.
The specification for this change can be found at:
https://github.com/xrp-community/standards-drafts/issues/16
This change can help improve the liveness of the network during periods of network
instability, by allowing the network to track which validators are presently not online
and to disregard them for the purposes of quorum calculations.
* Document delete_batch, back_off_milliseconds, age_threshold_seconds.
* Convert those time values to chrono types.
* Fix bug that ignored age_threshold_seconds.
* Add a "recovery buffer" to the config that gives the node a chance to
recover before aborting online delete.
* Add begin/end log messages around the SQL queries.
* Add a new configuration section: [sqlite] to allow tuning the sqlite
database operations. Ignored on full/large history servers.
* Update documentation of [node_db] and [sqlite] in the
rippled-example.cfg file.
Resolves#3321
* Make sure variables are always initialized
* Use lround instead of adding .5 and casting
* Remove some unneeded vars
* Check for null before calling strcmp
* Remove redundant if conditions
* Remove make_TxQ factory function
In deciding whether to relay a proposal or validation, a server would
consider whether it was issued by a validator on that server's UNL.
While both trusted proposals and validations were always relayed,
the code prioritized relaying of untrusted proposals over untrusted
validations. While not technically incorrect, validations are
generally more "valuable" because they are required during the
consensus process, whereas proposals are not, strictly, required.
The commit introduces two new configuration options, allowing server
operators to fine-tune the relaying behavior:
The `[relay_proposals]` option controls the relaying behavior for
proposals received by this server. It has two settings: "trusted"
and "all" and the default is "trusted".
The `[relay_validations]` options controls the relaying behavior for
validations received by this server. It has two settings: "trusted"
and "all" and the default is "all".
This change does not require an amendment as it does not affect
transaction processing.
This commit introduces no functional changes but cleans up the
code and shrinks the surface area by removing dead and unused
code, leveraging std:: alternatives to hand-rolled code and
improving comments and documentation.
Entries in the ledger are located using 256-bit locators. The locators
are calculated using a wide range of parameters specific to the entry
whose locator we are calculating (e.g. an account's locator is derived
from the account's address, whereas the locator for an offer is derived
from the account and the offer sequence.)
Keylets enhance type safety during lookup and make the code more robust,
so this commit removes most of the earlier code, which used naked
uint256 values.
This commit introduces the "HardenedValidations" amendment which,
if enabled, allows validators to include additional information in
their validations that can increase the robustness of consensus.
Specifically, the commit introduces a new optional field that can
be set in validation messages can be used to attest to the hash of
the latest ledger that a validator considers to be fully validated.
Additionally, the commit leverages the previously introduced "cookie"
field to improve the robustness of the network by making it possible
for servers to automatically detect accidental misconfiguration which
results in two or more validators using the same validation key.
* canonicalize_replace_cache
* canonicalize_replace_client
Now it is clear at the call site that if there are
duplicate copies of the data between the cache and
the caller, which copy gets replaced.
Additionally data parameter is now const-correct.
If it is not going to be replaced (canonicalize_replace_cache),
then the shared_ptr to the client data is const.
- Add support for all transaction types and ledger object types to gRPC
implementation of tx and account_tx.
- Create common handlers for tx and account_tx.
- Remove mutex and abort() from gRPC server. JobQueue is stopped before
gRPC server, with all coroutines executed to completion, so no need for
synchronization.
* When an unknown amendment reaches majority, log an error-level
message, and return a `warnings` array on all successful
admin-level RPC calls to `server_info` and `server_state` with
a message describing the problem, and the expected deadline.
* In addition to the `amendment_blocked` flag returned by
`server_info` and `server_state`, return a warning with a more
verbose description when the server is amendment blocked.
* Check on every flag ledger to see if the amendment(s) lose majority.
Logs again if they don't, resumes normal operations if they did.
The intention is to give operators earlier warning that their
instances are in danger of being amendment blocked, which will
hopefully motivate them to update ahead of time.
FIXES: #2847
* Transactions that are submitted with the fail_hard flag
and that result in any TER code besides tesSUCCESS shall
be neither queued nor held.
[FOLD] Keep tec results out of the open ledger when fail_hard:
* Improve TransactionStatus const correctness, and remove redundant
`local` check
* Check open ledger tx count in fail_hard tests
* Fix some wrapping
* Remove duplicate test