Add tracing instrumentation to the RPC request handling layer:
TracingInstrumentation.h:
- Convenience macros (XRPL_TRACE_RPC, XRPL_TRACE_TX, etc.) that
create RAII SpanGuard objects when telemetry is enabled
- XRPL_TRACE_SET_ATTR / XRPL_TRACE_EXCEPTION for span enrichment
- Zero-overhead no-ops when XRPL_ENABLE_TELEMETRY is not defined
RPCHandler.cpp:
- Trace each RPC command with span name "rpc.command.<method>"
- Record command name, API version, role, and status as attributes
- Capture exceptions on the span for error visibility
ServerHandler.cpp:
- Trace HTTP requests ("rpc.request"), WebSocket messages
("rpc.ws_message"), and processRequest ("rpc.process")
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
The existing code added the git commit info (`GIT_COMMIT_HASH` and `GIT_BRANCH`) to every file, which was a problem for leveraging `ccache` to cache build objects. This change adds a separate C++ file from where these compile-time variables are propagated to wherever they are needed. A new CMake file is added to set the commit info if the `git` binary is available.
This change enables all clang-tidy checks that are already passing. It also modifies the clang-tidy CI job, so it runs against all files if .clang-tidy changed.
The rdb module was not properly designed, which is fixed in this change. The module had three classes:
1) The abstract class `RelationalDB`.
2) The abstract class `SQLiteDatabase`, which inherited from `RelationalDB` and added some pure virtual methods.
3) The concrete class `SQLiteDatabaseImp`, which inherited from `SQLiteDatabase` and implemented all methods.
The updated code simplifies this as follows:
* The `SQLiteDatabaseImp` has become `SQLiteDatabase`, and
* The former `SQLiteDatabase `has merged with `RelationalDatabase`.
This change modularizes the `WalletDB` and `Manifest`. Note that the wallet db has nothing to do with account wallets and it stores node configuration, which is why it depends on the manifest code.
In certain cases, such as when modifying headers used by many compilation units, performing a unity build is slower than when performing a regular build with `ccache` enabled. There is also a benefit to a unity build in that it can detect things such as macro redefinitions within the group of files that are compiled together as a unit. This change therefore restores the ability to perform unity builds. However, instead of running every configuration with and without unity enabled, it is now only enabled for a single configuration to maintain lower computational use.
As part of restoring the code, it became clear that currently two configurations have coverage enabled, since the check doesn't focus specifically on Debian Bookworm so it also applies to Debian Trixie. This has been fixed too in this change.
Unity builds were intended to speed up builds, by bundling multiple files into compilation units. However, now that ccache is available on all platforms, there is no need for unity builds anymore, as ccache stores compiled individual build objects for reuse. This change therefore removes the ability to make unity builds.
Currently we're passing the `Application` object around, whereby the `Application` class acts more like a service registry that gives other classes access to other services. In order to allow modularization, we should replace `Application` with a service registry class so that modules depending on `Application` for other services can be moved easily. This change adds the `ServiceRegistry` class.
To allow developers to consume the latest unstable and (near-)stable versions of our `xrpl` Conan recipe, we should export and upload it whenever a push occurs to the corresponding branch or a release tag has been created. This way, developers do not have to figure out themselves what the most recent shortened commit hash was to determine the latest unstable recipe version (e.g. `3.2.0-b0+a1b2c3d`) or what the most recent release (candidate) was to determine the latest (near-)stable recipe version (e.g. `3.1.0-rc2`).
Now, pushes to the `develop` branch will produce the `develop` recipe version, pushes to the `release` branch will produce the `rc` recipe version, and creation of versioned tags will produce the `release` recipe version.
The `upload-conan-deps` workflow that's triggered on push is supposed to upload the Conan dependencies to our remote, so future PR commits can pull those dependencies from the remote. However, as the `sanitize` argument is missing, it was building different dependencies than what the PRs are building for the asan/tsan/ubsan job, so the latter would not find anything in the remote that they could use. This change sets the missing `sanitizers` input variable when running the `build-deps` action.
Separately, the `setup-conan` action showed the default profile, while we are using the `ci` profile. To ensure the profile is correctly printed when sanitizers are enabled, the environment variable the profile uses is set before calling the action.
The export and upload steps were initially in a separate action, where GitHub Actions does not support the `secrets` keyword, but only `inputs` for the credentials. After they were moved to a reusable workflow, only part of the references to the credentials were updated. This change correctly references to the Conan credentials via `secrets` instead of `inputs`.
By default the Conan recipe extracts the version from `BuildInfo.cpp`, but in some of the cases we want to upload a recipe with a suffix derived from the commit hash. This currently then results in the uploading to fail, since there is a version mismatch.
Here we explicitly set the version, and then simplify the steps in the upload workflow since we now need the recipe name (embedded within the conanfile.py but also needed when uploading), the recipe version, and the recipe ref (name/version).
Conan recipes use semantic versioning, and since our version already contains a hyphen the second hyphen causes Conan to ignore it. The plus sign is a valid separator we can use instead, so this change uses a `+` to separate a version suffix (commit hash) instead of a `-`.
During several iterations of development of https://github.com/XRPLF/rippled/pull/6235, the commit hash was supposed to be moved into the `run:` statement, but it slipped through the cracks and did not get added. This change adds the commit hash as suffix to the Conan recipe version.
This change uploads the `libxrpl` library as a Conan recipe to our remote when (i) merging into the `develop` branch, (ii) committing to a PR that targets a `release*` branch, and (iii) a versioned tag is applied. Clio is only notified in the second case. The user and channel are no longer used when uploading the recipe.
Specific changes are:
* A `generate-version` action is added, which extracts the build version from `BuildInfo.cpp` and appends the short 7-character commit hash to it for merges into the `develop` branch and for commits to a PR that targets a `release*` branch. When a tag is applied, however, the tag itself is used as the version. This functionality has been turned into a separate action as we will use the same versioning logic for creating .rpm and .deb packages, as well as Docker images.
* An `upload-recipe` action is added, which calls the `generate-version` action and further handles the uploading of the recipe to Conan.
* This action is called by both the `on-pr` and `on-trigger` workflows, and a new `on-tag` workflow.
The reason for this change is that we have downstream uses for the `libxrpl` library, but currently only upload the recipe to check for compatibility with Clio when making commits to a PR that targets the release branch.
`PeerImp` processes `TMGetObjectByHash` queries with an unbounded per-request loop, which performs a `NodeStore` fetch and then appends retrieved data to the reply for each queried object without a local count cap or reply-byte budget. However, the `Nodestore` fetches are expensive when high in numbers, which might slow down the process overall. Hence this code change adds an upper cap on the response size.
This change removes the `master` branch as a trigger for the CI pipelines, and updates comments accordingly. It also fixes the pre-commit workflow, so it will run on all release branches.
This change adds support for sanitizer build options in CI builds workflow. Currently `asan+ubsan` is enabled, while `tsan+ubsan` is left disabled as more changes are required.
This change updates the XRPLF pre-commit workflow and prepare-runner action to their latest versions. For naming consistency the prepare-runner action changed the disable_ccache variable into enable_ccache, which matches our naming.
This change fixes the last of the spelling issues, and enables the pre-commit (and CI) check for spelling. There are no functionality changes, but it does rename some enum values.