This change replaces all instances of `<variable> != tesSUCCESS` with `!isTesSuccess(<variable>)` and `<variable> == tesSUCCESS` with `isTesSuccess(<variable>)`.
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 continues the thread naming work from #5691 and #5758, which enables more useful lock contention profiling by ensuring threads/jobs have short, stable, human-readable names (rather than being truncated/failing due to OS limits). This changes diagnostic naming only (thread names and job/load-event labels), not behavior.
Specific modifications are:
* Shortens all thread/job names used with `beast::setCurrentThreadName`, so the effective Linux thread name stays within the 15-character limit.
* Removes per-ledger sequence numbers from job/thread names to avoid long labels. This improves aggregation in lock contention profiling for short-lived job executions.
- Introduces amendment `fixBatchInnerSigs`
- Update Batch unit tests
- Fix all the Env instantiations to _use_ the "features" parameter.
- testInnerSubmitRPC runs with Batch enabled and disabled.
- Add a test to testInnerSubmitRPC for a correctly signed tx incorrectly
using the tfInnerBatchTxn flag.
- Generalize the submitAndValidate lambda in testInnerSubmitRPC.
- With the fix amendment, a transaction never reaches the transaction
engine (Transactor and derived classes.)
- Test submitting a pseudo-transaction. Stopped before reaching the
transaction engine, but with different errors.
- The tests verify that without the amendment, a transaction with
tfInnerBatchTxn is immediately rejected. Without the amendment, things
are safe. The amendment just makes things safer and more future-proof.
This change renames all occurrences of `namespace ripple` and `ripple::` to `namespace xrpl` and `xrpl::`, respectively, as well as the names of test suites. It also provides a script to allow developers to replicate the changes in their local branch or fork to avoid conflicts.
This change renames all the `info()` functions to `header()`, since they return `LedgerHeader` structs. It also renames the underlying variables from `info_` to `header_`.
- Spec: XLS-66
- Introduces amendment "LendingProtocol", but leaves it UNSUPPORTED to
allow for standalone testing, future development work, and potential
bug fixes.
- AccountInfo RPC will indicate the type of pseudo-account when
appropriate.
- Refactors and improves several existing classes and functional areas,
including Number, STAmount, STObject, json_value, Asset, directory
handling, View helper functions, and unit test helpers.
Per XLS-0095, we are taking steps to rename ripple(d) to xrpl(d).
This change specifically removes all copyright notices referencing Ripple, XRPLF, and certain affiliated contributors upon mutual agreement, so the notice in the LICENSE.md file applies throughout. Copyright notices referencing external contributions remain as-is. Duplicate verbiage is also removed.
This PR changes fee().accountReserve(0) to fee().reserve, as the current network reserve amount should be used instead of the account reserve.
Co-authored-by: Bart Thomee <11445373+bthomee@users.noreply.github.com>
This change excludes from Codecov unreachable/difficult-to-test transaction code (such as `tecINTERNAL`) and old code (from amendments that have been enabled for a long time that are only around for ledger replay reasons). This removes about 200 lines of misses and increases the Codecov coverage by 0.3% (79.2% to 79.5%).
This updates Boost to 1.88, which is needed because Clio wants to move to 1.88 as that fixes several ASAN false positives around coroutine usage. In order for Clio to move to newer boost, libXRPL needs to move too. Hence the changes in this PR. A lot has changed between 1.83 and 1.88 so there are lots of changes in the diff, especially in regards to Boost.Asio and coroutines in particular.
This change includes `network_id` data in the validations and ledger subscription stream responses, as well as unit tests to validate the response fields. Fixes#4783
- Specification: [XRPLF/XRPL-Standards 56](https://github.com/XRPLF/XRPL-Standards/blob/master/XLS-0056d-batch/README.md)
- Amendment: `Batch`
- Implements execution of multiple transactions within a single batch transaction with four execution modes: `tfAllOrNothing`, `tfOnlyOne`, `tfUntilFailure`, and `tfIndependent`.
- Enables atomic multi-party transactions where multiple accounts can participate in a single batch, with up to 8 inner transactions and 8 batch signers per batch transaction.
- Inner transactions use `tfInnerBatchTxn` flag with zero fees, no signature, and empty signing public key.
- Inner transactions are applied after the outer batch succeeds via the `applyBatchTransactions` function in apply.cpp.
- Network layer prevents relay of transactions with `tfInnerBatchTxn` flag - each peer applies inner transactions locally from the batch.
- Batch transactions are excluded from AccountDelegate permissions but inner transactions retain full delegation support.
- Metadata includes `ParentBatchID` linking inner transactions to their containing batch for traceability and auditing.
- Extended STTx with batch-specific signature verification methods and added protocol structures (`sfRawTransactions`, `sfBatchSigners`).
- Specification: XRPLF/XRPL-Standards#239
- Amendment: `SingleAssetVault`
- Implements a vault feature used to store a fungible asset (XRP, IOU, or MPT, but not NFT) and to receive shares in the vault (an MPT) in exchange.
- A vault can be private or public.
- A private vault can use permissioned domains, subject to the `PermissionedDomains` amendment.
- Shares can be exchanged back into asset with `VaultWithdraw`.
- Permissions on the asset in the vault are transitively applied on shares in the vault.
- Issuer of the asset in the vault can clawback with `VaultClawback`.
- Extended `MPTokenIssuance` with `DomainID`, used by the permissioned domain on the vault shares.
Co-authored-by: John Freeman <jfreeman08@gmail.com>
Combines four related changes:
1. "Decrease `shouldRelay` limit to 30s." Pretty self-explanatory. Currently, the limit is 5 minutes, by which point the `HashRouter` entry could have expired, making this transaction look brand new (and thus causing it to be relayed back to peers which have sent it to us recently).
2. "Give a transaction more chances to be retried." Will put a transaction into `LedgerMaster`'s held transactions if the transaction gets a `ter`, `tel`, or `tef` result. Old behavior was just `ter`.
* Additionally, to prevent a transaction from being repeatedly held indefinitely, it must meet some extra conditions. (Documented in a comment in the code.)
3. "Pop all transactions with sequential sequences, or tickets." When a transaction is processed successfully, currently, one held transaction for the same account (if any) will be popped out of the held transactions list, and queued up for the next transaction batch. This change pops all transactions for the account, but only if they have sequential sequences (for non-ticket transactions) or use a ticket. This issue was identified from interactions with @mtrippled's #4504, which was merged, but unfortunately reverted later by #4852. When the batches were spaced out, it could potentially take a very long time for a large number of held transactions for an account to get processed through. However, whether batched or not, this change will help get held transactions cleared out, particularly if a missing earlier transaction is what held them up.
4. "Process held transactions through existing NetworkOPs batching." In the current processing, at the end of each consensus round, all held transactions are directly applied to the open ledger, then the held list is reset. This bypasses all of the logic in `NetworkOPs::apply` which, among other things, broadcasts successful transactions to peers. This means that the transaction may not get broadcast to peers for a really long time (5 minutes in the current implementation, or 30 seconds with this first commit). If the node is a bottleneck (either due to network configuration, or because the transaction was submitted locally), the transaction may not be seen by any other nodes or validators before it expires or causes other problems.
This change fixes a number of issues involved with CTID:
* CTID is not present on all RPC tx transactions.
* rpcWRONG_NETWORK is missing in the ErrorCodes.cpp
It’s possible for this to happen legitimately if a set of peers, including a validator, are connected in a cycle, and the latency and message processing time between those peers is significantly less than the latency between the validator and the last peer. It’s unlikely in the real world, but obviously easy to simulate with Antithesis.
- Detects if the consensus process is "stalled". If it is, then we can declare a
consensus and end successfully even if we do not have 80% agreement on
our proposal.
- "Stalled" is defined as:
- We have a close time consensus
- Each disputed transaction is individually stalled:
- It has been in the final "stuck" 95% requirement for at least 2
(avMIN_ROUNDS) "inner rounds" of phaseEstablish,
- and either all of the other trusted proposers or this validator, if proposing,
have had the same vote(s) for at least 4 (avSTALLED_ROUNDS) "inner
rounds", and at least 80% of the validators (including this one, if
appropriate) agree about the vote (whether yes or no).
- If we have been in the establish phase for more than 10x the previous
consensus establish phase's time, then consensus is considered "expired",
and we will leave the round, which sends a partial validation (indicating
that the node is moving on without validating). Two restrictions avoid
prematurely exiting, or having an extended exit in extreme situations.
- The 10x time is clamped to be within a range of 15s
(ledgerMAX_CONSENSUS) to 120s (ledgerABANDON_CONSENSUS).
- If consensus has not had an opportunity to walk through all avalanche
states (defined as not going through 8 "inner rounds" of phaseEstablish),
then ConsensusState::Expired is treated as ConsensusState::No.
- When enough nodes leave the round, any remaining nodes will see they've
fallen behind, and move on, too, generally before hitting the timeout. Any
validations or partial validations sent during this time will help the
consensus process bring the nodes back together.
What the LoadManager class does is stall detection, which is not the same as deadlock detection. In the condition of severe CPU starvation, LoadManager will currently intentionally crash rippled reporting `LogicError: Deadlock detected`. This error message is misleading as the condition being detected is not a deadlock. This change fixes and refactors the code in response.