- Specification: https://github.com/XRPLF/XRPL-Standards/pull/272
- Amendment: `TokenEscrow`
- Enables escrowing of IOU and MPT tokens in addition to native XRP.
- Allows accounts to lock issued tokens (IOU/MPT) in escrow objects, with support for freeze, authorization, and transfer rates.
- Adds new ledger fields (`sfLockedAmount`, `sfIssuerNode`, etc.) to track locked balances for IOU and MPT escrows.
- Updates EscrowCreate, EscrowFinish, and EscrowCancel transaction logic to support IOU and MPT assets, including proper handling of trustlines and MPT authorization, transfer rates, and locked balances.
- Enforces invariant checks for escrowed IOU/MPT amounts.
- Extends GatewayBalances RPC to report locked (escrowed) balances.
- 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>
The codebase is filled with includes that are unused, and which thus can be removed. At the same time, the files often do not include all headers that contain the definitions used in those files. This change uses clang-format and clang-tidy to clean up the includes, with minor manual intervention to ensure the code compiles on all platforms.
- spec: XRPLF/XRPL-Standards#220
- amendment: "DeepFreeze"
- implemented deep freeze spec to allow token issuers to prevent currency holders from being able to acquire more of these tokens.
- in combination with normal freeze, deep freeze effectively prevents any balance trust line balance change of a currency holder (except direct issuer <-> holder payments).
- added 2 new invariant checks to verify that deep freeze cannot be enacted without normal freeze and transfer is not frozen.
- made some fixes to existing freeze handling.
Co-authored-by: Ed Hennis <ed@ripple.com>
Co-authored-by: Howard Hinnant <howard.hinnant@gmail.com>
* Add fixNFTokenPageLinks amendment:
It was discovered that under rare circumstances the links between
NFTokenPages could be removed. If this happens, then the
account_objects and account_nfts RPC commands under-report the
NFTokens owned by an account.
The fixNFTokenPageLinks amendment does the following to address
the problem:
- It fixes the underlying problem so no further broken links
should be created.
- It adds Invariants so, if such damage were introduced in the
future, an invariant would stop it.
- It adds a new FixLedgerState transaction that repairs
directories that were damaged in this fashion.
- It adds unit tests for all of it.
The names of the files should reflect the name of the Dir class.
Co-authored-by: Zack Brunson <Zshooter@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Ed Hennis <ed@ripple.com>
* Add feature / amendment "InvariantsV1_1"
* Adds invariant AccountRootsDeletedClean:
* Checks that a deleted account doesn't leave any directly
accessible artifacts behind.
* Always tests, but only changes the transaction result if
featureInvariantsV1_1 is enabled.
* Unit tests.
* Resolves#4638
* [FOLD] Review feedback from @gregtatcam:
* Fix unused variable warning
* Improve Invariant test const correctness
* [FOLD] Review feedback from @mvadari:
* Centralize the account keylet function list, and some optimization
* [FOLD] Some structured binding doesn't work in clang
* [FOLD] Review feedback 2 from @mvadari:
* Clean up and clarify some comments.
* [FOLD] Change InvariantsV1_1 to unsupported
* Will allow multiple PRs to be merged over time using the same amendment.
* fixup! [FOLD] Change InvariantsV1_1 to unsupported
* [FOLD] Update and clarify some comments. No code changes.
* Move CMake directory
* Rearrange sources
* Rewrite includes
* Recompute loops
* Fix merge issue and formatting
---------
Co-authored-by: Pretty Printer <cpp@ripple.com>
This amendment, `fixPreviousTxnID`, adds `PreviousTxnID` and
`PreviousTxnLgrSequence` as fields to all ledger objects that did
not already have them included (`DirectoryNode`, `Amendments`,
`FeeSettings`, `NegativeUNL`, and `AMM`). This makes it much easier
to go through the history of these ledger objects.
* Introduces amendment `XRPFees`
* Convert fee voting and protocol messages to use XRPAmounts
* Includes Validations, Change transactions, the "Fees" ledger object,
and subscription messages
* Improve handling of 0 drop reference fee with TxQ. For use with networks that do not want to require fees
* Note that fee escalation logic is still in place, which may cause the
open ledger fee to rise if the network is busy. 0 drop transactions
will still queue, and fee escalation can be effectively disabled by
modifying the configuration on all nodes
* Change default network reserves to match Mainnet
* Name the new SFields *Drops (not *XRP)
* Reserve SField IDs for Hooks
* Clarify comments explaining the ttFEE transaction field validation
A few unit tests have historically generated a lot of noise
to the console from log writes. This noise was not useful
and made it harder to locate actual test failures.
By changing the log level of these tests from
- severities::kError to
- severities::kDisabled
it was possible to remove that noise coming from the logs.
A recent version of clang notes a number of places in range
for loops where the code base was making unnecessary copies
or using const lvalue references to extend lifetimes. This
fixes the places that clang identified.
- 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.
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.
Remove the implicit conversion from int64 to XRPAmount. The motivation for this
was noticing that many calls to `to_string` with an integer parameter type were
calling the wrong `to_string` function. Since the calls were not prefixed with
`std::`, and there is no ADL to call `std::to_string`, this was converting the
int to an `XRPAmount` and calling `to_string(XRPAmount)`.
Since `to_string(XRPAmount)` did the same thing as `to_string(int)` this error
went undetected.
The XRP Ledger utilizes an account model. Unlike systems based on a UTXO
model, XRP Ledger accounts are first-class objects. This design choice
allows the XRP Ledger to offer rich functionality, including the ability
to own objects (offers, escrows, checks, signer lists) as well as other
advanced features, such as key rotation and configurable multi-signing
without needing to change a destination address.
The trade-off is that accounts must be stored on ledger. The XRP Ledger
applies reserve requirements, in XRP, to protect the shared global ledger
from growing excessively large as the result of spam or malicious usage.
Prior to this commit, accounts had been permanent objects; once created,
they could never be deleted.
This commit introduces a new amendment "DeletableAccounts" which, if
enabled, will allow account objects to be deleted by executing the new
"AccountDelete" transaction. Any funds remaining in the account will
be transferred to an account specified in the deletion transaction.
The amendment changes the mechanics of account creation; previously
a new account would have an initial sequence number of 1. Accounts
created after the amendment will have an initial sequence number that
is equal to the ledger in which the account was created.
Accounts can only be deleted if they are not associated with any
obligations (like RippleStates, Escrows, or PayChannels) and if the
current ledger sequence number exceeds the account's sequence number
by at least 256 so that, if recreated, the account can be protected
from transaction replay.
At this point all of the jss::* names are defined in the same
file. That file has been named JsonFields.h. That file name
has little to do with either JsonStaticStrings (which is what
jss is short for) or with jss. The file is renamed to jss.h
so the file name better reflects what the file contains.
All includes of that file are fixed. A few include order
issues are tidied up along the way.