Fixes: RIPD-1574
Alias beast address classes to the asio equivalents. Adjust users of
address classes accordingly. Fix resolver class so that it can support
ipv6 addresses. Make unit tests use ipv6 localhost network. Extend
endpoint peer message to support string endpoint
representations while also supporting the existing fields (both are
optional/repeated types). Expand test for Livecache and Endpoint.
Workaround some false positive ipaddr tests on windows (asio bug?)
Replaced usage of address::from_string(deprecated) with free function
make_address. Identified a remaining use of v4 address type and
replaced with the more appropriate IPEndpoint type (rpc_ip cmdline
option). Add CLI flag for using ipv4 with unit tests.
Release Notes
-------------
The optional rpc_port command line flag is deprecated. The rpc_ip
parameter now works as documented and accepts ip and port combined.
The lsfDepositAuth flag limits the AccountIDs that can deposit into
the account that has the flag set. The original design only
allowed deposits to complete if the account with the flag set also
signed the transaction that caused the deposit.
The DepositPreauth ledger type allows an account with the
lsfDepositAuth flag set to preauthorize additional accounts.
This preauthorization allows them to sign deposits as well. An
account can add DepositPreauth objects to the ledger (and remove
them as well) using the DepositPreauth transaction.
* Tally and duration counters for Job Queue tasks and RPC calls
optionally rendered by server_info and server_state, and
optionally printed to a distinct log file.
- Tally each Job Queue task as it is queued, starts, and
finishes running. Track total duration queued and running.
- Tally each RPC call as it starts and either finishes
successfully or throws an exception. Track total running
duration for each.
* Track currently executing Job Queue tasks and RPC methods
along with durations.
* Json-formatted performance log file written by a dedicated
thread, for above-described data.
* New optional parameter, "counters", for server_info and
server_state. If set, render Job Queue and RPC call counters
as well as currently executing tasks.
* New configuration section, "[perf]", to optionally control
performance logging to a file.
* Support optional sub-second periods when rendering human-readable
time points.
* The compiler can provide many non-explicit constructors for
aggregate types. This is sometimes desired, but it can
happen accidentally, resulting in run-time errors.
* This commit assures that no types are aggregates unless existing
code is using aggregate initialization.
For the functions defined in <ctype.h> the C standard requires
that the value of the int argument be in the range of an
unsigned char, or be EOF. Violation of this requirement
results in undefined behavior.
* RIPD-1617, RIPD-1619, RIPD-1621:
Verify serialized public keys more strictly before
using them.
* RIPD-1618:
* Simplify the base58 decoder logic.
* Reduce the complexity of the base58 encoder and
eliminate a potential out-of-bounds memory access.
* Improve type safety by using an `enum class` to
enforce strict type checking for token types.
* RIPD-1616:
Avoid calling `memcpy` with a null pointer even if the
size is specified as zero, since it results in undefined
behavior.
Acknowledgements:
Ripple thanks Guido Vranken for responsibly disclosing these
issues.
Bug Bounties and Responsible Disclosures:
We welcome reviews of the rippled code and urge researchers
to responsibly disclose any issues that they may find. For
more on Ripple's Bug Bounty program, please visit:
https://ripple.com/bug-bounty
* Rename isArray to isArrayOrNull
* Rename isObject to isObjectOrNull
* Introduce isArray and isObject
* Change as many uses of isArrayorNull to isArray as possible
* Change as many uses of isObjectorNull to isObject as possible
* Reject null JSON arrays for subscribe and unsubscribe
* This change passes detailed error messages from the JSON parser
on the server side, back to the client for inclusion into the
reply's error message.
* Errors originating from the server's inability to parse are
reclassified from rpcINTERNAL to rpcINVALID_PARAMS.
* Null json values can be objects or arrays.
* json arrays are now interpreted as batch commands.
* json objects are single commands.
* null jsons are ambiguous as to whether they are single or batch
commands and should be avoided.
Previously if you mistyped the "submit_multisigned" command as
"submit_multisign", the returned message was "Internal error". Not
very helpful. It turns out this was caused by a small amount of
code in RPCCall.cpp. Removing that code improves two situations:
1. It improves the situation with a mistyped command. Now the
command returns "Unknown method" and provides the string of
the mistyped command.
2. The "transaction_entry", if properly entered in its command
line form, would fire an assert. That assert is now removed.
In the process, it was discovered that the command line form of
the "transaction_entry" command has not worked correctly for at
least a year. Therefore support for that the command line form
of "transaction_entry" is added along with appropriate unit
tests.
* Can be exercised from the command line with json2
* Rewrite Env::do_rpc to call the same code as
rpc from the command line. This puts rpc
handling logic in one place.
If the JobQueue is used during shutdown then those Jobs may access
Stoppables after they have already stopped. This violates the
preconditions of Stoppables and may lead to undefined behavior.
The solution taken here is to reference count all Jobs in the
JobQueue. At stop time all Jobs already in the JobQueue are
allowed to run to completion, but no further Jobs are allowed
into the JobQueue.
If a Job is rejected from the JobQueue (because we are stopping),
then JobQueue::addJob() returns false, so the caller can make any
necessary adjustments.
A full ledger on the production Ripple network could
exceed the default maximum reply size for the
HTTPClient code. Remove the reply size maximum for
responses that include a Content-Length header.
* Force jtx to request/receive the 2.0 API
* Force the JSON and WebSocket tests to use 2.0 API
* This specifically allows the Websocket to create 2.0 json/ripple
and get back a 2.0 response.
* Add test for malformed json2
* Add check for parse failure
* Add check for params to be in array form.
* Correct type-o discovered in tests due to stricter checking.
* Add API version to the WSClient & JSONRPCClient test
* Update source.dox with more headers
A recent commit (0d0227e744a81746714dee71c4c2c63d41e3e691) broke the
parser for the rpc command `account_lines` such that an empty
string ("") was no longer required for the second parameter. This commit
fixes that bug.
Note the empty peer field string requirement only applies to the rippled
command line. It can be comitted with a ledger via HTTP or WebSocket.
Payment channels permit off-ledger checkpoints of XRP payments flowing
in a single direction. A channel sequesters the owner's XRP in its own
ledger entry. The owner can authorize the recipient to claim up to a
give balance by giving the receiver a signed message (off-ledger). The
recipient can use this signed message to claim any unpaid balance while
the channel remains open. The owner can top off the line as needed. If
the channel has not paid out all its funds, the owner must wait out a
delay to close the channel to give the recipient a chance to supply any
claims. The recipient can close the channel at any time. Any transaction
that touches the channel after the expiration time will close the
channel. The total amount paid increases monotonically as newer claims
are issued. When the channel is closed any remaining balance is returned
to the owner. Channels are intended to permit intermittent off-ledger
settlement of ILP trust lines as balances get substantial. For
bidirectional channels, a payment channel can be used in each direction.
Replace Journal public data members with member function accessors
in order to make Journal lighter weight. The change makes a
Journal cheaper to pass by value.
Also add missing stream checks (e.g., calls to JLOG) to avoid
text processing that ultimately will not be stored in the log.