Escrow replaces the existing SusPay implementation with improved
code that also adds hashlock support to escrow payments, making
RCL ILP enabled.
The new functionality is under the `Escrow` amendment, which
supersedes and replaces the `SusPay` amendment.
This commit also deprecates the `CryptoConditions` amendment
which is replaced by the `CryptoConditionSuite` amendment which,
once enabled, will allow use of cryptoconditions others than
hashlocks.
Make LEDGER_MIN_CONSENSUS slightly smaller and not a multiple of
LEDGER_GRANULARITY to avoid fluctuations in the heartbeat timer needlessly
delaying consensus.
All uses of beast::Thread were previously removed from the code
base, so beast::Thread is removed. One piece of beast::Thread
needed to be preserved: the ability to set the current thread's
name. So there's now a beast::CurrentThreadName that allows the
current thread's name to be set and returned.
Thread naming is also cleaned up a bit. ThreadName.h and .cpp
are removed since beast::CurrentThreadName does a better job.
ThreadEntry is also removed, but its terminateHandler() is
preserved in TerminateHandler.cpp. The revised terminateHandler()
uses beast::CurrentThreadName to recover the name of the running
thread.
Finally, the NO_LOG_UNHANDLED_EXCEPTIONS #define is removed since
it was discovered that the MacOS debugger preserves the stack
of the original throw even if the terminateHandler() rethrows.
The deferred credits table can compute a balance that's different from the
ledger balance.
Syntax:
A number written with no decimal means that number exactly. I.e. "12". A number
written with a decimal means that number has a non-zero digit at the lowest
order digit. I.e. "12.XX" means a number like "12.00000000000005"
Consider the following payment:
alice (USD) -> USD/XRP -> (XRP) Bob
Alice initially has 12.XX USD in her account.
The strand is used to debit alice the following amounts:
1) Debit alice 5
2) Debit alice 0.XX
3) Debit alice 3.XX
The next time the strand is explored, alice has a USD/XRP offer on the books,
and her account is credited:
1) Credit alice 20
When the beginning of the strand is reached, consider what happens when alice is
a limiting step. Calculate how much we can get out the step. According to the
deferred credit table this is:
12.XX - (5 + 0.XX + 3.XX)
This is also limited by alice's balance, which is large thanks to the credit she
received in the book step.
Now that the step has calculated how much we can get out, throw out the
sandbox (the one with the credit), and re-execute. However, the following error
occurs. We asked for 12.XX - (5 + 0.XX + 3.XX). However, the ledger has
calculated that alice has:
((12.XX - 5) - 0.XX) - 3.XX
That's a problem, because that number is smaller. Notice that there are two
precision losing operations in the deferred credits table:
1) The 5 + 0.XX step
2) The 12.XX - (total of debits). (Notice total of debits is < 10)
However, there is only one precision losing operation in the ledger calculation:
1) (Subtotal of 12.XX-5) - 0.XX
That means the calculation for the ledger results in a number that's smaller
than the deferred credits. Flow detects this as a re-execution error.
Allow manifest revoking validator keys to be stored in a separate
[validator_key_revocation] config field, so the validator can run
again with new keys and token.
Validator lists from configured remote sites are fetched at a regular
interval. Fetched lists are expected to be in JSON format and contain the
following fields:
* "manifest": Base64-encoded serialization of a manifest containing the
validator publisher's master and signing public keys.
* "blob": Base64-encoded JSON string containing a "sequence",
"expiration" and "validators" field. "expiration" contains the Ripple
timestamp (seconds since January 1st, 2000 (00:00 UTC)) for when the
list expires. "validators" contains an array of objects with a
"validation_public_key" field.
* "signature": Hex-encoded signature of the blob using the publisher's
signing key.
* "version": 1
* "refreshInterval" (optional)
Instead of specifying a static list of trusted validators in the config
or validators file, the configuration can now include trusted validator
list publisher keys.
The trusted validator list and quorum are now reset each consensus
round using the latest validator lists and the list of recent
validations seen. The minimum validation quorum is now only
configurable via the command line.
Avoid custom overflow code; simply use 128-bit math to
maintain precision and return a saturated 64-bit value
as the final result.
Disallow use of negative values in the `fee_mult_max`
and `fee_div_max` fields. This change could potentially
cause submissions with negative values that would have
previously succeeded to now fail.