## Description
Internalize some libs. This reduces the amount ot public API tendermint is supporting. The moved libraries are mainly ones that are used within Tendermint-core.
This cleans up the `Router` code and adds a bunch of tests. These sorts of systems are a real pain to test, since they have a bunch of asynchronous goroutines living their own lives, so the test coverage is decent but not fantastic. Luckily we've been able to move all of the complex peer management and transport logic outside of the router, as synchronous components that are much easier to test, so the core router logic is fairly small and simple.
This also provides some initial test tooling in `p2p/p2ptest` that automatically sets up in-memory networks and channels for use in integration tests. It also includes channel-oriented test asserters in `p2p/p2ptest/require.go`, but these have primarily been written for router testing and should probably be adapted or extended for reactor testing.
## Description
Fixes the data race in usage of `WaitGroup`. Specifically, the case where we invoke `Wait` _before_ the first delta `Add` call when the current waitgroup counter is zero. See https://golang.org/pkg/sync/#WaitGroup.Add.
Still not sure how this manifests itself in a test since the reactor has to be stopped virtually immediately after being started (I think?).
Regardless, this is the appropriate fix.
closes: #5968
blockchain/vX reactor priority was decreased because during the normal operation
(i.e. when the node is not fast syncing) blockchain priority can't be
the same as consensus reactor priority. Otherwise, it's theoretically possible to
slow down consensus by constantly requesting blocks from the node.
NOTE: ideally blockchain/vX reactor priority would be dynamic. e.g. when
the node is fast syncing, the priority is 10 (max), but when it's done
fast syncing - the priority gets decreased to 5 (only to serve blocks
for other nodes). But it's not possible now, therefore I decided to
focus on the normal operation (priority = 5).
evidence and consensus critical messages are more important than
the mempool ones, hence priorities are bumped by 1 (from 5 to 6).
statesync reactor priority was changed from 1 to 5 to be the same as
blockchain/vX priority.
Refs https://github.com/tendermint/tendermint/issues/5816
The `NodeInfo` interface does not appear to serve any purpose at all, so I removed it and renamed the `DefaultNodeInfo` struct to `NodeInfo` (including the Protobuf representations). Let me know if this is actually needed for anything.
Only the Protobuf rename is listed in the changelog, since we do not officially support API stability of the `p2p` package (according to `README.md`). The on-wire protocol remains compatible.
Closes#5766
* memoize the scSchedulerFail error to avoid printing it every scheduleFreq
* blockchain/v2: modify switchIO funcs to accept peer instead of peerID
After a reactor has failed to parse an incoming message, it shouldn't output the "bad" data into the logs, as that data is unfiltered and could have anything in it. (We also don't think this information is helpful to have in the logs anyways.)
I introduced a new variable - syncEnded, which is now used to prevent
sending new events to channels (which would block otherwise) if reactor
is finished syncing
Closes#4591
Closes#5444
Now we record the fact that a peer does not have a requested block and later use this information to make a new request for the same block from another peer.
Before: scheduler receives psBlockProcessed event, but does not mark block as processed because peer timed out (or was removed for other reasons) and all associated blocks were rescheduled.
After: scheduler receives psBlockProcessed event and marks block as processed in any case (even if peer who provided this block errors).
Closes#5387
When a peer is stopped due to some network issue, the Reactor calls scheduler#handleRemovePeer, which removes the peer from the scheduler. BUT the peer stays in the processor, which sometimes could lead to "duplicate block enqueued by processor" panic WHEN the same block is requested by the scheduler again from a different peer. The solution is to return scPeerError, which will be propagated to the processor. The processor will clean up the blocks associated with the peer in purgePeer.
Closes#5513, #5517
## Description
Add simple `NoBlockResponse` handling to blockchain reactor v1. I tested before and after with erik's e2e testing and was not able to reproduce the inability to sync after the changes were applied
Closes: #5394
## Description
Check block protocol version in header validate basic.
I tried searching for where we check the P2P protocol version but was unable to find it. When we check compatibility with a node we check we both have the same block protocol and are on the same network, but we do not check if we are on the same P2P protocol. It makes sense if there is a handshake change because we would not be able to establish a secure connection, but a p2p protocol version bump may be because of a p2p message change, which would go unnoticed until that message is sent over the wire. Is this purposeful?
Closes: #4790
## Description
Add test vectors for all reactors
- [x] state-sync
- [x] privval
- [x] mempool
- [x] p2p
- [x] evidence
- [ ] light?
this PR is primarily oriented at testvectors for things going over the wire. should we expand the testvectors into types as well?
Closes: #XXX
Fixes#5192.
@liamsi Can you verify that the test vectors match the Rust implementation? I updated `ProofsFromByteSlices()` as well, anything else that should be updated?
While working on tendermint my colleague @jinmannwong fixed a few of the unit tests that we found to be flaky in our CI. We thought that you might find this useful, see below for comments.