Since the goal of reading events at the head of the event log is to satisfy a
subscription style interface, there is no point in allowing head polling with
no wait interval. The pagination case already bypasses long polling, so the
extra option is unneessary.
Set a minimum default long-polling interval for the head case.
Add a test for minimum delay.
This is mostly an extremely small change where I double a somewhat
arbitrarly set timeout from 1m to 2m for an entire test. When I put
these timeouts in the test, they were arbitrary based on my local
performance (which is quite fact,) and I expected that they'd need to
be tweaked in the future.
A big chunk of this PR is reworking a collection of helper functions
that produce somewhat intractable messages when a test fails, so that
the error messages take up less vertical space, hopefully without
losing any debugability.
We're waiting between trying witnesses (which shouldn't be neccessary
because the witnesses shouldn't depend on each other,) and also
between *attempts*, and really the outer sleep should be enough.
This is a little coarse, but the idea is that we'll send information
about the channels a peer has upon the peer-up event that we send to
reactors that we can then use to reject peers (if neeeded) from reactors.
This solves the problem where statesync would hang in test networks
(and presumably real) where we would attempt to statesync from seed
nodes, thereby hanging silently forever.
This change implements the spec for `ProcessProposal`. It first calls the Tendermint block validation logic to check that all of the proposed block fields are well formed and do not violate any of the rules for Tendermint to consider the block valid and then passes the validated block the `ProcessProposal`.
This change also adds additional fixtures to test the change. It adds the `baseMock` types that holds a mock as well as a reference to `BaseApplication`. If the function was not setup by the test on the contained mock Application, the type delegates to the `BaseApplication` and returns what `BaseApplication` returns.
The change also switches the `makeState` helper to take an arg struct so that an ABCI application can be plumbed through when needed.
closes: #7656
* p2p: mconn track last message for pongs
* fix spell
* cr feedback
* test fix part one
* cleanup tests
* fix comment
Co-authored-by: M. J. Fromberger <fromberger@interchain.io>
Add deprecation logs when websocket is enabled
As promised in ADR 075, this causes the node to log (without error) when
websocket transport is enabled, and also when subscribers connect.
This method implements the eventlog extension interface to expose ABCI metadata
to the log for query processing. Only the types that have ABCI events need to
implement this.
- Add an event log to the environment
- Add a sketch of the handler method
- Add an /events RPCFunc to the route map
- Implement query logic
- Subscribe to pubsub if confingured, handle termination
This is the first step in removing the mutex from ABCI applications:
making our test applications hold mutexes, which this does, hopefully
with zero impact. If this lands well, then we can explore deleting the
other mutexes (in the ABCI server and the clients.) While this change
is not user impacting at all, removing the other mutexes *will* be.
In persuit of this, I've changed the KV app somewhat, to put almost
all of the logic in the base application and make the persistent
application mostly be a wrapper on top of that with a different
storage layer.
The previous implementation of the *test* was flaky, and this irons
out some of those problems. The primary assertion that was failing
(less than 1% of the time) was an error on close that I think we
shouldn't care about.
Implement the basic cursor and eventlog types described in ADR 075. Handle
encoding and decoding as strings for compatibility with JSON.
- Add unit tests for the required order and synchronization properties.
- Add hooks for metrics, with one value to be expanded later.
- Update ADR 075 to match the specifics of the implementation so far.
* event: Added Events after evidence validation; evidence: refactored AddEvidence
Added context and Metrics as parameter for the pool constructor
* evidence: pushed event firing into evidence pool and added metrics to represent the size of the evpool
* state: fixed parameters of evpool mock functions
* evidence: added test to confirm events are generated
* Removed obsolete EvidenceEventPublisher interface
* evidence: pool removed error on missing eventbus
Went through #2871, there are several issues, this PR tries to tackle the `HasVoteMessage` with an invalid validator index sent by a bad peer and it prevents the bad vote goes to the peerMsgQueue.
Future work, check other bad message cases and plumbing the reactor errors with the peer manager and then can disconnect the peer sending the bad messages.
When testing rollback feature in the Cosmos SDK, we found that the app hash
in Tendermint after rollback was the value after the latest block, rather than
before it.
Co-authored-by: Callum Waters <cmwaters19@gmail.com>
While I'd hoped to be able to make the socket client less weird, I
think that this is a nice middle ground in terms of improving
readability and removing the vestigal components without breaking
anything or radically changing the underlying assumptions.
In the future we'd want to have requests be identified by a request
ID, and then we could drop the request tracking logic in the client
entirely, and this is protocol breaking. The alternatives aren't
substantively different than the current implementation.
This follows along in the spirit of #7845 but is orthogonal to
removing `CheckTxAsync` (which will come after the previous commit
lands,) so I thought I'd get it out there earlier.
After poking around #7828, I saw the oppertunity for this cleanup,
which I think is both reasonable on its own, and quite low impact, and
removes the math around process start time.
Now that shutdown is handled by contexts in most cases, I think it's
fair to cleanup the way this reactor shuts down. Additionaly there
were a few cases where the `blockSyncOutBridgeCh` was misshandled and
could have lead to a deadlock which I observed in some tests
* Rebased and git-squashed the commits in PR #6546
migrate abci to finalizeBlock
work on abci, proxy and mempool
abciresponse, blok events, indexer, some tests
fix some tests
fix errors
fix errors in abci
fix tests amd errors
* Fixes after rebasing PR#6546
* Restored height to RequestFinalizeBlock & other
* Fixed more UTs
* Fixed kvstore
* More UT fixes
* last TC fixed
* make format
* Update internal/consensus/mempool_test.go
Co-authored-by: William Banfield <4561443+williambanfield@users.noreply.github.com>
* Addressed @williambanfield's comments
* Fixed UTs
* Addressed last comments from @williambanfield
* make format
Co-authored-by: marbar3778 <marbar3778@yahoo.com>
Co-authored-by: William Banfield <4561443+williambanfield@users.noreply.github.com>
Our test cases spew a lot of files and directories around $TMPDIR. Make more
thorough use of the testing package's TempDir methods to ensure these are
cleaned up.
In a few cases, this required plumbing test contexts through existing helper
code. In a couple places an explicit path was required, to work around cases
where we do global setup during a TestMain function. Those cases probably
deserve more thorough cleansing (preferably with fire), but for now I have just
worked around it to keep focused on the cleanup.
To simplify local testing, do not report failures for tests that require Docker
when Docker is not avaliable. Instead, log a warning and skip the tests.
This has no effect in CI, where Docker is installed.
Based on the discussion in #7723, make the CheckTx benchmark exercise
GetEvictableTxs which is one of the critical paths in CheckTx.
After profiling the test, the sorting will occupy 90% of the CPU time in CheckTx.
In the test it doesn't count the influence of the preCheck, postCheck, and
CheckTxAsync when the mempool is full.