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
* 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
## Summary
This pull request adds a default set of values to the new Synchrony parameters. These values were chosen by after observation of three live networks: Emoney, Osmosis, and the Cosmos Hub.
For the default Precision value, `505ms` was selected. The reasoning for this is summarized in https://github.com/tendermint/tendermint/issues/7724
For each observed chain, an experimental Message Delay was collected over a 24 hour period and an average over this period was calculated using this data. Values over 10s were considered outliers and treated separately for the average since the majority of observations were far below 10s. The message delay was calculated both for the quorum and the 'full' prevote. Description of the technique for collecting the experimental values can found in #7202. This value is calculated only using timestamps given by processes on the network, so large variation in values is almost certainly due to clock skew among the validator set.
`12s` is proposed for the default MessageDelay value. This value would easily accomodates all non-outlier values, allowing even E-money's 4.25s value to be valid. This would also allow some validators with skewed clocks to still participate without allowing for huge variation in the timestamps produced by the network. Additionally, for the currently listed use-cases of PBTS, such as unbonding period, and light client trust period, the current bounds for these are in weeks. Adding a few seconds of tolerance by default is therefore unlikely to have serious side-effects.
## Data
### Cosmos Hub
Observation Period: 2022-02-03 20:22-2022-02-04 20:22
Avg Full Prevote Message Delay: 1.27s
Outliers: 11s,13s,50s,106s,144s
Total Outlier Heights: 86
Avg Quorum Prevote Message Delay: .77s
Outliers: 10s,14s,107s,144s
Total Outlier Heights: 617
Total heights: 11528
### Osmosis
Observation Period: 2022-01-29 20:26-2022-01-28 20:26
Avg Quorum Prevote Message Delay: .46s
Outliers: 21s,50s
Total Outlier Heights: 26
NOTE: During the observation period, a 'full' prevote was not observed.
Total heights: 13983
### E-Money
Observation Period: 2022-02-07 04:29-2022-02-08 04:29
Avg Full Prevote Message Delay: 4.25s
Outliers: 12s,15s,39s
Total Outlier Heights: 128
Avg Quorum Prevote Message Delay: .20s
Outliers: 28s
Total Outlier Heights: 15
Total heights: 3791
* 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.
This change adds logic to double the message delay bound after every 10 rounds. Alternatives to this somewhat magic number were discussed. Specifically, whether or not to make '10' modifiable as a parameter was discussed. Since this behavior only exists to ensure liveness in the case that these values were poorly chosen to begin with, a method to configure this value was not created. Chains that notice many 'untimely' rounds per the [relevant metric](https://github.com/tendermint/tendermint/pull/7709) are expected to take action to increase the configured message delay to more accurately match the conditions of the network.
closes: https://github.com/tendermint/spec/issues/371
This pull request merges in the changes for implementing Proposer-based timestamps into `master`. The power was primarily being done in the `wb/proposer-based-timestamps` branch, with changes being merged into that branch during development. This pull request represents an amalgamation of the changes made into that development branch. All of the changes that were placed into that branch have been cleanly rebased on top of the latest `master`. The changes compile and the tests pass insofar as our tests in general pass.
### Note To Reviewers
These changes have been extensively reviewed during development. There is not much new here. In the interest of making effective use of time, I would recommend against trying to perform a complete audit of the changes presented and instead examine for mistakes that may have occurred during the process of rebasing the changes. I gave the complete change set a first pass for any issues, but additional eyes would be very appreciated.
In sum, this change set does the following:
closes#6942
merges in #6849
This is the interface shared by types that can be used as event data in, for
example, subscriptions via the RPC.
To be compatible with the RPC service, data need to support JSON encoding.
Require this as part of the interface.
Remove the pubsub.Query interface and instead use the concrete query type.
Nothing uses any other implementation but pubsub/query.
* query: remove the error from the Matches method
* Update all usage.
There are no further uses of this package anywhere in Tendermint.
All the uses in the Cosmos SDK are for types that now work correctly with the
standard encoding/json package.
The main change here is to use encoding/json to encode and decode RPC
parameters, rather than the custom tmjson package. This includes:
- Update the HTTP POST handler parameter handling.
- Add field tags to 64-bit integer types to get string encoding (to match amino/tmjson).
- Add marshalers to struct types that mention interfaces.
- Inject wrappers to decode interface arguments in RPC handlers.
*light: rpc /status returns status of light client ; code refactoring
light: moved lightClientInfo into light.go, renamed String to ID
test/e2e: Return light client trusted height instead of SyncInfo trusted height
test/e2e/start.go: Not waiting for light client to catch up in tests. Removed querying of syncInfo in start if the node is a light node
* light: Removed call to primary /status. Added trustedPeriod to light info
* light/provider: added ID function to return IP of primary and witnesses
* light/provider/http/http_test: renamed String() to ID()
## What does this pull request do?
This pull requests adds two metrics intended for use in calculating an experimental value for `MessageDelay`.
The metrics are as follows:
```
# HELP tendermint_consensus_complete_prevote_message_delay Difference in seconds between the proposal timestamp and the timestamp of the prevote that achieved 100% of the voting power in the prevote step.
# TYPE tendermint_consensus_complete_prevote_message_delay gauge
tendermint_consensus_complete_prevote_message_delay{chain_id="test-chain-aZbwF1"} 0.013025505
# HELP tendermint_consensus_quorum_prevote_message_delay Difference in seconds between the proposal timestamp and the timestamp of the prevote that achieved a quorum in the prevote step.
# TYPE tendermint_consensus_quorum_prevote_message_delay gauge
tendermint_consensus_quorum_prevote_message_delay{chain_id="test-chain-aZbwF1"} 0.013025505
```
## Why this change?
For more information on what these metrics are calculating, see #7202. The aim is to merge to backport these metrics to v0.34 and run nodes on a few popular chains with these metrics to determine the experimental values for `MessageDelay` on these popular chains and use these to select our default `SynchronyParams.MessageDelay` value.
## Why Gauges for the metrics?
Gauges allow us to overwrite the metric on each successive observation. We can then capture these metrics over time to track the highest and lowest observed value.
Add package jsontypes that implements a subset of the custom libs/json
package. Specifically it handles encoding and decoding of interface types
wrapped in "tagged" JSON objects. It omits the deep reflection on arbitrary
types, preserving only the handling of type tags wrapper encoding.
- Register interface types (Evidence, PubKey, PrivKey) for tagged encoding.
- Update the existing implementations to satisfy the type.
- Register those types with the jsontypes registry.
- Add string tags to 64-bit integer fields where needed.
- Add marshalers to structs that export interface-typed fields.
Where possible, replace uses of the custom JSON library with the standard
library. The custom library treats interface and unnamed lteral types
differently, so this change avoids those even where it would probably be safe
to switch them.
These tests use a deterministic and unseeded random source to generate
non-colliding filenames for testing. When testing locally, this means tests are
not hermetic from one run to the next.
Use proper temp directories, and clean up after they're done.
Noticed in profiles that invoking *VoteSignBytes always created a
bytes.Buffer, then discarded it inside protoio.MarshalDelimited.
I dug further and examined the call paths and noticed that we
unconditionally create the bytes.Buffer, even though we might
have proto messages (in the common case) that implement
MarshalTo([]byte), and invoked varintWriter. Instead by inlining
this case, we skip a bunch of allocations and CPU cycles,
which then reflects properly on all calling functions. Here
are the benchmark results:
```shell
$ benchstat before.txt after.txt
name old time/op new time/op delta
types.VoteSignBytes-8 705ns ± 3% 573ns ± 6% -18.74% (p=0.000 n=18+20)
types.CommitVoteSignBytes-8 8.15µs ± 9% 6.81µs ± 4% -16.51% (p=0.000 n=20+19)
protoio.MarshalDelimitedWithMarshalTo-8 788ns ± 8% 772ns ± 3% -2.01% (p=0.050 n=20+20)
protoio.MarshalDelimitedNoMarshalTo-8 989ns ± 4% 845ns ± 2% -14.51% (p=0.000 n=20+18)
name old alloc/op new alloc/op delta
types.VoteSignBytes-8 792B ± 0% 600B ± 0% -24.24% (p=0.000 n=20+20)
types.CommitVoteSignBytes-8 9.52kB ± 0% 7.60kB ± 0% -20.17% (p=0.000 n=20+20)
protoio.MarshalDelimitedNoMarshalTo-8 808B ± 0% 440B ± 0% -45.54% (p=0.000 n=20+20)
name old allocs/op new allocs/op delta
types.VoteSignBytes-8 13.0 ± 0% 10.0 ± 0% -23.08% (p=0.000 n=20+20)
types.CommitVoteSignBytes-8 140 ± 0% 110 ± 0% -21.43% (p=0.000 n=20+20)
protoio.MarshalDelimitedNoMarshalTo-8 10.0 ± 0% 7.0 ± 0% -30.00% (p=0.000 n=20+20)
```
Thanks to Tharsis who tasked me to help them increase TPS and who
are keen on improving Tendermint and efficiency.
Rework the implementation of event query parsing and execution to
improve performance and reduce memory usage.
Previous memory and CPU profiles of the pubsub service showed query
processing as a significant hotspot. While we don't have evidence that
this is visibly hurting users, fixing it is fairly easy and self-contained.
Updates #6439.
Typical benchmark results comparing the original implementation (PEG) with the reworked implementation (Custom):
```
TEST TIME/OP BYTES/OP ALLOCS/OP SPEEDUP MEM SAVING
BenchmarkParsePEG-12 51716 ns 526832 27
BenchmarkParseCustom-12 2167 ns 4616 17 23.8x 99.1%
BenchmarkMatchPEG-12 3086 ns 1097 22
BenchmarkMatchCustom-12 294.2 ns 64 3 10.5x 94.1%
```
Components:
* Add a basic parsing benchmark.
* Move the original query implementation to a subdirectory.
* Add lexical scanner for Query expressions.
* Add a parser for Query expressions.
* Implement query compiler.
* Add test cases based on OpenAPI examples.
* Add MustCompile to replace the original MustParse, and update usage.
This is part of the work described by #7156.
Remove "unbuffered subscriptions" from the pubsub service.
Replace them with a dedicated blocking "observer" mechanism.
Use the observer mechanism for indexing.
Add a SubscribeWithArgs method and deprecate the old Subscribe
method. Remove SubscribeUnbuffered entirely (breaking).
Rework the Subscription interface to eliminate exposed channels.
Subscriptions now use a context to manage lifecycle notifications.
Internalize the eventbus package.
Addresses one of the concerns with #7041.
Provides a mechanism (via the RPC interface) to delete a single transaction, described by its hash, from the mempool. The method returns an error if the transaction cannot be found. Once the transaction is removed it remains in the cache and cannot be resubmitted until the cache is cleared or it expires from the cache.
The code in the Tendermint repository makes heavy use of import aliasing.
This is made necessary by our extensive reuse of common base package names, and
by repetition of similar names across different subdirectories.
Unfortunately we have not been very consistent about which packages we alias in
various circumstances, and the aliases we use vary. In the spirit of the advice
in the style guide and https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/CodeReviewComments#imports,
his change makes an effort to clean up and normalize import aliasing.
This change makes no API or behavioral changes. It is a pure cleanup intended
o help make the code more readable to developers (including myself) trying to
understand what is being imported where.
Only unexported names have been modified, and the changes were generated and
applied mechanically with gofmt -r and comby, respecting the lexical and
syntactic rules of Go. Even so, I did not fix every inconsistency. Where the
changes would be too disruptive, I left it alone.
The principles I followed in this cleanup are:
- Remove aliases that restate the package name.
- Remove aliases where the base package name is unambiguous.
- Move overly-terse abbreviations from the import to the usage site.
- Fix lexical issues (remove underscores, remove capitalization).
- Fix import groupings to more closely match the style guide.
- Group blank (side-effecting) imports and ensure they are commented.
- Add aliases to multiple imports with the same base package name.