This contains two major changes:
- Remove the legacy test logging method, and just explicitly call the
noop logger. This is just to make the test logging behavior more
coherent and clear.
- Move the logging in the light package from the testing.T logger to
the noop logger. It's really the case that we very rarely need/want
to consider test logs unless we're doing reproductions and running a
narrow set of tests.
In most cases, I (for one) prefer to run in verbose mode so I can
watch progress of tests, but I basically never need to consider
logs. If I do want to see logs, then I can edit in the testing.T
logger locally (which is what you have to do today, anyway.)
* Allow for zero witness providers
* Verify provider duplicates, fix tests
* Add duplicate provider ID to the error
* Return error on attempt to remove last witness
* Verify duplicates when restoring from store
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 continues the push of plumbing contexts through tendermint. I
attempted to find all goroutines in the production code (non-test) and
made sure that these threads would exit when their contexts were
canceled, and I believe this PR does that.
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.
This pull request removes the homegrown mocks in `light/provider/mock` in favor of mockery mocks.
Adds a simple benchmark only mock to avoid the overhead of `reflection` that `mockery` incurs.
part of #5274
Introduces heuristics that track the amount of no responses or unavailable blocks a provider has for more robust provider handling by the light client. Use concurrent calls to all witnesses when a new primary is needed.
Closes#4934
* light: do not compare trusted header w/ witnesses
we don't have trusted state to bisect from
* check header before checking height
otherwise you can get nil panic
fix bug so that PotentialAmnesiaEvidence is being gossiped
handle inbound amnesia evidence correctly
add method to check if potential amnesia evidence is on trial
fix a bug with the height when we upgrade to amnesia evidence
change evidence to using just pointers.
More logging in the evidence module
Co-authored-by: Marko <marbar3778@yahoo.com>
- Move core stateless validation of the Header type to a ValidateBasic method.
- Call header.ValidateBasic during a SignedHeader validation.
- Call header.ValidateBasic during a PhantomValidatorEvidence validation.
- Call header.ValidateBasic during a LunaticValidatorEvidence validation.
lite tests are skipped since the package is deprecated, no need to waste time on it
closes: #4572
Co-authored-by: Anton Kaliaev <anton.kalyaev@gmail.com>
Closes: #4530
This PR contains logic for both submitting an evidence by the light client (lite2 package) and receiving it on the Tendermint side (/broadcast_evidence RPC and/or EvidenceReactor#Receive). Upon receiving the ConflictingHeadersEvidence (introduced by this PR), the Tendermint validates it, then breaks it down into smaller pieces (DuplicateVoteEvidence, LunaticValidatorEvidence, PhantomValidatorEvidence, PotentialAmnesiaEvidence). Afterwards, each piece of evidence is verified against the state of the full node and added to the pool, from which it's reaped upon block creation.
* rpc/client: do not pass height param if height ptr is nil
* rpc/core: validate incoming evidence!
* only accept ConflictingHeadersEvidence if one
of the headers is committed from this full node's perspective
This simplifies the code. Plus, if there are multiple forks, we'll
likely to receive multiple ConflictingHeadersEvidence anyway.
* swap CommitSig with Vote in LunaticValidatorEvidence
Vote is needed to validate signature
* no need to embed client
http is a provider and should not be used as a client
Closes: #4537
Uses SignedHeaderBefore to find header before unverified header and then bisection to verify the header. Only when header is between first and last trusted header height else if before the first trusted header height then regular backwards verification is used.
error itself is not enough since it only signals if there were any
errors. Either (types.SignedHeader) or (success bool) is needed to
indicate the status of the operation. Returning a header is optimal
since most of the clients will want to get a newly verified header
anyway.
We first introduced auto-update as a separate struct AutoClient, which
was wrapping Client and calling Update periodically.
// AutoClient can auto update itself by fetching headers every N seconds.
type AutoClient struct {
base *Client
updatePeriod time.Duration
quit chan struct{}
trustedHeaders chan *types.SignedHeader
errs chan error
}
// NewAutoClient creates a new client and starts a polling goroutine.
func NewAutoClient(base *Client, updatePeriod time.Duration) *AutoClient {
c := &AutoClient{
base: base,
updatePeriod: updatePeriod,
quit: make(chan struct{}),
trustedHeaders: make(chan *types.SignedHeader),
errs: make(chan error),
}
go c.autoUpdate()
return c
}
// TrustedHeaders returns a channel onto which new trusted headers are posted.
func (c *AutoClient) TrustedHeaders() <-chan *types.SignedHeader {
return c.trustedHeaders
}
// Err returns a channel onto which errors are posted.
func (c *AutoClient) Errs() <-chan error {
return c.errs
}
// Stop stops the client.
func (c *AutoClient) Stop() {
close(c.quit)
}
func (c *AutoClient) autoUpdate() {
ticker := time.NewTicker(c.updatePeriod)
defer ticker.Stop()
for {
select {
case <-ticker.C:
lastTrustedHeight, err := c.base.LastTrustedHeight()
if err != nil {
c.errs <- err
continue
}
if lastTrustedHeight == -1 {
// no headers yet => wait
continue
}
newTrustedHeader, err := c.base.Update(time.Now())
if err != nil {
c.errs <- err
continue
}
if newTrustedHeader != nil {
c.trustedHeaders <- newTrustedHeader
}
case <-c.quit:
return
}
}
}
Later we merged it into the Client itself with the assumption that most clients will want it.
But now I am not sure. Neither IBC nor cosmos/relayer are using it. It increases complexity (Start/Stop methods).
That said, I think it makes sense to remove it until we see a need for it (until we better understand usage behavior). We can always introduce it later 😅. Maybe in the form of AutoClient.
* lite2: fix tendermint lite sub command
- better logging
- chainID as an argument
- more examples
* one more log msg
* lite2: fire update right away after start
* turn off auto update in verification tests
Co-authored-by: mergify[bot] <37929162+mergify[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
closes#4469
Improved speed of cleanup by using SignedHeaderAfter instead of TrustedHeader to jump from header to header.
Prune() is now called when a new header and validator set are saved and is a function dealt by the database itself
## Commits:
* prune headers and vals
* modified cleanup and tests
* fixes after my own review
* implement Prune func
* make db ops concurrently safe
* use Iterator in SignedHeaderAfter
we should iterate from height+1, not from the end!
* simplify cleanup
Co-authored-by: Anton Kaliaev <anton.kalyaev@gmail.com>
closes: #4455
Verifying backwards checks that the trustedHeader hasn't expired both before and after the loop in case of verifying many headers (a longer operation), but not during the loop itself.
TrustedHeader() no longer checks whether the header saved in the store has expired.
Tests have been updated to reflect the changes
## Commits:
* verify headers backwards out of trust period
* removed expiration check in trusted header func
* modified tests to reflect changes
* wrote new tests for backwards verification
* modified TrustedHeader and TrustedValSet functions
* condensed test functions
* condensed test functions further
* fix build error
* update doc
* add comments
* remove unnecessary declaration
* extract latestHeight check into a separate func
Co-authored-by: Callum Waters <cmwaters19@gmail.com>
Before we were storing trustedHeader (height=1) and trustedNextVals
(height=2).
After this change, we will be storing trustedHeader (height=1) and
trustedVals (height=1). This a) simplifies the code b) fixes#4399
inconsistent pairing issue c) gives a relayer access to the current
validator set #4470.
The only downside is more jumps during bisection. If validator set
changes between trustedHeader and the next header (by 2/3 or more), the
light client will be forced to download the next header and check that
2/3+ signed the transition. But we don't expect validator set change too
much and too often, so it's an acceptable compromise.
Closes#4470 and #4399
closes#4426
The sequence and bisection methods no longer save the intermediate headers and validator sets that they require to verify a currently untrusted header.
## Commits:
* sequence and bisection don't save intermediate headers and vals
* check the next validator hash matches the header
* check expired header at start of backwards verification
* added tests
* handled cleanup warning
* lint fix
* removed redundant code
* tweaked minor errors
* avoided premature trusting of nextVals
* fix test error
* updated trustedHeader and Vals together
* fixed bisection error
* fixed sequence error for different vals and made test
* fixes after my own review
* reorder vars to be consistent
with the rest of the code
Co-authored-by: Anton Kaliaev <anton.kalyaev@gmail.com>
closes#4413 and #4419
When VerifyHeaderAtHeight() is called, TrustedHeader is initially run to check if the header has already been verified and returns the Header.
If the new header height is less than the lite clients latestTrustedHeader height, than backwards verification is performed else either sequence or bisection
Refactored a test to reflect the changes
* use trustedHeader func for already verified Headers
* remove fetch missing header from TrustedHeader
* check for already trusted Header in VerifyHeaderAtHeight
* replace updateTrustedHeaderAndVals to updateTrustedHeaderAndNextVals
* rename trustedHeader and trustedNextVals
* refactored backwards and included it in VerifyHeader
* cleaned up test to match changes
* lite2: fixes after my own review
Refs https://github.com/tendermint/tendermint/pull/4428#pullrequestreview-361730169
* fix ineffectual assignment
* lite2: check that header exists in VerifyHeader
* extract function
Co-authored-by: Anton Kaliaev <anton.kalyaev@gmail.com>
refs #4329
As opposed to using recursion to implement the bisection method of verifying a header, which could have problems with memory allocation (especially for smaller devices), the bisection algorithm now uses a for loop.
* modified bisection to loop
* made lint changes
* made lint changes
* move note to VerifyHeader
since it applies both for sequence and bisection
* test bisection jumps to header signed by 1/3+
of old validator set
* update labels in debug log calls
* copy tc
Co-authored-by: Anton Kaliaev <anton.kalyaev@gmail.com>
Closes#4385
* extract TrustOptions into its own file
* print trusted hash before asking whenever to rollback or not
so the user could reset the light client with the trusted header
* do not return an error if rollback is aborted
reason: we trust the old header presumably, so can continue from it.
* add note about time of initial header
* improve logging and add comments
* cross-check newHeader after LC verified it
* check if header is not nil
so we don't crash on the next line
* remove witness if it sends us incorrect header
* require at least one witness
* fix build and tests
* rename tests and assert for specific error
* wrote a test
* fix linter errors
* only check 1/3 if headers diverge