Bumps [watchpack](https://github.com/webpack/watchpack) from 2.1.0 to 2.1.1.
<details>
<summary>Release notes</summary>
<p><em>Sourced from <a href="https://github.com/webpack/watchpack/releases">watchpack's releases</a>.</em></p>
<blockquote>
<h2>v2.1.1</h2>
<h1>Bugfix</h1>
<ul>
<li>fix warnings with ENOENT when symlinks are resolved by watchpack</li>
</ul>
</blockquote>
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<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li><a href="f1b5e2da2d"><code>f1b5e2d</code></a> 2.1.1</li>
<li><a href="cbfc11a8d7"><code>cbfc11a</code></a> Merge pull request <a href="https://github-redirect.dependabot.com/webpack/watchpack/issues/188">#188</a> from Aghassi/fix/enoent-throwing</li>
<li><a href="7684df0846"><code>7684df0</code></a> fix: adds ENOENT for non windows errors</li>
<li>See full diff in <a href="https://github.com/webpack/watchpack/compare/v2.1.0...v2.1.1">compare view</a></li>
</ul>
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I got tired of seeing the literal phrase "Closes #XXX" left in PR bodies.
Also, this template isn't usually viewed as rendered markdown, so I've removed the markdown formatting and the "Description" heading (which usually gets deleted anyways).
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.
E2E tests often fail because validators miss signing or proposing blocks. Often this is because e.g. there's a lot of disruption in the network or it takes a long time to start up all the nodes.
This changes the test criteria to only check for 3 signed/proposed blocks, rather than a fraction of the expected blocks. This should be enough to catch most issues, apart from performance problems causing nodes to miss signing/proposing, but we may want separate tests for those sorts of things.
This renames `PeerAddress` to `NodeAddress`, moves it and `NodeID` into a separate file `address.go`, adds tests for them, and fixes a bunch of bugs and inconsistencies.
This revises the new P2P `Transport` interface and does some preliminary code cleanups and simplifications.
The major change here is to add `Connection.Handshake()` for performing node handshakes (once the stream transport API is implemented, this can be done entirely independent of the transport). This moves most of the handshaking logic into the `Router`, such as prevention of head-of-line blocking, validation of peer's `NodeInfo`, controlling timeouts, and so on. This significantly simplifies transports, completely removes the need for internal goroutines, and shares common logic across all transports. This also allows varying the handshake `NodeInfo` across peers, e.g. to vary `ListenAddr`. Similarly, connection filtering is also moved into the switch/router so that it can be shared between transports.
Fixes#5981, which was caused by changes in Router behavior after the introduction of the peer manager, leading to a race condition that could halt the test.
This is a temporary measure, I'll start tightening up the new P2P core tomorrow and write "real" tests with better test infrastructure.
This patches over a test data race where the logger would try to read struct internals via `reflect` while these were concurrently modified (specifically `MemoryTransport.closeOnce`).
Executed a local network using simapp and looked for logs that seemed superfluous. This isn't by any means an exhaustive grooming, but should drastically help legibility of logs.
ref: #5912
This test occasionally fails because the peer is already stopped. It is unclear to me exactly what this test is supposed to do, since calling `FlushStop()` will stop the peer, but the test asserts that the peer shouldn't have been stopped by `FlushStop()` since calling `Stop()` afterwards will error in that case.
The current PEX reactor will be removed in the new P2P stack anyway.