These are mostly the timeouts that I think we're still hitting in CI.
At this point, the tests (on master) pass on my local machine (which is quite beefy) so I think this is just the first in (perhaps?) a sequence of changes that attempt to change timeouts and load patterns so that the tests pass in CI more reliably.
Communication in Tendermint among consensus nodes, applications, and operator
tools all use different message formats and transport mechanisms. In some
cases there are multiple options. Having all these options complicates both the
code and the developer experience, and hides bugs. To support a more robust,
trustworthy, and usable system, we should document which communication paths
are essential, which could be removed or reduced in scope, and what we can
improve for the most important use cases.
This document proposes a variety of possible improvements of varying size and
scope. Specific design proposals should get their own documentation.
The previous implemention of hybrid set testing, which was entirely my
own creation, was a bit peculiar, and I think this probably clears thins up.
The previous implementation had far fewer legacy nodes in hybrid
networks, *and* also for some reason that I can't quite explain,
caused a test case to fail.
Bumps [github.com/rs/zerolog](https://github.com/rs/zerolog) from 1.24.0 to 1.25.0.
<details>
<summary>Commits</summary>
<ul>
<li><a href="65adfd88ec"><code>65adfd8</code></a> Make Fields method accept both map and slice (<a href="https://github-redirect.dependabot.com/rs/zerolog/issues/352">#352</a>)</li>
<li>See full diff in <a href="https://github.com/rs/zerolog/compare/v1.24.0...v1.25.0">compare view</a></li>
</ul>
</details>
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The responses from node RPCs encode hash values as hexadecimal strings. This
behaviour is stipulated in our OpenAPI documentation. In some cases, however,
hashes received as JSON parameters were being decoded as byte buffers, as is
the convention for JSON.
This resulted in the confusing situation that a hash reported by one request
(e.g., broadcast_tx_commit) could not be passed as a parameter to another
(e.g., tx) via JSON, without translating the hex-encoded output hash into the
base64 encoding used by JSON for opaque bytes.
Fixes#6802.
The 0.35 release cycle renamed the 'fastsync' functionality to 'blocksync'. This change brings the configuration parameters in line with that change. Namely, it updates the configuration file `[fastsync]` field to be `[blocksync]` and changes the command line flag and config file parameters `--fast-sync` and `fast-sync` to `--enable-block-sync` and `enable-block-sync` respectively.
Error messages were added to help users encountering these changes be able to quickly make the needed update to their files/scripts.
When using the old command line argument for fast-sync, the following is printed
```
./build/tendermint start --proxy-app=kvstore --consensus.create-empty-blocks=false --fast-sync=false
ERROR: invalid argument "false" for "--fast-sync" flag: --fast-sync has been deprecated, please use --enable-block-sync
```
When using one of the old config file parameters, the following is printed:
```
./build/tendermint start --proxy-app=kvstore --consensus.create-empty-blocks=false
ERROR: error in config file: a configuration parameter named 'fast-sync' was found in the configuration file. The 'fast-sync' parameter has been renamed to 'enable-block-sync', please update the 'fast-sync' field in your configuration file to 'enable-block-sync'
```
* add information on upgrading to the new p2p library
* clarify p2p backwards compatibility
* reorder p2p queue list
* add demo for p2p selection
* fix spacing in upgrading
This is a cosmetic change that restores lexicographic order to the selected
linters in the CI config. No change to which linters we run, only putting them
back in order so it's easier to spot the one you care about.
This changes the focus of the e2e suite, to (roughly) focus on
configurations that are more well used. Most production users of
tendermint run ABCI application in process and the GRPC/socket methods
cover the vast majority of the remaining use cases.
Perhaps we should consider drop support unix domain sockets in a
future release, but I think in the mean time it's useful to have the
tests *mostly* focus on the primary use cases.
Update the schema and implementation of the Postgres event indexer to improve
certain types of queries against the index. These changes address the use cases
raised by #6843, and are partly inspired by the prototype schema in that issue.
In the old schema, events were flattened, making it difficult to find all the events
associated with a particular block or transaction. In addition, events with no key/value
attributes were entirely lost, since entries were generated only for attributes.
To address these issues, this new schema records blocks, transactions, events,
and attributes in separate tables, and provides views that join these tables to
give a more convenient query surface for block and transaction events.
- All events for a given block can be queried from the `block_events` view.
- All events for a given transaction can be queried from the `tx_events` view.
- Multiple events for the same key can be indexed for both blocks and transactions.
The tests have been reworked, but all of the existing test cases for the old schema
still pass with the new implementation. Various other minor cleanups are included,
ADR-065 is also updated to reflect the updated schema.
An explicit exit prevents the deferred cleanup code from running. In this case,
falling off the end of main will achieve the same goal as an explicit exit.
When revwing #6807 I assumed that `probSetChoice` worked this way.
I think that the coverage of various configuration options should
generally track what we expect the actual useage to be to focus the
most test coverage on the configurations that are the most prevelent.
Issues reported in Osmosis, where the message is extremely long. Also, there is absolutely no reason to log the message IMO. If we must, we can make the message log DEBUG.