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## rlp
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2019-08-14 11:47:40 +00:00
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### Introduction
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A Nim implementation of the Recursive Length Prefix encoding (RLP) as specified
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in the Ethereum's [Yellow Paper](https://ethereum.github.io/yellowpaper/paper.pdf)
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and [Wiki](https://github.com/ethereum/wiki/wiki/RLP).
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### Reading RLP data
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The `Rlp` type provided by this library represents a cursor over an RLP-encoded
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byte stream.
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``` nim
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proc rlpFromBytes*(data: openArray[byte]): Rlp
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```
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### Streaming API
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Once created, the `Rlp` object will offer procs such as `isList`, `isBlob`,
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`getType`, `listLen`, `blobLen` to determine the type of the value under
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the cursor. The contents of blobs can be extracted with procs such as
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`toString`, `toBytes` and `toInt` without advancing the cursor.
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Lists can be traversed with the standard `items` iterator, which will advance
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the cursor to each sub-item position and yield the `Rlp` object at that point.
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As an alternative, `listElem` can return a new `Rlp` object adjusted to a
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particular sub-item position without advancing the original cursor.
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Keep in mind that copying `Rlp` objects is cheap and you can create as many
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cursors pointing to different positions in the RLP stream as necessary.
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`skipElem` will advance the cursor to the next position in the current list.
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`hasData` will indicate that there are no more bytes in the stream that can
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be consumed.
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Another way to extract data from the stream is through the universal `read`
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proc that accepts a type as a parameter. You can pass any supported type
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such as `string`, `int`, `seq[T]`, etc, including composite user-defined
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types (see [Object Serialization](#object-serialization)). The cursor
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will be advanced just past the end of the consumed object.
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The `toXX` and `read` family of procs may raise a `RlpTypeMismatch` in case
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of type mismatch with the stream contents under the cursor. A corrupted
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RLP stream or an attempt to read past the stream end will be signaled
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with the `MalformedRlpError` exception. If the RLP stream includes data
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that cannot be processed on the current platform (e.g. an integer value
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that is too large), the library will raise an `UnsupportedRlpError` exception.
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### DOM API
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Calling `Rlp.toNodes` at any position within the stream will return a tree
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of `RlpNode` objects representing the collection of values starting at that
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position:
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``` nim
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type
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RlpNodeType* = enum
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rlpBlob
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rlpList
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RlpNode* = object
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case kind*: RlpNodeType
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of rlpBlob:
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bytes*: seq[byte]
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of rlpList:
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elems*: seq[RlpNode]
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```
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As a short-cut, you can also call `decode` directly on a byte sequence to
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avoid creating a `Rlp` object when obtaining the nodes.
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For debugging purposes, you can also create a human readable representation
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of the Rlp nodes by calling the `inspect` proc:
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``` nim
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proc inspect*(self: Rlp, indent = 0): string
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```
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### Creating RLP data
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The `RlpWriter` type can be used to encode RLP data. Instances are created
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with the `initRlpWriter` proc. This should be followed by one or more calls
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to `append` which is overloaded to accept arbitrary values. Finally, you can
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call `finish` to obtain the final `seq[byte]`.
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2020-02-05 13:58:07 +00:00
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If the end result should be a RLP list of particular length, you can replace
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the initial call to `initRlpWriter` with `initRlpList(n)`. Calling `finish`
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before writing the sufficient number of elements will then result in an assertion failure.
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As an alternative short-cut, you can also call `encode` on an arbitrary value
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(including sequences and user-defined types) to execute all of the steps at
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once and directly obtain the final RLP bytes. `encodeList(varargs)` is another
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short-cut for creating RLP lists.
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### Object serialization
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As previously explained, generic procs such as `read`, `append`, `encode` and
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`decode` can be used with arbitrary used-defined object types. By default, the
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library will serialize all of the fields of the object using the `fields`
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iterator, but you can also include only a subset of the fields or modify the
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order of serialization or by employing the `rlpIgnore` pragma or by using the
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`rlpFields` macro:
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``` nim
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macro rlpFields*(T: typedesc, fields: varargs[untyped])
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## example usage:
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type
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Transaction = object
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amount: int
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time: DateTime
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sender: string
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receiver: string
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rlpFields Transaction,
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sender, receiver, amount
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...
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var t1 = rlp.read(Transaction)
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var bytes = encode(t1)
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var t2 = bytes.decode(Transaction)
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```
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Remove `{.rlpInline.}` which was never really implemented
For a long time this caused invalid RLP parsing of `NewBlock` messages in the
`eth` protocol.
The `rlpInline` pragma was accepted but had no effect. We could implemented
it, but it doesn't seem worth doing, with tests etc, as there's only one user
which has been fixed another way.
With `NewBlock`, whenever a peer sent us `NewBlock`, we'd get an RLP decoding
error, and disconnected the peer thinking it was the peer's error.
These messages are sent often by good peers, so whenever we connected to a
really good peer, we'd end up disconnecting within a minute due to this. This
went unnoticed for years, as we stayed connected to old peers which have no new
blocks, and we weren't looking at peer quality, disconnect reasons or real-time
blockchain updates anyway.
Signed-off-by: Jamie Lokier <jamie@shareable.org>
2021-07-28 00:55:58 +00:00
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In rare circumstances, you may need to serialize the same field type
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differently depending on the enclosing object type. You can use the
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`rlpCustomSerialization` pragma to achieve this.
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### Contributing / Testing
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To test the correctness of any modifications to the library, please execute
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`nimble test_rlp` at the root of the repo.
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