nimbus-eth1/tests/macro_assembler.nim

475 lines
15 KiB
Nim
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import
macrocache, strutils, sequtils, unittest2, times,
stew/byteutils, chronicles, eth/[common, keys],
stew/shims/macros
import
options, eth/trie/[db, hexary],
../nimbus/db/[db_chain, accounts_cache],
Added basic async capabilities for vm2. (#1260) * Added basic async capabilities for vm2. This is a whole new Git branch, not the same one as last time (https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1250) - there wasn't much worth salvaging. Main differences: I didn't do the "each opcode has to specify an async handler" junk that I put in last time. Instead, in oph_memory.nim you can see sloadOp calling asyncChainTo and passing in an async operation. That async operation is then run by the execCallOrCreate (or asyncExecCallOrCreate) code in interpreter_dispatch.nim. In the test code, the (previously existing) macro called "assembler" now allows you to add a section called "initialStorage", specifying fake data to be used by the EVM computation run by that test. (In the long run we'll obviously want to write tests that for-real use the JSON-RPC API to asynchronously fetch data; for now, this was just an expedient way to write a basic unit test that exercises the async-EVM code pathway.) There's also a new macro called "concurrentAssemblers" that allows you to write a test that runs multiple assemblers concurrently (and then waits for them all to finish). There's one example test using this, in test_op_memory_lazy.nim, though you can't actually see it doing so unless you uncomment some echo statements in async_operations.nim (in which case you can see the two concurrently running EVM computations each printing out what they're doing, and you'll see that they interleave). A question: is it possible to make EVMC work asynchronously? (For now, this code compiles and "make test" passes even if ENABLE_EVMC is turned on, but it doesn't actually work asynchronously, it just falls back on doing the usual synchronous EVMC thing. See FIXME-asyncAndEvmc.) * Moved the AsyncOperationFactory to the BaseVMState object. * Made the AsyncOperationFactory into a table of fn pointers. Also ditched the plain-data Vm2AsyncOperation type; it wasn't really serving much purpose. Instead, the pendingAsyncOperation field directly contains the Future. * Removed the hasStorage idea. It's not the right solution to the "how do we know whether we still need to fetch the storage value or not?" problem. I haven't implemented the right solution yet, but at least we're better off not putting in a wrong one. * Added/modified/removed some comments. (Based on feedback on the PR.) * Removed the waitFor from execCallOrCreate. There was some back-and-forth in the PR regarding whether nested waitFor calls are acceptable: https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1260#discussion_r998587449 The eventual decision was to just change the waitFor to a doAssert (since we probably won't want this extra functionality when running synchronously anyway) to make sure that the Future is already finished.
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../nimbus/vm2/[async_operations, types],
../nimbus/vm_internals, ../nimbus/forks,
Added basic async capabilities for vm2. (#1260) * Added basic async capabilities for vm2. This is a whole new Git branch, not the same one as last time (https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1250) - there wasn't much worth salvaging. Main differences: I didn't do the "each opcode has to specify an async handler" junk that I put in last time. Instead, in oph_memory.nim you can see sloadOp calling asyncChainTo and passing in an async operation. That async operation is then run by the execCallOrCreate (or asyncExecCallOrCreate) code in interpreter_dispatch.nim. In the test code, the (previously existing) macro called "assembler" now allows you to add a section called "initialStorage", specifying fake data to be used by the EVM computation run by that test. (In the long run we'll obviously want to write tests that for-real use the JSON-RPC API to asynchronously fetch data; for now, this was just an expedient way to write a basic unit test that exercises the async-EVM code pathway.) There's also a new macro called "concurrentAssemblers" that allows you to write a test that runs multiple assemblers concurrently (and then waits for them all to finish). There's one example test using this, in test_op_memory_lazy.nim, though you can't actually see it doing so unless you uncomment some echo statements in async_operations.nim (in which case you can see the two concurrently running EVM computations each printing out what they're doing, and you'll see that they interleave). A question: is it possible to make EVMC work asynchronously? (For now, this code compiles and "make test" passes even if ENABLE_EVMC is turned on, but it doesn't actually work asynchronously, it just falls back on doing the usual synchronous EVMC thing. See FIXME-asyncAndEvmc.) * Moved the AsyncOperationFactory to the BaseVMState object. * Made the AsyncOperationFactory into a table of fn pointers. Also ditched the plain-data Vm2AsyncOperation type; it wasn't really serving much purpose. Instead, the pendingAsyncOperation field directly contains the Future. * Removed the hasStorage idea. It's not the right solution to the "how do we know whether we still need to fetch the storage value or not?" problem. I haven't implemented the right solution yet, but at least we're better off not putting in a wrong one. * Added/modified/removed some comments. (Based on feedback on the PR.) * Removed the waitFor from execCallOrCreate. There was some back-and-forth in the PR regarding whether nested waitFor calls are acceptable: https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1260#discussion_r998587449 The eventual decision was to just change the waitFor to a doAssert (since we probably won't want this extra functionality when running synchronously anyway) to make sure that the Future is already finished.
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../nimbus/transaction/[call_common, call_evm],
../nimbus/[transaction, chain_config, genesis, vm_types, vm_state],
../nimbus/utils/difficulty
Added basic async capabilities for vm2. (#1260) * Added basic async capabilities for vm2. This is a whole new Git branch, not the same one as last time (https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1250) - there wasn't much worth salvaging. Main differences: I didn't do the "each opcode has to specify an async handler" junk that I put in last time. Instead, in oph_memory.nim you can see sloadOp calling asyncChainTo and passing in an async operation. That async operation is then run by the execCallOrCreate (or asyncExecCallOrCreate) code in interpreter_dispatch.nim. In the test code, the (previously existing) macro called "assembler" now allows you to add a section called "initialStorage", specifying fake data to be used by the EVM computation run by that test. (In the long run we'll obviously want to write tests that for-real use the JSON-RPC API to asynchronously fetch data; for now, this was just an expedient way to write a basic unit test that exercises the async-EVM code pathway.) There's also a new macro called "concurrentAssemblers" that allows you to write a test that runs multiple assemblers concurrently (and then waits for them all to finish). There's one example test using this, in test_op_memory_lazy.nim, though you can't actually see it doing so unless you uncomment some echo statements in async_operations.nim (in which case you can see the two concurrently running EVM computations each printing out what they're doing, and you'll see that they interleave). A question: is it possible to make EVMC work asynchronously? (For now, this code compiles and "make test" passes even if ENABLE_EVMC is turned on, but it doesn't actually work asynchronously, it just falls back on doing the usual synchronous EVMC thing. See FIXME-asyncAndEvmc.) * Moved the AsyncOperationFactory to the BaseVMState object. * Made the AsyncOperationFactory into a table of fn pointers. Also ditched the plain-data Vm2AsyncOperation type; it wasn't really serving much purpose. Instead, the pendingAsyncOperation field directly contains the Future. * Removed the hasStorage idea. It's not the right solution to the "how do we know whether we still need to fetch the storage value or not?" problem. I haven't implemented the right solution yet, but at least we're better off not putting in a wrong one. * Added/modified/removed some comments. (Based on feedback on the PR.) * Removed the waitFor from execCallOrCreate. There was some back-and-forth in the PR regarding whether nested waitFor calls are acceptable: https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1260#discussion_r998587449 The eventual decision was to just change the waitFor to a doAssert (since we probably won't want this extra functionality when running synchronously anyway) to make sure that the Future is already finished.
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# Need to exclude ServerCommand because it contains something
# called Stop that interferes with the EVM operation named Stop.
import chronos except ServerCommand
export byteutils
{.experimental: "dynamicBindSym".}
# backported from Nim 0.19.9
# remove this when we use newer Nim
proc newLitFixed*(arg: enum): NimNode {.compileTime.} =
result = newCall(
arg.type.getTypeInst[1],
newLit(int(arg))
)
type
VMWord* = array[32, byte]
Storage* = tuple[key, val: VMWord]
Assembler* = object
title*: string
Added basic async capabilities for vm2. (#1260) * Added basic async capabilities for vm2. This is a whole new Git branch, not the same one as last time (https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1250) - there wasn't much worth salvaging. Main differences: I didn't do the "each opcode has to specify an async handler" junk that I put in last time. Instead, in oph_memory.nim you can see sloadOp calling asyncChainTo and passing in an async operation. That async operation is then run by the execCallOrCreate (or asyncExecCallOrCreate) code in interpreter_dispatch.nim. In the test code, the (previously existing) macro called "assembler" now allows you to add a section called "initialStorage", specifying fake data to be used by the EVM computation run by that test. (In the long run we'll obviously want to write tests that for-real use the JSON-RPC API to asynchronously fetch data; for now, this was just an expedient way to write a basic unit test that exercises the async-EVM code pathway.) There's also a new macro called "concurrentAssemblers" that allows you to write a test that runs multiple assemblers concurrently (and then waits for them all to finish). There's one example test using this, in test_op_memory_lazy.nim, though you can't actually see it doing so unless you uncomment some echo statements in async_operations.nim (in which case you can see the two concurrently running EVM computations each printing out what they're doing, and you'll see that they interleave). A question: is it possible to make EVMC work asynchronously? (For now, this code compiles and "make test" passes even if ENABLE_EVMC is turned on, but it doesn't actually work asynchronously, it just falls back on doing the usual synchronous EVMC thing. See FIXME-asyncAndEvmc.) * Moved the AsyncOperationFactory to the BaseVMState object. * Made the AsyncOperationFactory into a table of fn pointers. Also ditched the plain-data Vm2AsyncOperation type; it wasn't really serving much purpose. Instead, the pendingAsyncOperation field directly contains the Future. * Removed the hasStorage idea. It's not the right solution to the "how do we know whether we still need to fetch the storage value or not?" problem. I haven't implemented the right solution yet, but at least we're better off not putting in a wrong one. * Added/modified/removed some comments. (Based on feedback on the PR.) * Removed the waitFor from execCallOrCreate. There was some back-and-forth in the PR regarding whether nested waitFor calls are acceptable: https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1260#discussion_r998587449 The eventual decision was to just change the waitFor to a doAssert (since we probably won't want this extra functionality when running synchronously anyway) to make sure that the Future is already finished.
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chainDBIdentName*: string
vmStateIdentName*: string
stack*: seq[VMWord]
memory*: seq[VMWord]
Added basic async capabilities for vm2. (#1260) * Added basic async capabilities for vm2. This is a whole new Git branch, not the same one as last time (https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1250) - there wasn't much worth salvaging. Main differences: I didn't do the "each opcode has to specify an async handler" junk that I put in last time. Instead, in oph_memory.nim you can see sloadOp calling asyncChainTo and passing in an async operation. That async operation is then run by the execCallOrCreate (or asyncExecCallOrCreate) code in interpreter_dispatch.nim. In the test code, the (previously existing) macro called "assembler" now allows you to add a section called "initialStorage", specifying fake data to be used by the EVM computation run by that test. (In the long run we'll obviously want to write tests that for-real use the JSON-RPC API to asynchronously fetch data; for now, this was just an expedient way to write a basic unit test that exercises the async-EVM code pathway.) There's also a new macro called "concurrentAssemblers" that allows you to write a test that runs multiple assemblers concurrently (and then waits for them all to finish). There's one example test using this, in test_op_memory_lazy.nim, though you can't actually see it doing so unless you uncomment some echo statements in async_operations.nim (in which case you can see the two concurrently running EVM computations each printing out what they're doing, and you'll see that they interleave). A question: is it possible to make EVMC work asynchronously? (For now, this code compiles and "make test" passes even if ENABLE_EVMC is turned on, but it doesn't actually work asynchronously, it just falls back on doing the usual synchronous EVMC thing. See FIXME-asyncAndEvmc.) * Moved the AsyncOperationFactory to the BaseVMState object. * Made the AsyncOperationFactory into a table of fn pointers. Also ditched the plain-data Vm2AsyncOperation type; it wasn't really serving much purpose. Instead, the pendingAsyncOperation field directly contains the Future. * Removed the hasStorage idea. It's not the right solution to the "how do we know whether we still need to fetch the storage value or not?" problem. I haven't implemented the right solution yet, but at least we're better off not putting in a wrong one. * Added/modified/removed some comments. (Based on feedback on the PR.) * Removed the waitFor from execCallOrCreate. There was some back-and-forth in the PR regarding whether nested waitFor calls are acceptable: https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1260#discussion_r998587449 The eventual decision was to just change the waitFor to a doAssert (since we probably won't want this extra functionality when running synchronously anyway) to make sure that the Future is already finished.
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initialStorage*: seq[Storage]
storage*: seq[Storage]
code*: seq[byte]
logs*: seq[Log]
success*: bool
gasLimit*: GasInt
gasUsed*: GasInt
data*: seq[byte]
output*: seq[byte]
fork*: Fork
Added basic async capabilities for vm2. (#1260) * Added basic async capabilities for vm2. This is a whole new Git branch, not the same one as last time (https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1250) - there wasn't much worth salvaging. Main differences: I didn't do the "each opcode has to specify an async handler" junk that I put in last time. Instead, in oph_memory.nim you can see sloadOp calling asyncChainTo and passing in an async operation. That async operation is then run by the execCallOrCreate (or asyncExecCallOrCreate) code in interpreter_dispatch.nim. In the test code, the (previously existing) macro called "assembler" now allows you to add a section called "initialStorage", specifying fake data to be used by the EVM computation run by that test. (In the long run we'll obviously want to write tests that for-real use the JSON-RPC API to asynchronously fetch data; for now, this was just an expedient way to write a basic unit test that exercises the async-EVM code pathway.) There's also a new macro called "concurrentAssemblers" that allows you to write a test that runs multiple assemblers concurrently (and then waits for them all to finish). There's one example test using this, in test_op_memory_lazy.nim, though you can't actually see it doing so unless you uncomment some echo statements in async_operations.nim (in which case you can see the two concurrently running EVM computations each printing out what they're doing, and you'll see that they interleave). A question: is it possible to make EVMC work asynchronously? (For now, this code compiles and "make test" passes even if ENABLE_EVMC is turned on, but it doesn't actually work asynchronously, it just falls back on doing the usual synchronous EVMC thing. See FIXME-asyncAndEvmc.) * Moved the AsyncOperationFactory to the BaseVMState object. * Made the AsyncOperationFactory into a table of fn pointers. Also ditched the plain-data Vm2AsyncOperation type; it wasn't really serving much purpose. Instead, the pendingAsyncOperation field directly contains the Future. * Removed the hasStorage idea. It's not the right solution to the "how do we know whether we still need to fetch the storage value or not?" problem. I haven't implemented the right solution yet, but at least we're better off not putting in a wrong one. * Added/modified/removed some comments. (Based on feedback on the PR.) * Removed the waitFor from execCallOrCreate. There was some back-and-forth in the PR regarding whether nested waitFor calls are acceptable: https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1260#discussion_r998587449 The eventual decision was to just change the waitFor to a doAssert (since we probably won't want this extra functionality when running synchronously anyway) to make sure that the Future is already finished.
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ConcurrencyTest* = object
title*: string
assemblers*: seq[Assembler]
const
idToOpcode = CacheTable"NimbusMacroAssembler"
static:
for n in Op:
idToOpcode[$n] = newLit(ord(n))
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# EIP-4399 new opcode
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idToOpcode["PrevRandao"] = newLit(ord(Difficulty))
proc validateVMWord(val: string, n: NimNode): VMWord =
if val.len <= 2 or val.len > 66: error("invalid hex string", n)
if not (val[0] == '0' and val[1] == 'x'): error("invalid hex string", n)
let zerosLen = 64 - (val.len - 2)
let value = repeat('0', zerosLen) & val.substr(2)
hexToByteArray(value, result)
proc validateVMWord(val: NimNode): VMWord =
val.expectKind(nnkStrLit)
validateVMWord(val.strVal, val)
proc parseVMWords(list: NimNode): seq[VMWord] =
result = @[]
list.expectKind nnkStmtList
for val in list:
result.add validateVMWord(val)
proc validateStorage(val: NimNode): Storage =
val.expectKind(nnkCall)
val[0].expectKind(nnkStrLit)
val[1].expectKind(nnkStmtList)
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doAssert(val[1].len == 1)
val[1][0].expectKind(nnkStrLit)
result = (validateVMWord(val[0]), validateVMWord(val[1][0]))
proc parseStorage(list: NimNode): seq[Storage] =
result = @[]
list.expectKind nnkStmtList
for val in list:
result.add validateStorage(val)
Added basic async capabilities for vm2. (#1260) * Added basic async capabilities for vm2. This is a whole new Git branch, not the same one as last time (https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1250) - there wasn't much worth salvaging. Main differences: I didn't do the "each opcode has to specify an async handler" junk that I put in last time. Instead, in oph_memory.nim you can see sloadOp calling asyncChainTo and passing in an async operation. That async operation is then run by the execCallOrCreate (or asyncExecCallOrCreate) code in interpreter_dispatch.nim. In the test code, the (previously existing) macro called "assembler" now allows you to add a section called "initialStorage", specifying fake data to be used by the EVM computation run by that test. (In the long run we'll obviously want to write tests that for-real use the JSON-RPC API to asynchronously fetch data; for now, this was just an expedient way to write a basic unit test that exercises the async-EVM code pathway.) There's also a new macro called "concurrentAssemblers" that allows you to write a test that runs multiple assemblers concurrently (and then waits for them all to finish). There's one example test using this, in test_op_memory_lazy.nim, though you can't actually see it doing so unless you uncomment some echo statements in async_operations.nim (in which case you can see the two concurrently running EVM computations each printing out what they're doing, and you'll see that they interleave). A question: is it possible to make EVMC work asynchronously? (For now, this code compiles and "make test" passes even if ENABLE_EVMC is turned on, but it doesn't actually work asynchronously, it just falls back on doing the usual synchronous EVMC thing. See FIXME-asyncAndEvmc.) * Moved the AsyncOperationFactory to the BaseVMState object. * Made the AsyncOperationFactory into a table of fn pointers. Also ditched the plain-data Vm2AsyncOperation type; it wasn't really serving much purpose. Instead, the pendingAsyncOperation field directly contains the Future. * Removed the hasStorage idea. It's not the right solution to the "how do we know whether we still need to fetch the storage value or not?" problem. I haven't implemented the right solution yet, but at least we're better off not putting in a wrong one. * Added/modified/removed some comments. (Based on feedback on the PR.) * Removed the waitFor from execCallOrCreate. There was some back-and-forth in the PR regarding whether nested waitFor calls are acceptable: https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1260#discussion_r998587449 The eventual decision was to just change the waitFor to a doAssert (since we probably won't want this extra functionality when running synchronously anyway) to make sure that the Future is already finished.
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proc parseStringLiteral(node: NimNode): string =
let strNode = node[0]
strNode.expectKind(nnkStrLit)
strNode.strVal
proc parseIdent(node: NimNode): string =
let identNode = node[0]
identNode.expectKind(nnkIdent)
identNode.strVal
proc parseSuccess(list: NimNode): bool =
list.expectKind nnkStmtList
list[0].expectKind(nnkIdent)
$list[0] == "true"
proc parseData(list: NimNode): seq[byte] =
result = @[]
list.expectKind nnkStmtList
for n in list:
n.expectKind(nnkStrLit)
result.add hexToSeqByte(n.strVal)
proc parseLog(node: NimNode): Log =
node.expectKind(nnkPar)
for item in node:
item.expectKind(nnkExprColonExpr)
let label = item[0].strVal
let body = item[1]
case label.normalize
of "address":
body.expectKind(nnkStrLit)
let value = body.strVal
if value.len < 20:
error("bad address format", body)
hexToByteArray(value, result.address)
of "topics":
body.expectKind(nnkBracket)
for x in body:
result.topics.add validateVMWord(x.strVal, x)
of "data":
result.data = hexToSeqByte(body.strVal)
else:error("unknown log section '" & label & "'", item[0])
proc parseLogs(list: NimNode): seq[Log] =
result = @[]
list.expectKind nnkStmtList
for n in list:
result.add parseLog(n)
proc validateOpcode(sym: NimNode) =
let typ = getTypeInst(sym)
typ.expectKind(nnkSym)
if $typ != "Op":
error("unknown opcode '" & $sym & "'", sym)
proc addOpCode(code: var seq[byte], node, params: NimNode) =
node.expectKind nnkSym
let opcode = Op(idToOpcode[node.strVal].intVal)
case opcode
of Push1..Push32:
if params.len != 1:
error("expect 1 param, but got " & $params.len, node)
let paramWidth = (opcode.ord - 95) * 2
params[0].expectKind nnkStrLit
var val = params[0].strVal
if val[0] == '0' and val[1] == 'x':
val = val.substr(2)
if val.len != paramWidth:
error("expected param with " & $paramWidth & " hex digits, got " & $val.len, node)
code.add byte(opcode)
code.add hexToSeqByte(val)
else:
error("invalid hex format", node)
else:
if params.len > 0:
error("there should be no param for this instruction", node)
code.add byte(opcode)
proc parseCode(codes: NimNode): seq[byte] =
let emptyNode = newEmptyNode()
codes.expectKind nnkStmtList
for pc, line in codes:
line.expectKind({nnkCommand, nnkIdent, nnkStrLit})
if line.kind == nnkStrLit:
result.add hexToSeqByte(line.strVal)
elif line.kind == nnkIdent:
let sym = bindSym(line)
validateOpcode(sym)
result.addOpCode(sym, emptyNode)
elif line.kind == nnkCommand:
let sym = bindSym(line[0])
validateOpcode(sym)
var params = newNimNode(nnkBracket)
for i in 1 ..< line.len:
params.add line[i]
result.addOpCode(sym, params)
else:
error("unknown syntax: " & line.toStrLit.strVal, line)
proc parseFork(fork: NimNode): Fork =
fork[0].expectKind({nnkIdent, nnkStrLit})
# Normalise whitespace and capitalize each word because `parseEnum` matches
# enum string values not symbols, and the strings are capitalized in `Fork`.
parseEnum[Fork](fork[0].strVal.splitWhitespace().map(capitalizeAscii).join(" "))
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proc parseGasUsed(gas: NimNode): GasInt =
gas[0].expectKind(nnkIntLit)
result = gas[0].intVal
Added basic async capabilities for vm2. (#1260) * Added basic async capabilities for vm2. This is a whole new Git branch, not the same one as last time (https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1250) - there wasn't much worth salvaging. Main differences: I didn't do the "each opcode has to specify an async handler" junk that I put in last time. Instead, in oph_memory.nim you can see sloadOp calling asyncChainTo and passing in an async operation. That async operation is then run by the execCallOrCreate (or asyncExecCallOrCreate) code in interpreter_dispatch.nim. In the test code, the (previously existing) macro called "assembler" now allows you to add a section called "initialStorage", specifying fake data to be used by the EVM computation run by that test. (In the long run we'll obviously want to write tests that for-real use the JSON-RPC API to asynchronously fetch data; for now, this was just an expedient way to write a basic unit test that exercises the async-EVM code pathway.) There's also a new macro called "concurrentAssemblers" that allows you to write a test that runs multiple assemblers concurrently (and then waits for them all to finish). There's one example test using this, in test_op_memory_lazy.nim, though you can't actually see it doing so unless you uncomment some echo statements in async_operations.nim (in which case you can see the two concurrently running EVM computations each printing out what they're doing, and you'll see that they interleave). A question: is it possible to make EVMC work asynchronously? (For now, this code compiles and "make test" passes even if ENABLE_EVMC is turned on, but it doesn't actually work asynchronously, it just falls back on doing the usual synchronous EVMC thing. See FIXME-asyncAndEvmc.) * Moved the AsyncOperationFactory to the BaseVMState object. * Made the AsyncOperationFactory into a table of fn pointers. Also ditched the plain-data Vm2AsyncOperation type; it wasn't really serving much purpose. Instead, the pendingAsyncOperation field directly contains the Future. * Removed the hasStorage idea. It's not the right solution to the "how do we know whether we still need to fetch the storage value or not?" problem. I haven't implemented the right solution yet, but at least we're better off not putting in a wrong one. * Added/modified/removed some comments. (Based on feedback on the PR.) * Removed the waitFor from execCallOrCreate. There was some back-and-forth in the PR regarding whether nested waitFor calls are acceptable: https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1260#discussion_r998587449 The eventual decision was to just change the waitFor to a doAssert (since we probably won't want this extra functionality when running synchronously anyway) to make sure that the Future is already finished.
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proc parseAssembler(list: NimNode): Assembler =
result.success = true
result.fork = FkFrontier
result.gasUsed = -1
list.expectKind nnkStmtList
for callSection in list:
callSection.expectKind(nnkCall)
let label = callSection[0].strVal
let body = callSection[1]
case label.normalize
of "title": result.title = parseStringLiteral(body)
of "vmstate": result.vmStateIdentName = parseIdent(body)
of "chaindb": result.chainDBIdentName = parseIdent(body)
of "code" : result.code = parseCode(body)
of "memory": result.memory = parseVMWords(body)
of "stack" : result.stack = parseVMWords(body)
of "storage": result.storage = parseStorage(body)
of "initialstorage": result.initialStorage = parseStorage(body)
of "logs": result.logs = parseLogs(body)
of "success": result.success = parseSuccess(body)
of "data": result.data = parseData(body)
of "output": result.output = parseData(body)
of "fork": result.fork = parseFork(body)
of "gasused": result.gasUsed = parseGasUsed(body)
else: error("unknown section '" & label & "'", callSection[0])
proc parseAssemblers(list: NimNode): seq[Assembler] =
result = @[]
list.expectKind nnkStmtList
for callSection in list:
# Should we do something with the label? Or is the
# assembler's "title" section good enough?
# let label = callSection[0].strVal
let body = callSection[1]
result.add parseAssembler(body)
proc parseConcurrencyTest(list: NimNode): ConcurrencyTest =
list.expectKind nnkStmtList
for callSection in list:
callSection.expectKind(nnkCall)
let label = callSection[0].strVal
let body = callSection[1]
case label.normalize
of "title": result.title = parseStringLiteral(body)
of "assemblers": result.assemblers = parseAssemblers(body)
else: error("unknown section '" & label & "'", callSection[0])
type VMProxy = tuple[sym: NimNode, pr: NimNode]
proc generateVMProxy(boa: Assembler, shouldBeAsync: bool): VMProxy =
let
Added basic async capabilities for vm2. (#1260) * Added basic async capabilities for vm2. This is a whole new Git branch, not the same one as last time (https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1250) - there wasn't much worth salvaging. Main differences: I didn't do the "each opcode has to specify an async handler" junk that I put in last time. Instead, in oph_memory.nim you can see sloadOp calling asyncChainTo and passing in an async operation. That async operation is then run by the execCallOrCreate (or asyncExecCallOrCreate) code in interpreter_dispatch.nim. In the test code, the (previously existing) macro called "assembler" now allows you to add a section called "initialStorage", specifying fake data to be used by the EVM computation run by that test. (In the long run we'll obviously want to write tests that for-real use the JSON-RPC API to asynchronously fetch data; for now, this was just an expedient way to write a basic unit test that exercises the async-EVM code pathway.) There's also a new macro called "concurrentAssemblers" that allows you to write a test that runs multiple assemblers concurrently (and then waits for them all to finish). There's one example test using this, in test_op_memory_lazy.nim, though you can't actually see it doing so unless you uncomment some echo statements in async_operations.nim (in which case you can see the two concurrently running EVM computations each printing out what they're doing, and you'll see that they interleave). A question: is it possible to make EVMC work asynchronously? (For now, this code compiles and "make test" passes even if ENABLE_EVMC is turned on, but it doesn't actually work asynchronously, it just falls back on doing the usual synchronous EVMC thing. See FIXME-asyncAndEvmc.) * Moved the AsyncOperationFactory to the BaseVMState object. * Made the AsyncOperationFactory into a table of fn pointers. Also ditched the plain-data Vm2AsyncOperation type; it wasn't really serving much purpose. Instead, the pendingAsyncOperation field directly contains the Future. * Removed the hasStorage idea. It's not the right solution to the "how do we know whether we still need to fetch the storage value or not?" problem. I haven't implemented the right solution yet, but at least we're better off not putting in a wrong one. * Added/modified/removed some comments. (Based on feedback on the PR.) * Removed the waitFor from execCallOrCreate. There was some back-and-forth in the PR regarding whether nested waitFor calls are acceptable: https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1260#discussion_r998587449 The eventual decision was to just change the waitFor to a doAssert (since we probably won't want this extra functionality when running synchronously anyway) to make sure that the Future is already finished.
2022-11-01 15:35:46 +00:00
vmProxySym = genSym(nskProc, "asyncVMProxy")
chainDB = ident(if boa.chainDBIdentName == "": "chainDB" else: boa.chainDBIdentName)
vmState = ident(if boa.vmStateIdentName == "": "vmState" else: boa.vmStateIdentName)
body = newLitFixed(boa)
Added basic async capabilities for vm2. (#1260) * Added basic async capabilities for vm2. This is a whole new Git branch, not the same one as last time (https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1250) - there wasn't much worth salvaging. Main differences: I didn't do the "each opcode has to specify an async handler" junk that I put in last time. Instead, in oph_memory.nim you can see sloadOp calling asyncChainTo and passing in an async operation. That async operation is then run by the execCallOrCreate (or asyncExecCallOrCreate) code in interpreter_dispatch.nim. In the test code, the (previously existing) macro called "assembler" now allows you to add a section called "initialStorage", specifying fake data to be used by the EVM computation run by that test. (In the long run we'll obviously want to write tests that for-real use the JSON-RPC API to asynchronously fetch data; for now, this was just an expedient way to write a basic unit test that exercises the async-EVM code pathway.) There's also a new macro called "concurrentAssemblers" that allows you to write a test that runs multiple assemblers concurrently (and then waits for them all to finish). There's one example test using this, in test_op_memory_lazy.nim, though you can't actually see it doing so unless you uncomment some echo statements in async_operations.nim (in which case you can see the two concurrently running EVM computations each printing out what they're doing, and you'll see that they interleave). A question: is it possible to make EVMC work asynchronously? (For now, this code compiles and "make test" passes even if ENABLE_EVMC is turned on, but it doesn't actually work asynchronously, it just falls back on doing the usual synchronous EVMC thing. See FIXME-asyncAndEvmc.) * Moved the AsyncOperationFactory to the BaseVMState object. * Made the AsyncOperationFactory into a table of fn pointers. Also ditched the plain-data Vm2AsyncOperation type; it wasn't really serving much purpose. Instead, the pendingAsyncOperation field directly contains the Future. * Removed the hasStorage idea. It's not the right solution to the "how do we know whether we still need to fetch the storage value or not?" problem. I haven't implemented the right solution yet, but at least we're better off not putting in a wrong one. * Added/modified/removed some comments. (Based on feedback on the PR.) * Removed the waitFor from execCallOrCreate. There was some back-and-forth in the PR regarding whether nested waitFor calls are acceptable: https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1260#discussion_r998587449 The eventual decision was to just change the waitFor to a doAssert (since we probably won't want this extra functionality when running synchronously anyway) to make sure that the Future is already finished.
2022-11-01 15:35:46 +00:00
returnType = if shouldBeAsync:
quote do: Future[bool]
else:
quote do: bool
runVMProcName = ident(if shouldBeAsync: "asyncRunVM" else: "runVM")
vmProxyProc = quote do:
proc `vmProxySym`(): `returnType` =
let boa = `body`
let asyncFactory =
AsyncOperationFactory(
lazyDataSource:
if len(boa.initialStorage) == 0:
noLazyDataSource()
else:
fakeLazyDataSource(boa.initialStorage))
`runVMProcName`(`vmState`, `chainDB`, boa, asyncFactory)
(vmProxySym, vmProxyProc)
proc generateAssemblerTest(boa: Assembler): NimNode =
let
(vmProxySym, vmProxyProc) = generateVMProxy(boa, false)
title: string = boa.title
result = quote do:
test `title`:
Added basic async capabilities for vm2. (#1260) * Added basic async capabilities for vm2. This is a whole new Git branch, not the same one as last time (https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1250) - there wasn't much worth salvaging. Main differences: I didn't do the "each opcode has to specify an async handler" junk that I put in last time. Instead, in oph_memory.nim you can see sloadOp calling asyncChainTo and passing in an async operation. That async operation is then run by the execCallOrCreate (or asyncExecCallOrCreate) code in interpreter_dispatch.nim. In the test code, the (previously existing) macro called "assembler" now allows you to add a section called "initialStorage", specifying fake data to be used by the EVM computation run by that test. (In the long run we'll obviously want to write tests that for-real use the JSON-RPC API to asynchronously fetch data; for now, this was just an expedient way to write a basic unit test that exercises the async-EVM code pathway.) There's also a new macro called "concurrentAssemblers" that allows you to write a test that runs multiple assemblers concurrently (and then waits for them all to finish). There's one example test using this, in test_op_memory_lazy.nim, though you can't actually see it doing so unless you uncomment some echo statements in async_operations.nim (in which case you can see the two concurrently running EVM computations each printing out what they're doing, and you'll see that they interleave). A question: is it possible to make EVMC work asynchronously? (For now, this code compiles and "make test" passes even if ENABLE_EVMC is turned on, but it doesn't actually work asynchronously, it just falls back on doing the usual synchronous EVMC thing. See FIXME-asyncAndEvmc.) * Moved the AsyncOperationFactory to the BaseVMState object. * Made the AsyncOperationFactory into a table of fn pointers. Also ditched the plain-data Vm2AsyncOperation type; it wasn't really serving much purpose. Instead, the pendingAsyncOperation field directly contains the Future. * Removed the hasStorage idea. It's not the right solution to the "how do we know whether we still need to fetch the storage value or not?" problem. I haven't implemented the right solution yet, but at least we're better off not putting in a wrong one. * Added/modified/removed some comments. (Based on feedback on the PR.) * Removed the waitFor from execCallOrCreate. There was some back-and-forth in the PR regarding whether nested waitFor calls are acceptable: https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1260#discussion_r998587449 The eventual decision was to just change the waitFor to a doAssert (since we probably won't want this extra functionality when running synchronously anyway) to make sure that the Future is already finished.
2022-11-01 15:35:46 +00:00
`vmProxyProc`
{.gcsafe.}:
Added basic async capabilities for vm2. (#1260) * Added basic async capabilities for vm2. This is a whole new Git branch, not the same one as last time (https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1250) - there wasn't much worth salvaging. Main differences: I didn't do the "each opcode has to specify an async handler" junk that I put in last time. Instead, in oph_memory.nim you can see sloadOp calling asyncChainTo and passing in an async operation. That async operation is then run by the execCallOrCreate (or asyncExecCallOrCreate) code in interpreter_dispatch.nim. In the test code, the (previously existing) macro called "assembler" now allows you to add a section called "initialStorage", specifying fake data to be used by the EVM computation run by that test. (In the long run we'll obviously want to write tests that for-real use the JSON-RPC API to asynchronously fetch data; for now, this was just an expedient way to write a basic unit test that exercises the async-EVM code pathway.) There's also a new macro called "concurrentAssemblers" that allows you to write a test that runs multiple assemblers concurrently (and then waits for them all to finish). There's one example test using this, in test_op_memory_lazy.nim, though you can't actually see it doing so unless you uncomment some echo statements in async_operations.nim (in which case you can see the two concurrently running EVM computations each printing out what they're doing, and you'll see that they interleave). A question: is it possible to make EVMC work asynchronously? (For now, this code compiles and "make test" passes even if ENABLE_EVMC is turned on, but it doesn't actually work asynchronously, it just falls back on doing the usual synchronous EVMC thing. See FIXME-asyncAndEvmc.) * Moved the AsyncOperationFactory to the BaseVMState object. * Made the AsyncOperationFactory into a table of fn pointers. Also ditched the plain-data Vm2AsyncOperation type; it wasn't really serving much purpose. Instead, the pendingAsyncOperation field directly contains the Future. * Removed the hasStorage idea. It's not the right solution to the "how do we know whether we still need to fetch the storage value or not?" problem. I haven't implemented the right solution yet, but at least we're better off not putting in a wrong one. * Added/modified/removed some comments. (Based on feedback on the PR.) * Removed the waitFor from execCallOrCreate. There was some back-and-forth in the PR regarding whether nested waitFor calls are acceptable: https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1260#discussion_r998587449 The eventual decision was to just change the waitFor to a doAssert (since we probably won't want this extra functionality when running synchronously anyway) to make sure that the Future is already finished.
2022-11-01 15:35:46 +00:00
check `vmProxySym`()
when defined(macro_assembler_debug):
echo result.toStrLit.strVal
type
AsyncVMProxyTestProc* = proc(): Future[bool]
proc generateConcurrencyTest(t: ConcurrencyTest): NimNode =
let
vmProxies: seq[VMProxy] = t.assemblers.map(proc(boa: Assembler): VMProxy = generateVMProxy(boa, true))
vmProxyProcs: seq[NimNode] = vmProxies.map(proc(x: VMProxy): NimNode = x.pr)
vmProxySyms: seq[NimNode] = vmProxies.map(proc(x: VMProxy): NimNode = x.sym)
title: string = t.title
let runVMProxy = quote do:
{.gcsafe.}:
let procs: seq[AsyncVMProxyTestProc] = @(`vmProxySyms`)
let futures: seq[Future[bool]] = procs.map(proc(s: AsyncVMProxyTestProc): Future[bool] = s())
waitFor(allFutures(futures))
# Is there a way to use "quote" (or something like it) to splice
# in a statement list?
let stmtList = newStmtList(vmProxyProcs)
stmtList.add(runVMProxy)
result = newCall("test", newStrLitNode(title), stmtList)
when defined(macro_assembler_debug):
echo result.toStrLit.strVal
proc initDatabase*(networkId = MainNet): (BaseVMState, BaseChainDB) =
let db = newBaseChainDB(newMemoryDB(), false, networkId, networkParams(networkId))
initializeEmptyDb(db)
let
parent = getCanonicalHead(db)
coinbase = hexToByteArray[20]("bb7b8287f3f0a933474a79eae42cbca977791171")
timestamp = parent.timestamp + initDuration(seconds = 1)
header = BlockHeader(
blockNumber: 1.u256,
stateRoot: parent.stateRoot,
parentHash: parent.blockHash,
coinbase: coinbase,
timestamp: timestamp,
difficulty: db.config.calcDifficulty(timestamp, parent),
gasLimit: 100_000
)
Redesign of BaseVMState descriptor (#923) * Redesign of BaseVMState descriptor why: BaseVMState provides an environment for executing transactions. The current descriptor also provides data that cannot generally be known within the execution environment, e.g. the total gasUsed which is available not before after all transactions have finished. Also, the BaseVMState constructor has been replaced by a constructor that does not need pre-initialised input of the account database. also: Previous constructor and some fields are provided with a deprecated annotation (producing a lot of noise.) * Replace legacy directives in production sources * Replace legacy directives in unit test sources * fix CI (missing premix update) * Remove legacy directives * chase CI problem * rebased * Re-introduce 'AccountsCache' constructor optimisation for 'BaseVmState' re-initialisation why: Constructing a new 'AccountsCache' descriptor can be avoided sometimes when the current state root is properly positioned already. Such a feature existed already as the update function 'initStateDB()' for the 'BaseChanDB' where the accounts cache was linked into this desctiptor. The function 'initStateDB()' was removed and re-implemented into the 'BaseVmState' constructor without optimisation. The old version was of restricted use as a wrong accounts cache state would unconditionally throw an exception rather than conceptually ask for a remedy. The optimised 'BaseVmState' re-initialisation has been implemented for the 'persistBlocks()' function. also: moved some test helpers to 'test/replay' folder * Remove unused & undocumented fields from Chain descriptor why: Reduces attack surface in general & improves reading the code.
2022-01-18 16:19:32 +00:00
vmState = BaseVMState.new(header, db)
(vmState, db)
Added basic async capabilities for vm2. (#1260) * Added basic async capabilities for vm2. This is a whole new Git branch, not the same one as last time (https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1250) - there wasn't much worth salvaging. Main differences: I didn't do the "each opcode has to specify an async handler" junk that I put in last time. Instead, in oph_memory.nim you can see sloadOp calling asyncChainTo and passing in an async operation. That async operation is then run by the execCallOrCreate (or asyncExecCallOrCreate) code in interpreter_dispatch.nim. In the test code, the (previously existing) macro called "assembler" now allows you to add a section called "initialStorage", specifying fake data to be used by the EVM computation run by that test. (In the long run we'll obviously want to write tests that for-real use the JSON-RPC API to asynchronously fetch data; for now, this was just an expedient way to write a basic unit test that exercises the async-EVM code pathway.) There's also a new macro called "concurrentAssemblers" that allows you to write a test that runs multiple assemblers concurrently (and then waits for them all to finish). There's one example test using this, in test_op_memory_lazy.nim, though you can't actually see it doing so unless you uncomment some echo statements in async_operations.nim (in which case you can see the two concurrently running EVM computations each printing out what they're doing, and you'll see that they interleave). A question: is it possible to make EVMC work asynchronously? (For now, this code compiles and "make test" passes even if ENABLE_EVMC is turned on, but it doesn't actually work asynchronously, it just falls back on doing the usual synchronous EVMC thing. See FIXME-asyncAndEvmc.) * Moved the AsyncOperationFactory to the BaseVMState object. * Made the AsyncOperationFactory into a table of fn pointers. Also ditched the plain-data Vm2AsyncOperation type; it wasn't really serving much purpose. Instead, the pendingAsyncOperation field directly contains the Future. * Removed the hasStorage idea. It's not the right solution to the "how do we know whether we still need to fetch the storage value or not?" problem. I haven't implemented the right solution yet, but at least we're better off not putting in a wrong one. * Added/modified/removed some comments. (Based on feedback on the PR.) * Removed the waitFor from execCallOrCreate. There was some back-and-forth in the PR regarding whether nested waitFor calls are acceptable: https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1260#discussion_r998587449 The eventual decision was to just change the waitFor to a doAssert (since we probably won't want this extra functionality when running synchronously anyway) to make sure that the Future is already finished.
2022-11-01 15:35:46 +00:00
const codeAddress = hexToByteArray[20]("460121576cc7df020759730751f92bd62fd78dd6")
Added basic async capabilities for vm2. (#1260) * Added basic async capabilities for vm2. This is a whole new Git branch, not the same one as last time (https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1250) - there wasn't much worth salvaging. Main differences: I didn't do the "each opcode has to specify an async handler" junk that I put in last time. Instead, in oph_memory.nim you can see sloadOp calling asyncChainTo and passing in an async operation. That async operation is then run by the execCallOrCreate (or asyncExecCallOrCreate) code in interpreter_dispatch.nim. In the test code, the (previously existing) macro called "assembler" now allows you to add a section called "initialStorage", specifying fake data to be used by the EVM computation run by that test. (In the long run we'll obviously want to write tests that for-real use the JSON-RPC API to asynchronously fetch data; for now, this was just an expedient way to write a basic unit test that exercises the async-EVM code pathway.) There's also a new macro called "concurrentAssemblers" that allows you to write a test that runs multiple assemblers concurrently (and then waits for them all to finish). There's one example test using this, in test_op_memory_lazy.nim, though you can't actually see it doing so unless you uncomment some echo statements in async_operations.nim (in which case you can see the two concurrently running EVM computations each printing out what they're doing, and you'll see that they interleave). A question: is it possible to make EVMC work asynchronously? (For now, this code compiles and "make test" passes even if ENABLE_EVMC is turned on, but it doesn't actually work asynchronously, it just falls back on doing the usual synchronous EVMC thing. See FIXME-asyncAndEvmc.) * Moved the AsyncOperationFactory to the BaseVMState object. * Made the AsyncOperationFactory into a table of fn pointers. Also ditched the plain-data Vm2AsyncOperation type; it wasn't really serving much purpose. Instead, the pendingAsyncOperation field directly contains the Future. * Removed the hasStorage idea. It's not the right solution to the "how do we know whether we still need to fetch the storage value or not?" problem. I haven't implemented the right solution yet, but at least we're better off not putting in a wrong one. * Added/modified/removed some comments. (Based on feedback on the PR.) * Removed the waitFor from execCallOrCreate. There was some back-and-forth in the PR regarding whether nested waitFor calls are acceptable: https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1260#discussion_r998587449 The eventual decision was to just change the waitFor to a doAssert (since we probably won't want this extra functionality when running synchronously anyway) to make sure that the Future is already finished.
2022-11-01 15:35:46 +00:00
proc verifyAsmResult(vmState: BaseVMState, chainDB: BaseChainDB, boa: Assembler, asmResult: CallResult): bool =
if not asmResult.isError:
if boa.success == false:
error "different success value", expected=boa.success, actual=true
return false
else:
if boa.success == true:
error "different success value", expected=boa.success, actual=false
return false
2020-11-25 11:23:02 +00:00
if boa.gasUsed != -1:
if boa.gasUsed != asmResult.gasUsed:
error "different gasUsed", expected=boa.gasUsed, actual=asmResult.gasUsed
2020-11-25 11:23:02 +00:00
return false
if boa.stack.len != asmResult.stack.values.len:
error "different stack len", expected=boa.stack.len, actual=asmResult.stack.values.len
return false
for i, v in asmResult.stack.values:
let actual = v.dumpHex()
let val = boa.stack[i].toHex()
if actual != val:
error "different stack value", idx=i, expected=val, actual=actual
return false
const chunkLen = 32
let numChunks = asmResult.memory.len div chunkLen
if numChunks != boa.memory.len:
error "different memory len", expected=boa.memory.len, actual=numChunks
return false
for i in 0 ..< numChunks:
let actual = asmResult.memory.bytes.toOpenArray(i * chunkLen, (i + 1) * chunkLen - 1).toHex()
let mem = boa.memory[i].toHex()
if mem != actual:
error "different memory value", idx=i, expected=mem, actual=actual
return false
var stateDB = vmState.stateDB
stateDB.persist()
var
storageRoot = stateDB.getStorageRoot(codeAddress)
trie = initSecureHexaryTrie(chainDB.db, storageRoot)
for kv in boa.storage:
let key = kv[0].toHex()
let val = kv[1].toHex()
let keyBytes = (@(kv[0]))
let actual = trie.get(keyBytes).toHex()
let zerosLen = 64 - (actual.len)
let value = repeat('0', zerosLen) & actual
if val != value:
error "storage has different value", key=key, expected=val, actual=value
return false
let logs = vmState.logEntries
if logs.len != boa.logs.len:
error "different logs len", expected=boa.logs.len, actual=logs.len
return false
for i, log in boa.logs:
let eAddr = log.address.toHex()
let aAddr = logs[i].address.toHex()
if eAddr != aAddr:
error "different address", expected=eAddr, actual=aAddr, idx=i
return false
let eData = log.data.toHex()
let aData = logs[i].data.toHex()
if eData != aData:
error "different data", expected=eData, actual=aData, idx=i
return false
if log.topics.len != logs[i].topics.len:
error "different topics len", expected=log.topics.len, actual=logs[i].topics.len, idx=i
return false
for x, t in log.topics:
let eTopic = t.toHex()
let aTopic = logs[i].topics[x].toHex()
if eTopic != aTopic:
error "different topic in log entry", expected=eTopic, actual=aTopic, logIdx=i, topicIdx=x
return false
if boa.output.len > 0:
let actual = asmResult.output.toHex()
let expected = boa.output.toHex()
if expected != actual:
error "different output detected", expected=expected, actual=actual
return false
result = true
Added basic async capabilities for vm2. (#1260) * Added basic async capabilities for vm2. This is a whole new Git branch, not the same one as last time (https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1250) - there wasn't much worth salvaging. Main differences: I didn't do the "each opcode has to specify an async handler" junk that I put in last time. Instead, in oph_memory.nim you can see sloadOp calling asyncChainTo and passing in an async operation. That async operation is then run by the execCallOrCreate (or asyncExecCallOrCreate) code in interpreter_dispatch.nim. In the test code, the (previously existing) macro called "assembler" now allows you to add a section called "initialStorage", specifying fake data to be used by the EVM computation run by that test. (In the long run we'll obviously want to write tests that for-real use the JSON-RPC API to asynchronously fetch data; for now, this was just an expedient way to write a basic unit test that exercises the async-EVM code pathway.) There's also a new macro called "concurrentAssemblers" that allows you to write a test that runs multiple assemblers concurrently (and then waits for them all to finish). There's one example test using this, in test_op_memory_lazy.nim, though you can't actually see it doing so unless you uncomment some echo statements in async_operations.nim (in which case you can see the two concurrently running EVM computations each printing out what they're doing, and you'll see that they interleave). A question: is it possible to make EVMC work asynchronously? (For now, this code compiles and "make test" passes even if ENABLE_EVMC is turned on, but it doesn't actually work asynchronously, it just falls back on doing the usual synchronous EVMC thing. See FIXME-asyncAndEvmc.) * Moved the AsyncOperationFactory to the BaseVMState object. * Made the AsyncOperationFactory into a table of fn pointers. Also ditched the plain-data Vm2AsyncOperation type; it wasn't really serving much purpose. Instead, the pendingAsyncOperation field directly contains the Future. * Removed the hasStorage idea. It's not the right solution to the "how do we know whether we still need to fetch the storage value or not?" problem. I haven't implemented the right solution yet, but at least we're better off not putting in a wrong one. * Added/modified/removed some comments. (Based on feedback on the PR.) * Removed the waitFor from execCallOrCreate. There was some back-and-forth in the PR regarding whether nested waitFor calls are acceptable: https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1260#discussion_r998587449 The eventual decision was to just change the waitFor to a doAssert (since we probably won't want this extra functionality when running synchronously anyway) to make sure that the Future is already finished.
2022-11-01 15:35:46 +00:00
proc createSignedTx(boaData: Blob, chainId: ChainId): Transaction =
let privateKey = PrivateKey.fromHex("7a28b5ba57c53603b0b07b56bba752f7784bf506fa95edc395f5cf6c7514fe9d")[]
let unsignedTx = Transaction(
txType: TxLegacy,
nonce: 0,
gasPrice: 1.GasInt,
gasLimit: 500_000_000.GasInt,
to: codeAddress.some,
value: 500.u256,
payload: boaData
)
signTransaction(unsignedTx, privateKey, chainId, false)
proc runVM*(vmState: BaseVMState, chainDB: BaseChainDB, boa: Assembler, asyncFactory: AsyncOperationFactory): bool =
vmState.asyncFactory = asyncFactory
vmState.mutateStateDB:
db.setCode(codeAddress, boa.code)
db.setBalance(codeAddress, 1_000_000.u256)
let tx = createSignedTx(boa.data, chainDB.config.chainId)
let asmResult = testCallEvm(tx, tx.getSender, vmState, boa.fork)
verifyAsmResult(vmState, chainDB, boa, asmResult)
# FIXME-duplicatedForAsync
proc asyncRunVM*(vmState: BaseVMState, chainDB: BaseChainDB, boa: Assembler, asyncFactory: AsyncOperationFactory): Future[bool] {.async.} =
vmState.asyncFactory = asyncFactory
vmState.mutateStateDB:
db.setCode(codeAddress, boa.code)
db.setBalance(codeAddress, 1_000_000.u256)
let tx = createSignedTx(boa.data, chainDB.config.chainId)
let asmResult = await asyncTestCallEvm(tx, tx.getSender, vmState, boa.fork)
return verifyAsmResult(vmState, chainDB, boa, asmResult)
macro assembler*(list: untyped): untyped =
Added basic async capabilities for vm2. (#1260) * Added basic async capabilities for vm2. This is a whole new Git branch, not the same one as last time (https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1250) - there wasn't much worth salvaging. Main differences: I didn't do the "each opcode has to specify an async handler" junk that I put in last time. Instead, in oph_memory.nim you can see sloadOp calling asyncChainTo and passing in an async operation. That async operation is then run by the execCallOrCreate (or asyncExecCallOrCreate) code in interpreter_dispatch.nim. In the test code, the (previously existing) macro called "assembler" now allows you to add a section called "initialStorage", specifying fake data to be used by the EVM computation run by that test. (In the long run we'll obviously want to write tests that for-real use the JSON-RPC API to asynchronously fetch data; for now, this was just an expedient way to write a basic unit test that exercises the async-EVM code pathway.) There's also a new macro called "concurrentAssemblers" that allows you to write a test that runs multiple assemblers concurrently (and then waits for them all to finish). There's one example test using this, in test_op_memory_lazy.nim, though you can't actually see it doing so unless you uncomment some echo statements in async_operations.nim (in which case you can see the two concurrently running EVM computations each printing out what they're doing, and you'll see that they interleave). A question: is it possible to make EVMC work asynchronously? (For now, this code compiles and "make test" passes even if ENABLE_EVMC is turned on, but it doesn't actually work asynchronously, it just falls back on doing the usual synchronous EVMC thing. See FIXME-asyncAndEvmc.) * Moved the AsyncOperationFactory to the BaseVMState object. * Made the AsyncOperationFactory into a table of fn pointers. Also ditched the plain-data Vm2AsyncOperation type; it wasn't really serving much purpose. Instead, the pendingAsyncOperation field directly contains the Future. * Removed the hasStorage idea. It's not the right solution to the "how do we know whether we still need to fetch the storage value or not?" problem. I haven't implemented the right solution yet, but at least we're better off not putting in a wrong one. * Added/modified/removed some comments. (Based on feedback on the PR.) * Removed the waitFor from execCallOrCreate. There was some back-and-forth in the PR regarding whether nested waitFor calls are acceptable: https://github.com/status-im/nimbus-eth1/pull/1260#discussion_r998587449 The eventual decision was to just change the waitFor to a doAssert (since we probably won't want this extra functionality when running synchronously anyway) to make sure that the Future is already finished.
2022-11-01 15:35:46 +00:00
result = parseAssembler(list).generateAssemblerTest()
macro concurrentAssemblers*(list: untyped): untyped =
result = parseConcurrencyTest(list).generateConcurrencyTest()
macro evmByteCode*(list: untyped): untyped =
list.expectKind nnkStmtList
var code = parseCode(list)
result = newLitFixed(code)