14 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jacek Sieka
45ec6e7050
Use unittest2 test runner (#3073)
* Use unittest2 test runner

Since upgrading to unittest2, the test runner prints the command line to
re-run a failed test - this however relies on actually using the
unittest2 command line runner.

Previously, test files were assigned numbers - with the unittest2
runner, tests are run using suite/category names instead, like so:

```
# run the Genesis suite
build/all_tests "Genesis::``
# run all tests with "blsMapG1" in the name
build/all_tests "blsMapG1*"
# run tests verbosely
build/all_tests -v
```

A reasonable follow-up here would be to review the suite names to make
them easier to run :)

* lint

* easier-to-compare test order

* bump unittest2 (also the repo)
2025-02-15 14:08:50 +07:00
pmmiranda
411a3cadfa
Renamed 'nimbus' directory and its references to 'execution_chain' (#3052)
* renamed nimbus folder to execution_chain

* Renamed "nimbus" references to "execution_chain"

* fixed wrongly changed http reference

* delete snap types file given that it was deleted before this PR merge

* missing 'execution_chain' replacement

---------

Co-authored-by: pmmiranda <pedro.miranda@nimbus.team>
2025-02-11 22:28:42 +00:00
Jacek Sieka
2961905a95
aristo: fork support via layers/txframes (#2960)
* aristo: fork support via layers/txframes

This change reorganises how the database is accessed: instead holding a
"current frame" in the database object, a dag of frames is created based
on the "base frame" held in `AristoDbRef` and all database access
happens through this frame, which can be thought of as a consistent
point-in-time snapshot of the database based on a particular fork of the
chain.

In the code, "frame", "transaction" and "layer" is used to denote more
or less the same thing: a dag of stacked changes backed by the on-disk
database.

Although this is not a requirement, in practice each frame holds the
change set of a single block - as such, the frame and its ancestors
leading up to the on-disk state represents the state of the database
after that block has been applied.

"committing" means merging the changes to its parent frame so that the
difference between them is lost and only the cumulative changes remain -
this facility enables frames to be combined arbitrarily wherever they
are in the dag.

In particular, it becomes possible to consolidate a set of changes near
the base of the dag and commit those to disk without having to re-do the
in-memory frames built on top of them - this is useful for "flattening"
a set of changes during a base update and sending those to storage
without having to perform a block replay on top.

Looking at abstractions, a side effect of this change is that the KVT
and Aristo are brought closer together by considering them to be part of
the "same" atomic transaction set - the way the code gets organised,
applying a block and saving it to the kvt happens in the same "logical"
frame - therefore, discarding the frame discards both the aristo and kvt
changes at the same time - likewise, they are persisted to disk together
- this makes reasoning about the database somewhat easier but has the
downside of increased memory usage, something that perhaps will need
addressing in the future.

Because the code reasons more strictly about frames and the state of the
persisted database, it also makes it more visible where ForkedChain
should be used and where it is still missing - in particular, frames
represent a single branch of history while forkedchain manages multiple
parallel forks - user-facing services such as the RPC should use the
latter, ie until it has been finalized, a getBlock request should
consider all forks and not just the blocks in the canonical head branch.

Another advantage of this approach is that `AristoDbRef` conceptually
becomes more simple - removing its tracking of the "current" transaction
stack simplifies reasoning about what can go wrong since this state now
has to be passed around in the form of `AristoTxRef` - as such, many of
the tests and facilities in the code that were dealing with "stack
inconsistency" are now structurally prevented from happening. The test
suite will need significant refactoring after this change.

Once this change has been merged, there are several follow-ups to do:

* there's no mechanism for keeping frames up to date as they get
committed or rolled back - TODO
* naming is confused - many names for the same thing for legacy reason
* forkedchain support is still missing in lots of code
* clean up redundant logic based on previous designs - in particular the
debug and introspection code no longer makes sense
* the way change sets are stored will probably need revisiting - because
it's a stack of changes where each frame must be interrogated to find an
on-disk value, with a base distance of 128 we'll at minimum have to
perform 128 frame lookups for *every* database interaction - regardless,
the "dag-like" nature will stay
* dispose and commit are poorly defined and perhaps redundant - in
theory, one could simply let the GC collect abandoned frames etc, though
it's likely an explicit mechanism will remain useful, so they stay for
now

More about the changes:

* `AristoDbRef` gains a `txRef` field (todo: rename) that "more or less"
corresponds to the old `balancer` field
* `AristoDbRef.stack` is gone - instead, there's a chain of
`AristoTxRef` objects that hold their respective "layer" which has the
actual changes
* No more reasoning about "top" and "stack" - instead, each
`AristoTxRef` can be a "head" that "more or less" corresponds to the old
single-history `top` notion and its stack
* `level` still represents "distance to base" - it's computed from the
parent chain instead of being stored
* one has to be careful not to use frames where forkedchain was intended
- layers are only for a single branch of history!

* fix layer vtop after rollback

* engine fix

* Fix test_txpool

* Fix test_rpc

* Fix copyright year

* fix simulator

* Fix copyright year

* Fix copyright year

* Fix tracer

* Fix infinite recursion bug

* Remove aristo and kvt empty files

* Fic copyright year

* Fix fc chain_kvt

* ForkedChain refactoring

* Fix merge master conflict

* Fix copyright year

* Reparent txFrame

* Fix test

* Fix txFrame reparent again

* Cleanup and fix test

* UpdateBase bugfix and fix test

* Fixe newPayload bug discovered by hive

* Fix engine api fcu

* Clean up call template, chain_kvt, andn txguid

* Fix copyright year

* work around base block loading issue

* Add test

* Fix updateHead bug

* Fix updateBase bug

* Change func commitBase to proc commitBase

* Touch up and fix debug mode crash

---------

Co-authored-by: jangko <jangko128@gmail.com>
2025-02-06 14:04:50 +07:00
andri lim
aba9b582db
Rename stateDB to ledger (#2966)
* Rename stateDB to ledger

* Fix readOnlyLedger
2024-12-21 20:46:13 +07:00
Jacek Sieka
3d58393b4c
Offload signature checking to taskpools (#2927)
In block processing, depending on the complexity of a transaction and
hotness of caches etc, signature checking can actually make up the
majority of time needed to process a transaction (60% observed in some
randomly sampled block ranges).

Fortunately, this is a task that trivially can be offloaded to a task
pool similar to how nimbus-eth2 does it.

This PR introduces taskpools in the most simple way possible, by
performing signature checking concurrently with other TX processing,
assigning a taskpool task per TX effectively.

With this little trick, we're in gigagas land 🎉 on my laptop!

```
INF 2024-12-10 21:05:35.170+01:00 Imported blocks
blockNumber=3874817 b... mgps=1222.707 ...
```

Tests don't use the taskpool for now because it needs manual cleanup and
we don't have a good mechanism in place. Future PR:s should address this
by creating a common shutdown sequence that also closes and cleans up
other resources like the DB.

Co-authored-by: andri lim <jangko128@gmail.com>
2024-12-13 11:53:41 +07:00
Jacek Sieka
667897557a
Interpreter dispatch cleanups (#2913)
* `shouldPrepareTracer` always true
* simple `pop` should not copy value (reading the memory shows up in a
profiler)
* continuation code simplified
* remove some unnecessary EH
2024-12-06 13:01:15 +01:00
Jacek Sieka
b3cb51e89e
Speed up evm stack (#2881)
The EVM stack is a hot spot in EVM execution and we end up paying a nim
seq tax in several ways, adding up to ~5% of execution time:

* on initial allocation, all bytes get zeroed - this means we have to
choose between allocating a full stack or just a partial one and then
growing it
* pushing and popping introduce additional zeroing
* reallocations on growth copy + zero - expensive again!
* redundant range checking on every operation reducing inlining etc

Here a custom stack using C memory is instroduced:

* no zeroing on allocation
* full stack allocated on EVM startup -> no reallocation during
execution
* fast push/pop - no zeroing again
* 32-byte alignment - this makes it easier for the compiler to use
vector instructions
* no stack allocated for precompiles (these never use it anyway)

Of course, this change also means we have to manage memory manually -
for the EVM, this turns out to be not too bad because we already manage
database transactions the same way (they have to be freed "manually") so
we can simply latch on to this mechanism.

While we're at it, this PR also skips database lookup for known
precompiles by resolving such addresses earlier.
2024-11-30 10:07:10 +01:00
Chirag Parmar
2838191c4f
replace deprecated types (#2704)
* partial commit

* fixes

* remove converters too

* revert changes on nimbus_verified_proxy

* revert changes in converter

* revert changes(re-xport) in rpc_types

* update copyright year

* replace types in other binaries

* chain config bug

* fix rebase conflict imcomplete buffer

* fix more rebase buffers

* remove ditto types and converters

* fix the tests

* update copyright year
2024-10-16 08:34:12 +07:00
Jacek Sieka
08ffb3161c
Use eth/common transaction signature utilities (#2696)
* Use eth/common transaction signature utilities

* bump

* bump

* bump

* bump

* bump

* bump
2024-10-04 16:34:31 +02:00
Jacek Sieka
c210885b73
eth: bump to new types (#2660)
This is a minimal set of changes to make things work with the new types
in nim-eth - this is the minimal PR that merely resolves
incompatibilities while the full change set would include more cleanup
and migration.
2024-09-29 14:37:09 +02:00
Jacek Sieka
72947b3647
odds and ends (#2481)
small cleanups to reduce memory allocations
2024-07-13 20:42:49 +02:00
andri lim
4eaae5cbfa
EVM gasCall values always stay on positive side (#2459)
* EVM gasCall values always stay on positive side

This is also another part of preparations before
converting GasInt to uint64

* Fix test_evm_support
2024-07-06 08:39:22 +07:00
andri lim
f04f30c72b
Reduce EVM complexity by removing forkOverride (#2448)
* Reduce EVM complexity by removing forkOverride

* Fixes
2024-07-04 15:48:36 +02:00
andri lim
b751d3adee
Combine smaller tests into bigger one (#2425)
1. test_state_db and test_ledger -> test_ledger.
   They are the same thing now.
2. stack, memory, code_stream, gas_meter, misc,
   overflow -> test_evm_support.
   They are small tests and fall into the same area.
2024-06-29 08:57:30 +07:00