* Dissolve legacy `sync/types.nim` into `*/eth/eth_types.nim`
* Flare sync: Simplify scheduler and remove `runSingle()` method
why:
`runSingle()` is not used anymore (main purpose was for negotiating
best headers in legacy full sync.)
Also, `runMulti()` was renamed `runPeer()`
* Flare sync: Move `chain` field from `sync_desc` -> `worker_desc`
* Flare sync: Remove handler descriptor lateral reference
why:
Not used anymore. It enabled to turn on/off eth handler activity with
regards to the sync state, i.e.from with in the sync worker.
* Flare sync: Update `Hash256` and other deprecated `std/eth` symbols
* Protocols: Update `Hash256` and other deprecated `std/eth` symbols
* Eth handler: Update `Hash256` and other deprecated `std/eth` symbols
* Update flare TODO
* Remove redundant `sync/type` import
why:
The import module `type` has been removed
* Remove duplicate implementation
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.
* Cosmetics, small fixes, add stashed headers verifier
* Remove direct `Era1` support
why:
Era1 is indirectly supported by using the import tool before syncing.
* Clarify database persistent save function.
why:
Function relied on the last saved state block number which was wrong.
It now relies on the tx-level. If it is 0, then data are saved directly.
Otherwise the task that owns the tx will do it.
* Extracted configuration constants into separate file
* Enable single peer mode for debugging
* Fix peer losing issue in multi-mode
details:
Running concurrent download peers was previously programmed as running
a batch downloading and storing ~8k headers and then leaving the `async`
function to be restarted by a scheduler.
This was unfortunate because of occasionally occurring long waiting
times for restart.
While the time gap until restarting were typically observed a few
millisecs, there were always a few outliers which well exceed several
seconds. This seemed to let remote peers run into timeouts.
* Prefix function names `unprocXxx()` and `stagedYyy()` by `headers`
why:
There will be other `unproc` and `staged` modules.
* Remove cruft, update logging
* Fix accounting issue
details:
When staging after fetching headers from the network, there was an off
by 1 error occurring when the result was by one smaller than requested.
Also, a whole range was mis-accounted when a peer was terminating
connection immediately after responding.
* Fix slow/error header accounting when fetching
why:
Originally set for detecting slow headers in a row, the counter
was wrongly extended to general errors.
* Ban peers for a while that respond with too few headers continuously
why:
Some peers only returned one header at a time. If these peers sit on a
farm, they might collectively slow down the download process.
* Update RPC beacon header updater
why:
Old function hook has slightly changed its meaning since it was used
for snap sync. Also, the old hook is used by other functions already.
* Limit number of peers or set to single peer mode
details:
Merge several concepts, single peer mode being one of it.
* Some code clean up, fixings for removing of compiler warnings
* De-noise header fetch related sources
why:
Header download looks relatively stable, so general debugging is not
needed, anymore. This is the equivalent of removing the scaffold from
the part of the building where work has completed.
* More clean up and code prettification for headers stuff
* Implement body fetch and block import
details:
Available headers are used stage blocks by combining existing headers
with newly fetched blocks. Then these blocks are imported/executed via
`persistBlocks()`.
* Logger cosmetics and cleanup
* Remove staged block queue debugging
details:
Feature still available, just not executed anymore
* Docu, logging update
* Update/simplify `runDaemon()`
* Re-calibrate block body requests and soft config for import blocks batch
why:
* For fetching, larger fetch requests are mostly truncated anyway on
MainNet.
* For executing, smaller batch sizes reduce the memory needed for the
price of longer execution times.
* Update metrics counters
* Docu update
* Some fixes, formatting updates, etc.
* Update `borrowed` type: uint -. uint64
also:
Always convert to `uint64` rather than `uint` where appropriate
* ForkedChainRef.forkchoice: Skip newBase calculation and skip chain finalization if finalizedHash is zero
* Fix ForkedChainRef.forkChoice: do nothing if headHash is the same with cursorHash
* Fix stupid bug in engine API FCU when calling ForkedChainRef.forkChoice
* Wire RPC server API to nimbus RPC manager
* Add test case
* Use default(Hash256) in ForkedChainRef
* init style for Hash256
https://github.com/status-im/nim-eth/pull/733 updates `Hash256` to
become an array instead of an object - unfortunately, nim does not allow
constructing arrays with `name()`, so this PR changes it to `default`
which works with both.
* lint
* fix: nimbus state ahead of era history
* comments
* fix: suggestions
* fix: messages
* fix edge case resume
* check from last file
* formatting
* fix: typo
* fix: unwanted quit before rlp import
* batch database key writes during `computeKey` calls
* log progress when there are many keys to update
* avoid evicting the vertex cache when traversing the trie for key
computation purposes
* avoid storing trivial leaf hashes that directly can be loaded from the
vertex
* Add missing leaf cache update when a leaf turns to a branch with two
leaves (on merge) and vice versa (on delete) - this could lead to stale
leaves being returned from the cache causing validation failures - it
didn't happen because the leaf caches were not being used efficiently :)
* Replace `seq` with `ArrayBuf` in `Hike` allowing it to become
allocation-free - this PR also works around an inefficiency in nim in
returning large types via a `var` parameter
* Use the leaf cache instead of `getVtxRc` to fetch recent leaves - this
makes the vertex cache more efficient at caching branches because fewer
leaf requests pass through it.
The storage leaf cache was being circumvented when actually fetching
leaves and was instead only being filled with items :/
Also avoids an expensive copy when fetching account data (broadly,
variant objects are comparatively expensive to copy and fetching
accounts is a hotspot)
* move pfx out of variant which avoids pointless field type panic checks
and copies on access
* make `VertexRef` a non-inheritable object which reduces its memory
footprint and simplifies its use - it's also unclear from a semantic
point of view why inheritance makes sense for storing keys
Compared to `keyed_queue`, `minilru` uses significantly less memory, in
particular for the 32-byte hash keys where `kq` stores several copies of
the key redundantly.
detail:
For practical reasons, ifsuch an account is asked for a slot, an empty
proof list is returned. It is up to the user to provide an account
proof that shows that there is no storage tree.
* Reverse order in staged blob lists
why:
having the largest block number with the least header list index `0`
makes it easier to grow the list with parent headers, i.e. decreasing
block numbers.
* Set a header response threshold when to ditch peer
* Refactor extension of staged header chains record
why:
Was cobbled together as a proof of concept after several approaches of
how to run the download.
* TODO update
* Make debugging code independent of `release` flag
* Update import from jacek
* Block header download starting at Beacon down to Era1
details:
The header download implementation is intended to be completed to a
full sync facility.
Downloaded block headers are stored in a `CoreDb` table. Later on they
should be fetched, complemented by a block body, executed/imported,
and deleted from the table.
The Era1 repository may be partial or missing. Era1 headers are neither
downloaded nor stored on the `CoreDb` table.
Headers are downloaded top down (largest block number first) using the
hash of the block header by one peer. Other peers fetch headers
opportunistically using block numbers
Observed download times for 14m `MainNet` headers varies between 30min
and 1h (Era1 size truncated to 66m blocks.), full download 52min
(anectdotal.) The number of peers downloading concurrently is crucial
here.
* Activate `flare` by command line option
* Fix copyright year
Saving both memory and processing, we can move entries from one
savepoint to another, specially when the target is empty as it often is
during transaction processing
* replace rocksdb row cache with larger rdb lru caches - these serve the
same purpose but are more efficient because they skips serialization,
locking and rocksdb layering
* don't append fresh items to cache - this has the effect of evicting
the existing items and replacing them with low-value entries that might
never be read - during write-heavy periods of processing, the
newly-added entries were evicted during the store loop
* allow tuning rdb lru size at runtime
* add (hidden) option to print lru stats at exit (replacing the
compile-time flag)
pre:
```
INF 2024-09-03 15:07:01.136+02:00 Imported blocks
blockNumber=20012001 blocks=12000 importedSlot=9216851 txs=1837042
mgas=181911.265 bps=11.675 tps=1870.397 mgps=176.819 avgBps=10.288
avgTps=1574.889 avgMGps=155.952 elapsed=19m26s458ms
```
post:
```
INF 2024-09-03 13:54:26.730+02:00 Imported blocks
blockNumber=20012001 blocks=12000 importedSlot=9216851 txs=1837042
mgas=181911.265 bps=11.637 tps=1864.384 mgps=176.250 avgBps=11.202
avgTps=1714.920 avgMGps=169.818 elapsed=17m51s211ms
```
9%:ish import perf improvement on similar mem usage :)
* Cosmetics, spelling, etc.
* Aristo: make sure that a save cycle always commits even when empty
why:
If `Kvt` is tied to the `Aristo` DB save cycle, then this save cycle
must also be committed if there is no data to save for `Aristo`.
Otherwise this will lead to excessive core memory use with some fringe
condition where Eth headers (or blocks) are downloaded while syncing
and not really stored on disk.
* CoreDb: Correct persistent save mode
why:
Saving `Kvt` first is seen as a harbinger (or canary) for `Aristo` as
both run in sync. If `Kvt` succeeds saving first, so must be `Aristo`
next. Other than this is a defect.
* Wiring ForkedChainRef to other components
- Disable majority of hive simulators
- Only enable pyspec_sim for the moment
- The pyspec_sim is using a smaller RPC service wired to ForkedChainRef
- The RPC service will gradually grow
* Addressing PR review
* Fix test_beacon/setup_env
* Enable consensus_sim (#2441)
* Enable consensus_sim
* Remove isFile check
* Enable Engine API jwt auth tests and exchange cap tests
* Enable engine api in build_sim.sh
* Wire ForkedChainRef to Engine API newPayload
* Wire Engine API getBodies to ForkedChainRef
* Wire Engine API api_forkchoice to ForkedChainRef
* Wire more RPC methods to ForkedChainRef
* Implement eth_syncing
* Implement eth_call and eth_getlogs
* TxPool: simplify smartHead
* Fix smartHead usage
* Fix txpool headDiff
* Remove hasBlockHeader and use headerExists
* Addressing review
This is a first step towards measuring the efficiency of the LRU caches
over time - metrics can be collected during import or when running
regulary.
Since `nim-metrics` carries some overhead for its default way of
reporting metrics, this PR implements a custom collector over atomic
counters, given that this is one of the hottest spots in the block
processing pipeline.
Using a compile-time flag, the same metrics can be printed on exit which
is useful when comparing different strategies for caching - here's a
recent run over blocks 16000001-1616384 - this is a good candidate to
expose in a better way in the future, maybe:
```
state vtype miss hit total hitrate
Account Leaf 4909417 4466215 9375632 47.64%
Account Branch 20742574 72015123 92757697 77.64%
World Leaf 940483 1140946 2081429 54.82%
World Branch 8224151 131496580 139720731 94.11%
all all 34816625 209118864 243935489 85.73%
```
* pre-allocate `blobify` data and remove redundant error handling
(cannot fail on correct data)
* use threadvar for temporary storage when decoding rdb, avoiding
closure env
* speed up database walkers by avoiding many temporaries
~5% perf improvement on block import, 100x on database iteration (useful
for building analysis tooling)
Tested up to block ~14m, zstd uses ~12% less space which seems to result
in a small:ish (2-4%) performance improvement on block import speed -
this seems like a better baseline for more extensive testing in the
future.
Pre: 57383308 kb
Post: 50831236 kb
* bump metrics
* Remove cruft
* Cosmetics, update some logging, noise control
* Renamed `CoreDb` function `hasKey` => `hasKeyRc` and provided `hasKey`
why:
Currently, `hasKey` returns a `Result[]` rather than a `bool` which
is what one would expect from a function prototype of this name.
This was a bit of an annoyance and cost unnecessary attention.
In the current VM opcode dispatcher, a two-level case statement is
generated that first matches the opcode and then uses another nested
case statement to select the actual implementation based on which fork
it is, causing the dispatcher to grow by `O(opcodes) * O(forks)`.
The fork does not change between instructions causing significant
inefficiency for this approach - not only because it repeats the fork
lookup but also because of code size bloat and missed optimizations.
A second source of inefficiency in dispatching is the tracer code which
in the vast majority of cases is disabled but nevertheless sees multiple
conditionals being evaluated for each instruction only to remain
disabled throughout exeuction.
This PR rewrites the opcode dispatcher macro to generate a separate
dispatcher for each fork and tracer setting and goes on to pick the
right one at the start of the computation.
This has many advantages:
* much smaller dispatcher
* easier to compile
* better inlining
* fewer pointlessly repeated instruction
* simplified macro (!)
* slow "low-compiler-memory" dispatcher code can be removed
Net block import improvement at about 4-6% depending on the contract -
synthetic EVM benchmnarks would show an even better result most likely.
Because EthBlock is quite large, the stack usage that results from the
multiple copies (temporary and not) present in the import command is
larger than it should be - this PR moves some of that data to a closure
environment allocated once per EthBlock - a larger restructuring of the
code is due but in the meantime, this simple change speeds up garbage
collection a little bit.
* Remove redundant `eth/68` message and clean up docu
details:
There is only eth/68 available at the moment
* Allow to turn on chronicles line number logging in `Makefile`
* Accept (and forget) tx hashes announcements
why:
Does no harm to just ignore it at the moment
* Bump nim-eth (rlp fix)
When the stack has an empty layer on top, there's no need to copy the
contents of `top` to it since it would be the same.
~13% processing saved (!)
pre
```
INF 2024-08-17 19:11:31.748+02:00 Imported blocks
blockNumber=18667648 blocks=12000 importedSlot=7860043 txs=1797812
mgas=181135.177 bps=8.763 tps=1375.062 mgps=132.125 avgBps=6.798
avgTps=1018.501 avgMGps=102.617 elapsed=29m25s154ms
```
post
```
INF 2024-08-17 18:22:52.513+02:00 Imported blocks
blockNumber=18667648 blocks=12000 importedSlot=7860043 txs=1797812
mgas=181135.177 bps=9.648 tps=1513.961 mgps=145.472 avgBps=7.876
avgTps=1179.998 avgMGps=118.888 elapsed=25m23s572ms
```
The reverse slot hash mechanism causes quite a bit of database traffic
but is broadly not useful except for iterating the storage of an
account, something that a validator never does (it's used by the
tracers).
This flag adds one more thing that is not stored in the database, to be
explored more comprehensively when designing full, validator and archive
modes with different pruning options in the future.
`ldb` says this is 60gb of data (!):
```
ldb --db=. --ignore_unknown_options --column_family=KvtGen approxsize
--hex --from=0x05
--to=0x05ffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff
66488353954
```
* Move snap un-dumpers to aristo unit test folder
why:
The only place where it is used, now to test the database against
legacy snap sync dump samples.
While the details of the dumped data have mostly outlived their purpuse,
its use as **entropy** data thrown against `Aristo` has still been
useful to find/debug tricky DB problems.
* Remove cruft
* `nimbus-eth1-blobs` not used anymore as test data source