Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jacek Sieka df4a21c910
Store cached hash at the layer corresponding to the source data (#2492)
When lazily verifying state roots, we may end up with an entire state
without roots that gets computed for the whole database - in the current
design, that would result in hashes for the entire trie being held in
memory.

Since the hash depends only on the data in the vertex, we can store it
directly at the top-most level derived from the verticies it depends on
- be that memory or database - this makes the memory usage broadly
linear with respect to the already-existing in-memory change set stored
in the layers.

It also ensures that if we have multiple forks in memory, hashes get
cached in the correct layer maximising reuse between forks.

The same layer numbering scheme as elsewhere is reused, where -2 is the
backend, -1 is the balancer, then 0+ is the top of the stack and stack.

A downside of this approach is that we create many small batches - a
future improvement could be to collect all such writes in a single
batch, though the memory profile of this approach should be examined
first (where is the batch kept, exactly?).
2024-07-18 09:13:56 +02:00
Jordan Hrycaj 17391b58d0
Hash keys and hash256 revisited (#2497)
* Remove cruft left-over from PR #2494

* TODO

* Update comments on `HashKey` type values

* Remove obsolete hash key conversion flag `forceRoot`

why:
  Is treated implicitly by having vertex keys as `HashKey` type and
  root vertex states converted to `Hash256`
2024-07-17 20:48:21 +07:00
Jordan Hrycaj a84a2131cd
No ext update (#2494)
* Imported/rebase from `no-ext`, PR #2485

  Store extension nodes together with the branch

  Extension nodes must be followed by a branch - as such, it makes sense
  to store the two together both in the database and in memory:

  * fewer reads, writes and updates to traverse the tree
  * simpler logic for maintaining the node structure
  * less space used, both memory and storage, because there are fewer
    nodes overall

  There is also a downside: hashes can no longer be cached for an
  extension - instead, only the extension+branch hash can be cached - this
  seems like a fine tradeoff since computing it should be fast.

  TODO: fix commented code

* Fix merge functions and `toNode()`

* Update `merkleSignCommit()` prototype

why:
  Result is always a 32bit hash

* Update short Merkle hash key generation

details:
  Ethereum reference MPTs use Keccak hashes as node links if the size of
  an RLP encoded node is at least 32 bytes. Otherwise, the RLP encoded
  node value is used as a pseudo node link (rather than a hash.) This is
  specified in the yellow paper, appendix D.

  Different to the `Aristo` implementation, the reference MPT would not
  store such a node on the key-value database. Rather the RLP encoded node value is stored instead of a node link in a parent node
  is stored as a node link on the parent database.

  Only for the root hash, the top level node is always referred to by the
  hash.

* Fix/update `Extension` sections

why:
  Were commented out after removal of a dedicated `Extension` type which
  left the system disfunctional.

* Clean up unused error codes

* Update unit tests

* Update docu

---------

Co-authored-by: Jacek Sieka <jacek@status.im>
2024-07-16 19:47:59 +00:00
Jacek Sieka 7d78fd97d5
avoid allocations for slot storage (#2455)
Introduce a new `StoData` payload type similar to `AccountData`

* slightly more efficient storage format
* typed api
* fewer seqs
* fix encoding docs - it wasn't rlp after all :)
2024-07-04 23:48:45 +00:00
Jacek Sieka 81e75622cf
storage: store root id together with vid, for better locality of refe… (#2449)
The state and account MPT:s currenty share key space in the database
based on that vertex id:s are assigned essentially randomly, which means
that when two adjacent slot values from the same contract are accessed,
they might reside at large distance from each other.

Here, we prefix each vertex id by its root causing them to be sorted
together thus bringing all data belonging to a particular contract
closer together - the same effect also happens for the main state MPT
whose nodes now end up clustered together more tightly.

In the future, the prefix given to the storage keys can also be used to
perform range operations such as reading all the storage at once and/or
deleting an account with a batch operation.

Notably, parts of the API already supported this rooting concept while
parts didn't - this PR makes the API consistent by always working with a
root+vid.
2024-07-04 15:46:52 +02:00
Jordan Hrycaj 8dd038144b
Some cleanups (#2428)
* Remove `dirty` set from structural objects

why:
  Not used anymore, the tree is dirty by default.

* Rename `aristo_hashify` -> `aristo_compute`

* Remove cruft, update comments, cosmetics, etc.

* Simplify `SavedState` object

why:
  The key chaining have become obsolete after extra lazy hashing. There
  is some available space for a state hash to be maintained in future.

details:
  Accept the legacy `SavedState` object serialisation format for a
  while (which will be overwritten by new format.)
2024-06-28 18:43:04 +00:00