BTCP-Rebase/src/protocol.h

412 lines
14 KiB
C++

// Copyright (c) 2009-2010 Satoshi Nakamoto
// Copyright (c) 2009-2018 The Bitcoin Core developers
// Distributed under the MIT software license, see the accompanying
// file COPYING or http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php.
#ifndef __cplusplus
#error This header can only be compiled as C++.
#endif
#ifndef BITCOIN_PROTOCOL_H
#define BITCOIN_PROTOCOL_H
#include <netaddress.h>
#include <serialize.h>
#include <uint256.h>
#include <version.h>
#include <atomic>
#include <stdint.h>
#include <string>
/** Message header.
* (4) message start.
* (12) command.
* (4) size.
* (4) checksum.
*/
class CMessageHeader
{
public:
static constexpr size_t MESSAGE_START_SIZE = 4;
static constexpr size_t COMMAND_SIZE = 12;
static constexpr size_t MESSAGE_SIZE_SIZE = 4;
static constexpr size_t CHECKSUM_SIZE = 4;
static constexpr size_t MESSAGE_SIZE_OFFSET = MESSAGE_START_SIZE + COMMAND_SIZE;
static constexpr size_t CHECKSUM_OFFSET = MESSAGE_SIZE_OFFSET + MESSAGE_SIZE_SIZE;
static constexpr size_t HEADER_SIZE = MESSAGE_START_SIZE + COMMAND_SIZE + MESSAGE_SIZE_SIZE + CHECKSUM_SIZE;
typedef unsigned char MessageStartChars[MESSAGE_START_SIZE];
explicit CMessageHeader(const MessageStartChars& pchMessageStartIn);
CMessageHeader(const MessageStartChars& pchMessageStartIn, const char* pszCommand, unsigned int nMessageSizeIn);
std::string GetCommand() const;
bool IsValid(const MessageStartChars& messageStart) const;
ADD_SERIALIZE_METHODS;
template <typename Stream, typename Operation>
inline void SerializationOp(Stream& s, Operation ser_action)
{
READWRITE(pchMessageStart);
READWRITE(pchCommand);
READWRITE(nMessageSize);
READWRITE(pchChecksum);
}
char pchMessageStart[MESSAGE_START_SIZE];
char pchCommand[COMMAND_SIZE];
uint32_t nMessageSize;
uint8_t pchChecksum[CHECKSUM_SIZE];
};
/**
* Bitcoin protocol message types. When adding new message types, don't forget
* to update allNetMessageTypes in protocol.cpp.
*/
namespace NetMsgType {
/**
* The version message provides information about the transmitting node to the
* receiving node at the beginning of a connection.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#version
*/
extern const char *VERSION;
/**
* The verack message acknowledges a previously-received version message,
* informing the connecting node that it can begin to send other messages.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#verack
*/
extern const char *VERACK;
/**
* The addr (IP address) message relays connection information for peers on the
* network.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#addr
*/
extern const char *ADDR;
/**
* The inv message (inventory message) transmits one or more inventories of
* objects known to the transmitting peer.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#inv
*/
extern const char *INV;
/**
* The getdata message requests one or more data objects from another node.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#getdata
*/
extern const char *GETDATA;
/**
* The merkleblock message is a reply to a getdata message which requested a
* block using the inventory type MSG_MERKLEBLOCK.
* @since protocol version 70001 as described by BIP37.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#merkleblock
*/
extern const char *MERKLEBLOCK;
/**
* The getblocks message requests an inv message that provides block header
* hashes starting from a particular point in the block chain.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#getblocks
*/
extern const char *GETBLOCKS;
/**
* The getheaders message requests a headers message that provides block
* headers starting from a particular point in the block chain.
* @since protocol version 31800.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#getheaders
*/
extern const char *GETHEADERS;
/**
* The tx message transmits a single transaction.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#tx
*/
extern const char *TX;
/**
* The headers message sends one or more block headers to a node which
* previously requested certain headers with a getheaders message.
* @since protocol version 31800.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#headers
*/
extern const char *HEADERS;
/**
* The block message transmits a single serialized block.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#block
*/
extern const char *BLOCK;
/**
* The getaddr message requests an addr message from the receiving node,
* preferably one with lots of IP addresses of other receiving nodes.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#getaddr
*/
extern const char *GETADDR;
/**
* The mempool message requests the TXIDs of transactions that the receiving
* node has verified as valid but which have not yet appeared in a block.
* @since protocol version 60002.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#mempool
*/
extern const char *MEMPOOL;
/**
* The ping message is sent periodically to help confirm that the receiving
* peer is still connected.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#ping
*/
extern const char *PING;
/**
* The pong message replies to a ping message, proving to the pinging node that
* the ponging node is still alive.
* @since protocol version 60001 as described by BIP31.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#pong
*/
extern const char *PONG;
/**
* The notfound message is a reply to a getdata message which requested an
* object the receiving node does not have available for relay.
* @since protocol version 70001.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#notfound
*/
extern const char *NOTFOUND;
/**
* The filterload message tells the receiving peer to filter all relayed
* transactions and requested merkle blocks through the provided filter.
* @since protocol version 70001 as described by BIP37.
* Only available with service bit NODE_BLOOM since protocol version
* 70011 as described by BIP111.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#filterload
*/
extern const char *FILTERLOAD;
/**
* The filteradd message tells the receiving peer to add a single element to a
* previously-set bloom filter, such as a new public key.
* @since protocol version 70001 as described by BIP37.
* Only available with service bit NODE_BLOOM since protocol version
* 70011 as described by BIP111.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#filteradd
*/
extern const char *FILTERADD;
/**
* The filterclear message tells the receiving peer to remove a previously-set
* bloom filter.
* @since protocol version 70001 as described by BIP37.
* Only available with service bit NODE_BLOOM since protocol version
* 70011 as described by BIP111.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#filterclear
*/
extern const char *FILTERCLEAR;
/**
* The reject message informs the receiving node that one of its previous
* messages has been rejected.
* @since protocol version 70002 as described by BIP61.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#reject
*/
extern const char *REJECT;
/**
* Indicates that a node prefers to receive new block announcements via a
* "headers" message rather than an "inv".
* @since protocol version 70012 as described by BIP130.
* @see https://bitcoin.org/en/developer-reference#sendheaders
*/
extern const char *SENDHEADERS;
/**
* The feefilter message tells the receiving peer not to inv us any txs
* which do not meet the specified min fee rate.
* @since protocol version 70013 as described by BIP133
*/
extern const char *FEEFILTER;
/**
* Contains a 1-byte bool and 8-byte LE version number.
* Indicates that a node is willing to provide blocks via "cmpctblock" messages.
* May indicate that a node prefers to receive new block announcements via a
* "cmpctblock" message rather than an "inv", depending on message contents.
* @since protocol version 70014 as described by BIP 152
*/
extern const char *SENDCMPCT;
/**
* Contains a CBlockHeaderAndShortTxIDs object - providing a header and
* list of "short txids".
* @since protocol version 70014 as described by BIP 152
*/
extern const char *CMPCTBLOCK;
/**
* Contains a BlockTransactionsRequest
* Peer should respond with "blocktxn" message.
* @since protocol version 70014 as described by BIP 152
*/
extern const char *GETBLOCKTXN;
/**
* Contains a BlockTransactions.
* Sent in response to a "getblocktxn" message.
* @since protocol version 70014 as described by BIP 152
*/
extern const char *BLOCKTXN;
};
/* Get a vector of all valid message types (see above) */
const std::vector<std::string> &getAllNetMessageTypes();
/** nServices flags */
enum ServiceFlags : uint64_t {
// Nothing
NODE_NONE = 0,
// NODE_NETWORK means that the node is capable of serving the complete block chain. It is currently
// set by all Bitcoin Core non pruned nodes, and is unset by SPV clients or other light clients.
NODE_NETWORK = (1 << 0),
// NODE_GETUTXO means the node is capable of responding to the getutxo protocol request.
// Bitcoin Core does not support this but a patch set called Bitcoin XT does.
// See BIP 64 for details on how this is implemented.
NODE_GETUTXO = (1 << 1),
// NODE_BLOOM means the node is capable and willing to handle bloom-filtered connections.
// Bitcoin Core nodes used to support this by default, without advertising this bit,
// but no longer do as of protocol version 70011 (= NO_BLOOM_VERSION)
NODE_BLOOM = (1 << 2),
// NODE_WITNESS indicates that a node can be asked for blocks and transactions including
// witness data.
NODE_WITNESS = (1 << 3),
// NODE_XTHIN means the node supports Xtreme Thinblocks
// If this is turned off then the node will not service nor make xthin requests
NODE_XTHIN = (1 << 4),
// NODE_NETWORK_LIMITED means the same as NODE_NETWORK with the limitation of only
// serving the last 288 (2 day) blocks
// See BIP159 for details on how this is implemented.
NODE_NETWORK_LIMITED = (1 << 10),
// Bits 24-31 are reserved for temporary experiments. Just pick a bit that
// isn't getting used, or one not being used much, and notify the
// bitcoin-development mailing list. Remember that service bits are just
// unauthenticated advertisements, so your code must be robust against
// collisions and other cases where nodes may be advertising a service they
// do not actually support. Other service bits should be allocated via the
// BIP process.
};
/**
* Gets the set of service flags which are "desirable" for a given peer.
*
* These are the flags which are required for a peer to support for them
* to be "interesting" to us, ie for us to wish to use one of our few
* outbound connection slots for or for us to wish to prioritize keeping
* their connection around.
*
* Relevant service flags may be peer- and state-specific in that the
* version of the peer may determine which flags are required (eg in the
* case of NODE_NETWORK_LIMITED where we seek out NODE_NETWORK peers
* unless they set NODE_NETWORK_LIMITED and we are out of IBD, in which
* case NODE_NETWORK_LIMITED suffices).
*
* Thus, generally, avoid calling with peerServices == NODE_NONE, unless
* state-specific flags must absolutely be avoided. When called with
* peerServices == NODE_NONE, the returned desirable service flags are
* guaranteed to not change dependent on state - ie they are suitable for
* use when describing peers which we know to be desirable, but for which
* we do not have a confirmed set of service flags.
*
* If the NODE_NONE return value is changed, contrib/seeds/makeseeds.py
* should be updated appropriately to filter for the same nodes.
*/
ServiceFlags GetDesirableServiceFlags(ServiceFlags services);
/** Set the current IBD status in order to figure out the desirable service flags */
void SetServiceFlagsIBDCache(bool status);
/**
* A shortcut for (services & GetDesirableServiceFlags(services))
* == GetDesirableServiceFlags(services), ie determines whether the given
* set of service flags are sufficient for a peer to be "relevant".
*/
static inline bool HasAllDesirableServiceFlags(ServiceFlags services) {
return !(GetDesirableServiceFlags(services) & (~services));
}
/**
* Checks if a peer with the given service flags may be capable of having a
* robust address-storage DB.
*/
static inline bool MayHaveUsefulAddressDB(ServiceFlags services) {
return (services & NODE_NETWORK) || (services & NODE_NETWORK_LIMITED);
}
/** A CService with information about it as peer */
class CAddress : public CService
{
public:
CAddress();
explicit CAddress(CService ipIn, ServiceFlags nServicesIn);
void Init();
ADD_SERIALIZE_METHODS;
template <typename Stream, typename Operation>
inline void SerializationOp(Stream& s, Operation ser_action)
{
if (ser_action.ForRead())
Init();
int nVersion = s.GetVersion();
if (s.GetType() & SER_DISK)
READWRITE(nVersion);
if ((s.GetType() & SER_DISK) ||
(nVersion >= CADDR_TIME_VERSION && !(s.GetType() & SER_GETHASH)))
READWRITE(nTime);
uint64_t nServicesInt = nServices;
READWRITE(nServicesInt);
nServices = static_cast<ServiceFlags>(nServicesInt);
READWRITEAS(CService, *this);
}
// TODO: make private (improves encapsulation)
public:
ServiceFlags nServices;
// disk and network only
unsigned int nTime;
};
/** getdata message type flags */
const uint32_t MSG_WITNESS_FLAG = 1 << 30;
const uint32_t MSG_TYPE_MASK = 0xffffffff >> 2;
/** getdata / inv message types.
* These numbers are defined by the protocol. When adding a new value, be sure
* to mention it in the respective BIP.
*/
enum GetDataMsg
{
UNDEFINED = 0,
MSG_TX = 1,
MSG_BLOCK = 2,
// The following can only occur in getdata. Invs always use TX or BLOCK.
MSG_FILTERED_BLOCK = 3, //!< Defined in BIP37
MSG_CMPCT_BLOCK = 4, //!< Defined in BIP152
MSG_WITNESS_BLOCK = MSG_BLOCK | MSG_WITNESS_FLAG, //!< Defined in BIP144
MSG_WITNESS_TX = MSG_TX | MSG_WITNESS_FLAG, //!< Defined in BIP144
MSG_FILTERED_WITNESS_BLOCK = MSG_FILTERED_BLOCK | MSG_WITNESS_FLAG,
};
/** inv message data */
class CInv
{
public:
CInv();
CInv(int typeIn, const uint256& hashIn);
ADD_SERIALIZE_METHODS;
template <typename Stream, typename Operation>
inline void SerializationOp(Stream& s, Operation ser_action)
{
READWRITE(type);
READWRITE(hash);
}
friend bool operator<(const CInv& a, const CInv& b);
std::string GetCommand() const;
std::string ToString() const;
// TODO: make private (improves encapsulation)
public:
int type;
uint256 hash;
};
#endif // BITCOIN_PROTOCOL_H