This commit implements a dual state approach. The dual state approach
separates public and private state by making the core vm environment
context aware.
Although not currently implemented it will need to prohibit value
transfers and it must initialise all transactions from accounts on the
public state. This means that sending transactions increments the
account nonce on the public state and contract addresses are derived
from the public state when initialised by a transaction. For obvious
reasons, contract created by private contracts are still derived from
public state.
This is required in order to have consensus over the public state at all
times as non-private participants would still process the transaction on
the public state even though private payload can not be decrypted. This
means that participants of a private group must do the same in order to
have public consensus. However the creation of the contract and
interaction still occurs on the private state.
It implements support for the following calling model:
S: sender, (X): private, X: public, ->: direction, [ ]: read only mode
1. S -> A -> B
2. S -> (A) -> (B)
3. S -> (A) -> [ B -> C ]
It does not support
1. (S) -> A
2. (S) -> (A)
3. S -> (A) -> B
Implemented "read only" mode for the EVM. Read only mode is checked
during any opcode that could potentially modify the state. If such an
opcode is encountered during "read only", it throws an exception.
The EVM is flagged "read only" when a private contract calls in to
public state.
This commit includes several API changes:
- The behavior of eth_sign is changed. It now accepts an arbitrary
message, prepends the well-known string
\x19Ethereum Signed Message:\n<length of message>
hashes the result using keccak256 and calculates the signature of
the hash. This breaks backwards compatability!
- personal_sign(hash, address [, password]) is added. It has the same
semantics as eth_sign but also accepts a password. The private key
used to sign the hash is temporarily unlocked in the scope of the
request.
- personal_recover(message, signature) is added and returns the
address for the account that created a signature.
This implements 1b & 1c of EIP150 by adding a new GasTable which must be
returned from the RuleSet config method. This table is used to determine
the gas prices for the current epoch.
Please note that when the CreateBySuicide gas price is set it is assumed
that we're in the new epoch phase.
In addition this PR will serve as temporary basis while refactorisation
in being done in the EVM64 PR, which will substentially overhaul the gas
price code.
* trie: store nodes as pointers
This avoids memory copies when unwrapping node interface values.
name old time/op new time/op delta
Get 388ns ± 8% 215ns ± 2% -44.56% (p=0.000 n=15+15)
GetDB 363ns ± 3% 202ns ± 2% -44.21% (p=0.000 n=15+15)
UpdateBE 1.57µs ± 2% 1.29µs ± 3% -17.80% (p=0.000 n=13+15)
UpdateLE 1.92µs ± 2% 1.61µs ± 2% -16.25% (p=0.000 n=14+14)
HashBE 2.16µs ± 6% 2.18µs ± 6% ~ (p=0.436 n=15+15)
HashLE 7.43µs ± 3% 7.21µs ± 3% -2.96% (p=0.000 n=15+13)
* trie: close temporary databases in GetDB benchmark
* trie: don't keep []byte from DB load around
Nodes decoded from a DB load kept hashes and values as sub-slices of
the DB value. This can be a problem because loading from leveldb often
returns []byte with a cap that's larger than necessary, increasing
memory usage.
* trie: unload old cached nodes
* trie, core/state: use cache unloading for account trie
* trie: use explicit private flags (fixes Go 1.5 reflection issue).
* trie: fixup cachegen overflow at request of nick
* core/state: rename journal size constant
Two new tests are skipped because they're buggy. Making some newer
random state tests work required implementing the 'compressed return
value encoding'.
This commit replaces the deep-copy based state revert mechanism with a
linear complexity journal. This commit also hides several internal
StateDB methods to limit the number of ways in which calling code can
use the journal incorrectly.
As usual consultation and bug fixes to the initial implementation were
provided by @karalabe, @obscuren and @Arachnid. Thank you!