* add transaction V5 stub
* add v5_strategy
* deduplicate version group ids
* Update comment for V5 transactions
* Add V5 transactions to non_finalized_state
Currently these are all `unimplemented!(...)`
* Fix struct matches
* Apply trivial panic message changes
* add zcash_deserialize for V5
* make all tx versions explicit in sprout and sapling nullifier functions
* match exhaustively in sprout and sapling nullifier functions
* fix matches in zebra-consensus
* fix NU5 strategy
* We're still deciding if v5 transactions support Sprout
Co-authored-by: teor <teor@riseup.net>
* Add NU5 variant to NetworkUpgrade
* Add consensus branch ID for NU5
* Add network protocol versions for NU5
* Add NU5 to the protocol::version_consistent test
* Make unimplemented panic messages more specific
* Block target spacing doesn't change in NU5
* add comments for future updates for NU5
Co-authored-by: teor <teor@riseup.net>
* Bump versions where appropriate
Tested with cargo install --locked --path etc
* Remove fixed panics from 'Known Issues'
* Change to alpha release series in the README
Co-authored-by: teor <teor@riseup.net>
The clippy unknown lints attribute was deprecated in
nightly in rust-lang/rust#80524. The old lint name now produces a
warning.
Since we're using `allow(unknown_lints)` to suppress warnings, we need to
add the canonical name, so we can continue to build without warnings on
nightly.
But we also need to keep the old name, so we can continue to build
without warnings on stable.
And therefore, we also need to disable the "removed lints" warning,
otherwise we'll get warnings about the old name on nightly.
We'll need to keep this transitional clippy config until rustc 1.51 is
stable.
Previously we set the crate versions to 3.x, so that the major version was
aligned with the NU version. But we want to be able to make API changes
independently of the NU schedule.
We modeled a Bitcoin `headers` message as being a list of block headers.
However, the actual data structure is slightly different: it's a list of (block
header, transaction count) pairs. This caused zcashd to reject our headers
messages.
To fix this, introduce a new `CountedHeader` struct with a `block::Header` and
transaction count `usize`, then thread it through the inbound service and the
state.
I tested this locally by running Zebra with these changes and inspecting a
trace-level log of the span of a peer connection that requested a nontrivial
headers packet from us, and verified that it did not reject our message.
The `CoinbaseData` parses the block height separately from the rest of the
free-form coinbase data. However, it had two bugs:
1. It did not require that the height was canonically encoded;
2. Its canonical encoding was incorrect relative to the BIP34-inherited encoding.
This meant that we computed some transaction hashes incorrectly, because when
we re-serialized the coinbase transaction, we would canonically serialize the
coinbase transaction (using the incorrect definition of canonical, bug 2). And
we didn't notice that the wrong definition of canonical encoding was being used
because we accepted what we thought were non-canonically encoded heights.
The relevant rules are here: 877212414a/src/script/script.h (L307-L346)
This commit changes the encoding to reject non-canonically encoded heights, and
to match the correct encoding rules. We check that at least one
non-canonically encoded height is correctly rejected using a new test vector.
The database format increments because we saved a bunch of wrongly encoded blocks.
This discrepancy was originally noticed by @teor2345, who pointed out that a
previous version of the block 202 test vector (now preserved as "bad block
202") did not match the block from zcashd.
* implement inbound `FindBlocks`
* Handle inbound peer FindHeaders requests
* handle request before having any chain tip
* Split `find_chain_hashes` into smaller functions
Add a `max_len` argument to support `FindHeaders` requests.
Rewrite the hash collection code to use heights, so we can handle the
`stop` hash and "no intersection" cases correctly.
* Split state height functions into "any chain" and "best chain"
* Rename the best chain block method to `best_block`
* Move fmt utilities to zebra_chain::fmt
* Summarise Debug for some Message variants
Co-authored-by: teor <teor@riseup.net>
Co-authored-by: Jane Lusby <jlusby42@gmail.com>