* feat: upgrade to multihash 0.13
`multihash` changes a lot internally, it is using stack allocation instead
of heap allocation. This leads to a few limitations in regards on how
`Multihash` can be used.
Therefore `PeerId` is now using a `Bytes` internally so that only minimal
changes are needed.
* Update versions and changelogs.
Co-authored-by: Roman Borschel <romanb@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Roman S. Borschel <roman@parity.io>
* [mplex] Benchmark different split_send_size configurations.
With both TCP and memory transports. As a result, change the
default `split_send_size` to 8KiB.
* Cleanup
* [mplex] Update CHANGELOG.
* Add throughput information.
In all cases, we pass the PeerId directly as the connection info.
The flexbility of doing something different here was originally
envisioned but turned out to be never needed.
For reference see: https://github.com/libp2p/rust-libp2p/issues/1798#issuecomment-714526056
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>
* Emit events for active connection close and fix `disconnect()`.
The `Network` does currently not emit events for actively
closed connections, e.g. via `EstablishedConnection::close`
or `ConnectedPeer::disconnect()`. As a result, when actively
closing connections, there will be `ConnectionEstablished`
events emitted without eventually a matching `ConnectionClosed`
event. This seems undesirable and has the consequence that
the `Swarm::ban_peer_id` feature in `libp2p-swarm` does not
result in appropriate calls to `NetworkBehaviour::inject_connection_closed`
and `NetworkBehaviour::inject_disconnected`. Furthermore,
the `disconnect()` functionality in `libp2p-core` is currently
broken as it leaves the `Pool` in an inconsistent state.
This commit does the following:
1. When connection background tasks are dropped
(i.e. removed from the `Manager`), they
always terminate immediately, without attempting
an orderly close of the connection.
2. An orderly close is sent to the background task
of a connection as a regular command. The
background task emits a `Closed` event
before terminating.
3. `Pool::disconnect()` removes all connection
tasks for the affected peer from the `Manager`,
i.e. without an orderly close, thereby also
fixing the discovered state inconsistency
due to not removing the corresponding entries
in the `Pool` itself after removing them from
the `Manager`.
4. A new test is added to `libp2p-swarm` that
exercises the ban/unban functionality and
places assertions on the number and order
of calls to the `NetworkBehaviour`. In that
context some new testing utilities have
been added to `libp2p-swarm`.
This addresses https://github.com/libp2p/rust-libp2p/issues/1584.
* Update swarm/src/lib.rs
Co-authored-by: Toralf Wittner <tw@dtex.org>
* Incorporate some review feedback.
* Adapt to changes in master.
* More verbose panic messages.
* Simplify
There is no need for a `StartClose` future.
* Fix doc links.
* Further small cleanup.
* Update CHANGELOGs and versions.
Co-authored-by: Toralf Wittner <tw@dtex.org>
* Update rustls dependency.
* Bump async-tls lower bound.
* Bump async-tls to 0.8.
0.7.1 has been yanked. Since `libp2p-websockets` exposes
neither `async-tls` nor `rustls` on its API, this can
be a patch release.
* Add /dns protocol support to multiaddr
The /dns protocol has been added to the spec and has had a de-facto
meaning for years.
See https://github.com/multiformats/multiaddr/pull/100
This adds address parsing and encoding support for /dns to the multiaddr
format library.
* Cover Dns protocol in multiaddr property tests
* transports/dns: Support the /dns protocol
* Support /dns protocol in address translation
* Translate an FQDN URL into a /dns multiaddr
* transports/websocket: Support /dns multiaddr
* Use the /dns protocol in websocket redirects
The whole thing with back-translating from an redirect URL looks a bit
baroque, but at least now the transport does not completely ignore IPv6
addresses resolved from a hostname in a redirect URL.
* Add CHANGELOG entry
Co-authored-by: Pierre Krieger <pierre.krieger1708@gmail.com>
* tcp: Set IPV6_V6ONLY for IPv6 listeners.
The current behaviour of listening on an IPv6 address varies depending
on the operating system's IP address stack implementation. Some support
IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses (e.g. Linux and newer versions of Windows)
so a single IPv6 address would support IPv4-mapped addresses too.
Others do not (e.g. OpenBSD). If they do, then some support them by
default (e.g. Linux) and some do not (e.g. Windows).
This PR attempts to implement the same behaviour accross operating
systems. The strategy is as follows:
Disable IPv4-mapped IPv6 addresses, hence the socket option IPV6_V6ONLY
is always set to true.
This allows binding two sockets to the same port and also avoids the
problem of comparing mixed addresses which leads issues such as #1552.
* Update CHANGELOG and address review concerns.
* Update CHANGELOG.md
Co-Authored-By: Pierre Krieger <pierre.krieger1708@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Pierre Krieger <pierre.krieger1708@gmail.com>