Enable advanced dialing requests both on `Swarm` and via
`NetworkBehaviourAction`. Users can now trigger a dial with a specific
set of addresses, optionally extended via
`NetworkBehaviour::addresses_of_peer`. In addition the whole process is
now modelled in a type safe way via the builder pattern.
Example of a `NetworkBehaviour` requesting a dial to a specific peer
with a set of addresses additionally extended through
`NetworkBehaviour::addresses_of_peer`:
```rust
NetworkBehaviourAction::Dial {
opts: DialOpts::peer_id(peer_id)
.condition(PeerCondition::Always)
.addresses(addresses)
.extend_addresses_through_behaviour()
.build(),
handler,
}
```
Example of a user requesting a dial to an unknown peer with a single
address via `Swarm`:
```rust
swarm1.dial(
DialOpts::unknown_peer_id()
.address(addr2.clone())
.build()
)
```
Require `NetworkBehaviourAction::{DialPeer,DialAddress}` to contain a
`ProtocolsHandler`. This allows a behaviour to attach custom state to its
handler. The behaviour would no longer need to track this state separately
during connection establishment, thus reducing state required in a behaviour.
E.g. in the case of `libp2p-kad` the behaviour can include a `GetRecord` request
in its handler, or e.g. in the case of `libp2p-request-response` the behaviour
can include the first request in the handler.
Return `ProtocolsHandler` on connection error and close. This allows a behaviour
to extract its custom state previously included in the handler on connection
failure and connection closing. E.g. in the case of `libp2p-kad` the behaviour
could extract the attached `GetRecord` from the handler of the failed connection
and then start another connection attempt with a new handler with the same
`GetRecord` or bubble up an error to the user.
Co-authored-by: Thomas Eizinger <thomas@eizinger.io>
Signed-off-by: Emil Majchrzak <majchrzakemil@gitlab.com>
Co-authored-by: Emil Majchrzak <majchrzakemil@gitlab.com>
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>
Not all implementations of `NetworkBehaviour` need all callbacks.
We've have been adding new callbacks with default implementations
for a while now. There is no reason the initial ones cannot also
be defaulted, thus making it easier create new implementations.
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>
- Change `PublicKey::into_protobuf_encoding` to
`PublicKey::to_protobuf_encoding`.
- Change `PublicKey::into_peer_id` to `PublicKey::to_peer_id`.
- Change `PeerId::from_public_key(PublicKey)` to
`PeerId::from_public_key(&PublicKey)`.
- Add `From<&PublicKey> for PeerId`.
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>
* Fix needless question mark operator
* Don't convert from u64 to u64
LocalStreamId is already a u64, no need to convert.
* Don't use `.into()` to convert to the same type
* Don't specify lifetime if it can be inferred
* Use `vec!` macro if we immediately push to it
This creates the vector with the appropriate capacity.
* Don't index array when taking a reference is enough
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>
mdns keeps rediscovering nodes. this PR changes that to only emit events for new
nodes it discovered. In addition we make sure to only send a query if it is
really needed. Some logging is added for debugging purposes.
If you start listening after mdns joined a multicast group, the peers may not
discover eachother until the 5min timeout expires.
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>
Remove `Deref` and `DerefMut` implementations previously dereferencing
to the `NetworkBehaviour` on `Swarm`. Instead one can access the
`NetworkBehaviour` via `Swarm::behaviour` and `Swarm::behaviour_mut`.
Methods on `Swarm` can now be accessed directly, e.g. via
`my_swarm.local_peer_id()`.
Reasoning: Accessing the `NetworkBehaviour` of a `Swarm` through `Deref`
and `DerefMut` instead of a method call is an unnecessary complication,
especially for newcomers. In addition, `Swarm` is not a smart-pointer
and should thus not make use of `Deref` and `DerefMut`, see documentation
from the standard library below.
> Deref should only be implemented for smart pointers to avoid
confusion.
https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/ops/trait.Deref.html
* Implement `/dnsaddr` support on `libp2p-dns`.
To that end, since resolving `/dnsaddr` addresses needs
"fully qualified" multiaddresses when dialing, i.e. those
that end with the `/p2p/...` protocol, we make sure that
dialing always uses such fully qualified addresses by
appending the `/p2p` protocol as necessary. As a side-effect,
this adds support for dialing peers via "fully qualified"
addresses, as an alternative to using a `PeerId` together
with a `Multiaddr` with or without the `/p2p` protocol.
* Adapt libp2p-relay.
* Update versions, changelogs and small cleanups.
* Remove substream-specific protocol negotiation version.
Remove the option for a substream-specific multistream select protocol override.
The override at this granularity is no longer deemed useful, in particular because
it can usually not be configured for existing protocols like `libp2p-kad` and others.
There is a `Swarm`-scoped configuration for this version available since
[1858](https://github.com/libp2p/rust-libp2p/pull/1858).
* Update protocol crate versions and changelogs.
* Clean up documentation.
* Make clippy "happy".
Address all clippy complaints that are not purely stylistic (or even
have corner cases with false positives). Ignore all "style" and "pedantic" lints.
* Fix tests.
* Undo unnecessary API change.
`futures-codec` has not been updated in the recent months. It still
depends on `bytes` `v0.5` preventing all downstream dependencies to
upgrade to `bytes` `v1.0`.
This commit replaces `futures_codec` in favor of `asynchronous-codec`
The latter is a fully upgraded fork of the former.
In addition this commit upgrades:
- bytes to v1
- unsigned-varint to v0.6.0
- prost to v0.7
* [mdns] Split response packets.
Prevent MDNS response packets becoming too large by creating
multi-packet responses. Also skip addresses that don't fit
into a TXT record or contain invalid characters.
* Update protocols/mdns/src/dns.rs
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>
* Refactor response packet construction.
* Update mdns changelog.
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>
* 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>
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>
Also add warn if parsing of a packet fails, so problems with for example packet
sizes can more easily be detected.
Reasoning:
The previous 2048 bytes is already larger than the recommend size by
[rfc6762](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6762#page-46), which recommends
a packet size that fits within the interface MTU.
Nevertheless the rfc also states, that if more data needs to be
transmitted one should rely on IP fragments, which would only pose
problems when interfacing with devices not understanding IP fragments.
The standard also imposes a strict upper limit of 9000 bytes.
Therefore raising `recv_buffer` to 4096 seems sensible, given that we
already exceed the recommend size and given that we are not restricting
the size when sending in any way. Meaning the implementation already
sends packets larger than recommended, just can't handle them on
reception.