Previously, the `libp2p-ping` module came with a policy to close a connection after X failed pings. This is only one of many possible policies on how users would want to do connection management.
We remove this policy without a replacement. If users wish to restore this functionality, they can easily implement such policy themselves: The default value of `max_failures` was 1. To restore the previous functionality users can simply close the connection upon the first received ping error.
In this same patch, we also simplify the API of `ping::Event` by removing the layer of `ping::Success` and instead reporting the RTT to the peer directly.
Related: #3591.
Pull-Request: #3947.
This patch-set introduces `libp2p-swarm-test`. It provides utilities for quick and safe bootstrapping of tests for `NetworkBehaviour`s. The main design features are:
- Everything has timeouts
- APIs don't get in your way
- Minimal boilerplate
Closes#2884.
Pull-Request: #2888.
As I do frequently, I corrected for the latest clippy warnings. This will make sure the CI won't complain in the future. We could automate this btw and maybe run the nightly version of clippy.
Previously, the executor for connection tasks silently defaulted to a `futures::executor::ThreadPool`. This causes issues such as https://github.com/libp2p/rust-libp2p/issues/2230.
With this patch, we force the user to choose, which executor they want to run the connection tasks on which results in overall simpler API with less footguns.
Closes#3068.
Currently, our `NetworkBehaviour` derive macro depends on the `libp2p` crate to be in scope. This prevents standalone usage which forces us to depend on `libp2p` in all our tests where we want to derive a `NetworkBehaviour`.
This PR introduces a `prelude` option that - by default - points to `libp2p::swarm::derive_prelude`, a new module added to `libp2p_swarm`. With this config option, users of `libp2p_swarm` can now refer to the macro without depending on `libp2p`, breaking the circular dependency in our workspace. For consistency with the ecosystem, the macro is now also re-exported by `libp2p_swarm` instead of `libp2p` at the same position as the trait that it implements.
Lastly, we introduce an off-by-default `macros` feature flag that shrinks the dependency tree for users that don't need the derive macro.
Previously, the `DummyConnectionHandler` offered a "keep alive" functionality,
i.e. it allowed users to set the value of what is returned from
`ConnectionHandler::keep_alive`. This handler is primarily used in tests or
`NetworkBehaviour`s that don't open any connections (like mDNS). In all of these
cases, it is statically known whether we want to keep connections alive. As
such, this functionality is better represented by a static
`KeepAliveConnectionHandler` that always returns `KeepAlive::Yes` and a
`DummyConnectionHandler` that always returns `KeepAlive::No`.
To follow the naming conventions described in
https://github.com/libp2p/rust-libp2p/issues/2217, we introduce a top-level
`keep_alive` and `dummy` behaviour in `libp2p-swarm` that contains both the
`NetworkBehaviour` and `ConnectionHandler` implementation for either case.
Remove the concept of individual `Transport::Listener` streams from `Transport`.
Instead the `Transport` is polled directly via `Transport::poll`. The
`Transport` is now responsible for driving its listeners.
Allows `NetworkBehaviour` implementations to dial a peer, but instruct
the dialed connection to be upgraded as if it were the listening
endpoint.
This is needed when establishing direct connections through NATs and/or
Firewalls (hole punching). When hole punching via TCP (QUIC is different
but similar) both ends dial the other at the same time resulting in a
simultaneously opened TCP connection. To disambiguate who is the dialer
and who the listener there are two options:
1. Use the Simultaneous Open Extension of Multistream Select. See
[sim-open] specification and [sim-open-rust] Rust implementation.
2. Disambiguate the role (dialer or listener) based on the role within
the DCUtR [dcutr] protocol. More specifically the node initiating the
DCUtR process will act as a listener and the other as a dialer.
This commit enables (2), i.e. enables the DCUtR protocol to specify the
role used once the connection is established.
While on the positive side (2) requires one round trip less than (1), on
the negative side (2) only works for coordinated simultaneous dials.
I.e. when a simultaneous dial happens by chance, and not coordinated via
DCUtR, the connection attempt fails when only (2) is in place.
[sim-open]: https://github.com/libp2p/specs/blob/master/connections/simopen.md
[sim-open-rust]: https://github.com/libp2p/rust-libp2p/pull/2066
[dcutr]: https://github.com/libp2p/specs/blob/master/relay/DCUtR.md
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()
)
```
Don't close connection if ping protocol is unsupported by remote. Previously, a
failed protocol negotation for ping caused a force close of the connection. As a
result, all nodes in a network had to support ping. To allow networks where some
nodes don't support ping, we now emit `PingFailure::Unsupported` once for every
connection on which ping is not supported.
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>
Change `Stream` implementation of `ExpandedSwarm` to return all
`SwarmEvents` instead of only the `NetworkBehaviour`'s events.
Remove `ExpandedSwarm::next_event`. Users can use `<ExpandedSwarm as
StreamExt>::next` instead.
Remove `ExpandedSwarm::next`. Users can use `<ExpandedSwarm as
StreamExt>::filter_map` instead.
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
* Update tomls.
* Let transports decide when to translate.
* Improve tcp transport.
* Update stuff.
* Remove background task. Enhance documentation.
To avoid spawning a background task and thread within
`TcpConfig::new()`, with communication via unbounded channels,
a `TcpConfig` now keeps track of the listening addresses
for port reuse in an `Arc<RwLock>`. Furthermore, an `IfWatcher`
is only used by a `TcpListenStream` if it listens on any interface
and directly polls the `IfWatcher` both for initialisation and
new events.
Includes some documentation and test enhancements.
* Reintroduce feature flags for tokio vs async-io.
To avoid having an extra reactor thread running for tokio
users and to make sure all TCP I/O uses the mio-based
tokio reactor.
Thereby run tests with both backends.
* Add missing files.
* Fix docsrs attributes.
* Update transports/tcp/src/lib.rs
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>
* Restore chat-tokio example.
* Forward poll_write_vectored for tokio's AsyncWrite.
* Update changelogs.
Co-authored-by: David Craven <david@craven.ch>
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>
* Streamline mplex and yamux configurations.
* For all configuration options that exist for both multiplexers
and have the same semantics, use the same names for the
configuration.
* Rename `Config` to `YamuxConfig` for consistentcy with
the majority of other protocols, e.g. `MplexConfig`, `PingConfig`,
`KademliaConfig`, etc.
* Completely hide `yamux` APIs within `libp2p-yamux`. This allows
to fully control the libp2p API and streamline it with other
muxer APIs, consciously choosing e.g. which configuration options
to make configurable in libp2p and which to fix to certain values.
It does also not necessarily prescribe new incompatible version bumps of
yamux for `libp2p-yamux`, as no `yamux` types are exposed. The cost
is some more duplication of configuration options in the API, as well
as the need to update `libp2p-yamux` if `yamux` introduces new
configuration options that `libp2p-yamux` wants to expose as well.
* Update CHANGELOGs.
* [multistream-select] Fix panic with V1Lazy and add integration tests.
Fixes a panic when using the `V1Lazy` negotiation protocol,
a regression introduced in https://github.com/libp2p/rust-libp2p/pull/1484.
Thereby adds integration tests for a transport upgrade with both
`V1` and `V1Lazy` to the `multistream-select` crate to prevent
future regressions.
* Cleanup.
* Update changelog.
* Refactor the ping protocol.
Such that pings are sent over a single substream, as it is
done in other libp2p implementations. Note that, since each
peer sends its pings over a single, dedicated substream,
every peer that participates in the protocol has effectively
two open substreams.
* Cleanup
* Update ping changelog.
* Update protocols/ping/src/protocol.rs
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>
* Simplify trait bounds requirements
* More work
* Moar
* Finish
* Fix final tests
* More simplification
* Use separate traits for Inbound/Outbound
* Update gossipsub and remove warnings
* Add documentation to swarm
* Remove BoxSubstream
* Fix tests not compiling
* Fix stack overflow
* Address concerns
* For some reason my IDE ignored libp2p-kad
- Pin `futures_codec` to version 0.3.3 as later versions require
at least bytes-0.5 which he have not upgraded to yet.
- Replace `futures::executor::block_on` with `async_std::task::block_on`
where `async-std` is already a dependency to work around an issue with
`park`/`unpark` behaviour.
- Use the published version of `quicksink`.
* Configurable multistream-select protocol. Add V1Lazy variant. (#1245)
Make the multistream-select protocol (version) configurable
on transport upgrades as well as for individual substreams.
Add a "lazy" variant of multistream-select 1.0 that delays
sending of negotiation protocol frames as much as possible
but is only safe to use under additional assumptions that
go beyond what is required by the multistream-select v1
specification.
* Improve the code readability of the chat example (#1253)
* Add bridged chats (#1252)
* Try fix CI (#1261)
* Print Rust version on CI
* Don't print where not appropriate
* Change caching strategy
* Remove win32 build
* Remove win32 from list
* Update libsecp256k1 dep to 0.3.0 (#1258)
* Update libsecp256k1 dep to 0.3.0
* Sign now cannot fail
* Upgrade url and percent-encoding deps to 2.1.0 (#1267)
* Upgrade percent-encoding dep to 2.1.0
* Upgrade url dep to 2.1.0
* Fix more conflicts
* Revert CIPHERS set to null (#1273)
* Rework the transport upgrade API.
ALthough transport upgrades must follow a specific pattern
in order fot the resulting transport to be usable with a
`Network` or `Swarm`, that pattern is currently not well
reflected in the transport upgrade API. Rather, transport
upgrades are rather laborious and involve non-trivial code
duplication.
This commit introduces a `transport::upgrade::Builder` that is
obtained from `Transport::upgrade`. The `Builder` encodes the
previously implicit rules for transport upgrades:
1. Authentication upgrades must happen first.
2. Any number of upgrades may follow.
3. A multiplexer upgrade must happen last.
Since multiplexing is the last (regular) transport upgrade (because
that upgrade yields a `StreamMuxer` which is no longer a `AsyncRead`
/ `AsyncWrite` resource, which the upgrade process is based on),
the upgrade starts with `Transport::upgrade` and ends with
`Builder::multiplex`, which drops back down to the `Transport`,
providing a fluent API.
Authentication and multiplexer upgrades must furthermore adhere
to a minimal contract w.r.t their outputs:
1. An authentication upgrade is given an (async) I/O resource `C`
and must produce a pair `(I, D)` where `I: ConnectionInfo` and
`D` is a new (async) I/O resource `D`.
2. A multiplexer upgrade is given an (async) I/O resource `C`
and must produce a `M: StreamMuxer`.
To that end, two changes to the `secio` and `noise` protocols have been
made:
1. The `secio` upgrade now outputs a pair of `(PeerId, SecioOutput)`.
The former implements `ConnectionInfo` and the latter `AsyncRead` /
`AsyncWrite`, fulfilling the `Builder` contract.
2. A new `NoiseAuthenticated` upgrade has been added that wraps around
any noise upgrade (i.e. `NoiseConfig`) and has an output of
`(PeerId, NoiseOutput)`, i.e. it checks if the `RemoteIdentity` from
the handshake output is an `IdentityKey`, failing if that is not the
case. This is the standard upgrade procedure one wants for integrating
noise with libp2p-core/swarm.
* Cleanup
* Add a new integration test.
* Add missing license.
* muxing: adds an error type to streammuxer
* Update examples/chat.rs
Co-Authored-By: montekki <fedor.sakharov@gmail.com>
* make the trait error type bound to io error
This is now a very simple option serving multiple purposes:
* It allows for stable (integration) tests involving a Swarm, which
are otherwise subject to race conditions due to the connection being
allowed to terminate at any time with `KeepAlive::No`
(which remains the default).
* It makes for a more entertaining ping example which continuously
sends pings.
* Maybe someone wants to use the ping protocol for application-layer
connection keep-alive after all.
* libp2p-ping improvements.
* re #950: Removes use of the `OneShotHandler`, but still sending each
ping over a new substream, as seems to be intentional since #828.
* re #842: Adds an integration test that exercises the ping behaviour through
a Swarm, requiring the RTT to be below a threshold. This requires disabling
Nagle's algorithm as it can interact badly with delayed ACKs (and has been
observed to do so in the context of the new ping example and integration test).
* re #864: Control of the inbound and outbound (sub)stream protocol upgrade
timeouts has been moved from the `NodeHandlerWrapperBuilder` to the
`ProtocolsHandler`. That may also alleviate the need for a custom timeout
on an `OutboundSubstreamRequest` as a `ProtocolsHandler` is now free to
adjust these timeouts over time.
Other changes:
* A new ping example.
* Documentation improvements.
* More documentation improvements.
* Add PingPolicy and ensure no event is dropped.
* Remove inbound_timeout/outbound_timeout.
As per review comment, the inbound timeout is now configured
as part of the `listen_protocol` and the outbound timeout as
part of the `OutboundSubstreamRequest`.
* Simplify and generalise.
Generalise `ListenProtocol` to `SubstreamProtocol`, reusing it in
the context of `ProtocolsHandlerEvent::OutboundSubstreamRequest`.
* Doc comments for SubstreamProtocol.
* Adapt to changes in master.
* Relax upper bound for ping integration test rtt.
For "slow" CI build machines?