We refactor our continuous integration workflow with the following goals in mind:
- Run as few jobs as possible
- Have the jobs finish as fast as possible
- Have the jobs redo as little work as possible
There are only so many jobs that GitHub Actions will run in parallel.
Thus, it makes sense to not create massive matrices but instead group
things together meaningfully.
The new `test` job will:
- Run once for each crate
- Ensure that the crate compiles on its specified MSRV
- Ensure that the tests pass
- Ensure that there are no semver violations
This is an improvement to before because we are running all of these
in parallel which speeds up execution and highlights more errors at
once. Previously, tests run later in the pipeline would not get run
at all until you make sure the "first" one passes.
We also previously did not verify the MSRV of each crate, making the
setting in the `Cargo.toml` rather pointless.
The new `cross` job supersedes the existing `wasm` job.
This is an improvement because we now also compile the crate for
windows and MacOS. Something that wasn't checked before.
We assume that checking MSRV and the tests under Linux is good enough.
Hence, this job only checks for compile-errors.
The new `feature_matrix` ensures we compile correctly with certain feature combinations.
`libp2p` exposes a fair few feature-flags. Some of the combinations
are worth checking independently. For the moment, this concerns only
the executor related transports together with the executor flags but
this list can easily be extended.
The new `clippy` job runs for `stable` and `beta` rust.
Clippy gets continuously extended with new lints. Up until now, we would only
learn about those as soon as a new version of Rust is released and CI would
run the new lints. This leads to unrelated failures in CI. Running clippy on with `beta`
Rust gives us a heads-up of 6 weeks before these lints land on stable.
Fixes#2951.
Various muxer implementations struggle to fulfill this test. In practice, it doesn't matter much because we always run `multistream-select` on top of a newly negotiated stream so we never end up actually reading from a stream that we have never written to.
Relevant discussion: https://github.com/kpp/rust-libp2p/pull/27#discussion_r1012128418
Remove default features. You need to enable required features
explicitly now. As a quick workaround, you may want to use the
new `full` feature which activates all features.
* Provide separate functions for injecting in- and outbound streams
* Inline `HandlerWrapper` into `Connection`
* Only poll for new inbound streams if we are below the limit
* yamux: Buffer inbound streams in `StreamMuxer::poll`
Instead of having a mix of `poll_event`, `poll_outbound` and `poll_close`, we
flatten the entire interface of `StreamMuxer` into 4 individual functions:
- `poll_inbound`
- `poll_outbound`
- `poll_address_change`
- `poll_close`
This design is closer to the design of other async traits like `AsyncRead` and
`AsyncWrite`. It also allows us to delete the `StreamMuxerEvent`.
`libp2p-core` provides the `StreamMuxer` abstraction so it can provide
functionality that abstracts over this trait.
We never use the `flush_all` function as part of our abstractions.
No one else is going to use it so we can remove it from the abstraction.
Previously `libp2p-swarm` required a `Transport` to be `Clone`. Methods
on `Transport`, e.g. `Transport::dial` would take ownership, requiring
e.g. a `Clone::clone` before calling `Transport::dial`.
The requirement of `Transport` to be `Clone` is no longer needed in
`libp2p-swarm`. E.g. concurrent dialing can be done without a clone per
dial.
This commit removes the requirement of `Clone` for `Transport` in
`libp2p-swarm`. As a follow-up methods on `Transport` no longer take
ownership, but instead a mutable reference (`&mut self`).
On the one hand this simplifies `libp2p-swarm`, on the other it
simplifies implementations of `Transport`.
Don't report events of a connection to the `NetworkBehaviour`, if connection has
been established while the remote peer was banned. Among other guarantees this
upholds that `NetworkBehaviour::inject_event` is never called without a previous
`NetworkBehaviour::inject_connection_established` for said connection.
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>
Unless restricted by orphan rules, implementing `From` is superior
because it implies `Into` but leaves the choice to the user, which
one to use. Especially for errors, `From` is convenient because that
is what `?` builds on.
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>
* 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.