We create the `ConnectionId` for the new connection as part of `DialOpts`. This allows `NetworkBehaviour`s to accurately track state regarding their own dial attempts.
This patch is the main enabler of https://github.com/libp2p/rust-libp2p/pull/3254. Removing the `handler` field will allow us to deprecate the `NetworkBehaviour::new_handler` function in favor of four new ones that give more control over the connection lifecycle.
Previously, we used the full reference to the `OutEvent` of the `ConnectionHandler` in all implementations of `NetworkBehaviour`. Not only is this very verbose, it is also more brittle to changes. With the current implementation plan for #2824, we will be removing the `IntoConnectionHandler` abstraction. Using a type-alias to refer to the `OutEvent` makes the migration much easier.
With this commit `libp2p-autonat` no longer discards the whole remote payload in case an addr is unparsable, but instead logs the failure and skips the unparsable multiaddr.
See libp2p#3244 for details.
Previously, we used to buffer events separately and emit actions directly. That is unnecessary. We can have a single place where we return from the `poll` loop and shove all actions into the same buffer.
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.
This patch deprecates 3 out of 4 functions on `PollParameters`:
- `local_peer_id`
- `listened_addresses`
- `external_addresses`
The addresses can be obtained by inspecting the `FromSwarm` event. To make this easier, we introduce two utility structs in `libp2p-swarm`:
- `ExternalAddresses`
- `ListenAddresses`
A node's `PeerId` is always known to the caller, thus we can require them to pass it in.
Related: #3124.
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.
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.
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.
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`.
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.
Optionally only perform dial-backs on peers that are observed at a global ip-address.
This is relevant when multiple peers are in the same local network, in which case a peer could incorrectly assume themself to be public because a peer in the same local network was able to dial them. Thus servers should reject dial-back requests from clients with a non-global IP address, and at the same time clients should only pick connected peers as servers if they are global.
Behind a config flag (enabled by default) to also allow use-cases where AutoNAT is needed within a private network.
Handle in test that a `OutboundProbeEvent::Response` can be reported
before the associated inbound connection event.
In rare cases (that only really happen in a test setup where both peers
run on the same device) the server may observe a connection and report
the response back to the client, before the connection event was
reported at the client.
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`.
* build(deps): Update prost-build requirement from 0.9 to 0.10
Updates the requirements on [prost-build](https://github.com/tokio-rs/prost) to permit the latest version.
- [Release notes](https://github.com/tokio-rs/prost/releases)
- [Commits](https://github.com/tokio-rs/prost/commits)
---
updated-dependencies:
- dependency-name: prost-build
dependency-type: direct:production
...
Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
* .github/workflow: Don't run integration test in container
* .github/workflow: Don't run doc step in container
* .github/workflows: Remove component docs
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>