Currently, we store messages to be sent to the `ConnectionHandler` in an `Arc`. However, we never actually clone these messages as we can see with this patch, hence we remove this wrapping.
Related: https://github.com/libp2p/rust-libp2p/pull/3242
A `ProtocolsHandler`, now `ConnectionHandler`, handels a connection, not
a protocol. Thus the name `CONNECTIONHandler` is more appropriate.
Next to the rename of `ProtocolsHandler` this commit renames the `mod
protocols_handler` to `mod handler`. Finally all combinators (e.g.
`ProtocolsHandlerSelect`) are renamed appropriately.
Removed the custom interval implementation and removes support for
wasm32-unknown-unknown. See https://github.com/libp2p/rust-libp2p/issues/2497
for details.
Co-authored-by: Diva M <divma@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>
This PR adds some bandwidth improvements to gossipsub.
After a bit of inspection on live networks a number of improvements have been
made that can help reduce unnecessary bandwidth on gossipsub networks. This PR
introduces the following:
- A 1:1 tracking of all in-flight IWANT requests. This not only ensures that all
IWANT requests are answered and peers penalized accordingly, but gossipsub
will no no longer create multiple IWANT requests for multiple peers.
Previously, gossipsub sampled the in-flight IWANT requests in order to
penalize peers for not responding with a high probability that we would detect
non-responsive nodes. Futher, it was possible to re-request IWANT messages
that are already being requested causing added duplication in messages and
wasted unnecessary IWANT control messages. This PR shifts this logic to only
request message ids that we are not currently requesting from peers.
- Triangle routing naturally gives rise to unnecessary duplicates. Consider a
mesh of 4 peers that are interconnected. Peer 1 sends a new message to 2,3,4.
2 propagates to 3,4 and 3 propagates to 2,4 and 4 propagates to 2,3. In this
case 3 has received the message 3 times. If we keep track of peers that send
us messages, when publishing or forwarding we no longer send to peers that
have sent us a duplicate, we can eliminate one of the sends in the scenario
above. This only occurs when message validation is async however. This PR adds
this logic to remove some elements of triangle-routing duplicates.
Co-authored-by: Divma <26765164+divagant-martian@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>
Co-authored-by: Diva M <divma@protonmail.com>
* core: Mark "unused" field with "_"
We need to keep this marker type to ensure that the type continues
to be required to be pinned.
* tranports/noise: Derive `Default` for `Config`
`false` is the default for `bool`, we can derive this.
* protocols/request-response: Remove unused fields
These are already included the `RequestResponseMessage::Request`
variant.
* *: Allow clippy's large-enum-variant lint
Tackling these suggestions would require performance measurement
which we don't want to do at this stage.
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>
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()
)
```
Changes needed to get libp2p to run via `wasm32-unknown-unknown` in the browser
(both main thread and inside web workers).
Replaces wasm-timer with futures-timer and instant.
Co-authored-by: Oliver Wangler <oliver@wngr.de>
Concurrently dial address candidates within a single dial attempt.
Main motivation for this feature is to increase success rate on hole punching
(see https://github.com/libp2p/rust-libp2p/issues/1896#issuecomment-885894496
for details). Though, as a nice side effect, as one would expect, it does
improve connection establishment time.
Cleanups and fixes done along the way:
- Merge `pool.rs` and `manager.rs`.
- Instead of manually implementing state machines in `task.rs` use
`async/await`.
- Fix bug where `NetworkBehaviour::inject_connection_closed` is called without a
previous `NetworkBehaviour::inject_connection_established` (see
https://github.com/libp2p/rust-libp2p/issues/2242).
- Return handler to behaviour on incoming connection limit error. Missed in
https://github.com/libp2p/rust-libp2p/issues/2242.
Previously, peers that did not support gossipsub were removed from the
connection-id mappings.
This can cause the connection_id mappings to go out of sync with those managed
by the swarm. This PR corrects this and adds an extra event that can inform the
user that a peer that does not support the protocol has connected. The user can
then optionally handle peers that don't support the protocol.
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>
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>
Add `ExpandedSwarm::disconnect_peer_id` and
`NetworkBehaviourAction::CloseConnection` to close connections to a specific
peer via an `ExpandedSwarm` or `NetworkBehaviour`.
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>
* 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.
Currently, Gossipsub messages may not be published on a topic if there are no
subscribed peers on that topic, however they are being added to a duplicate
cache. If the messages are content-addressed, this prevents the user from
attempting to republish the message in the future.
This commit modifies the logic such that messages are only added to the caches
(duplicate, memcache and published_messages) if the message could be published
to at least one peer.
Previously, a failed publish would be added the memcache. This meant that the
router would gossip about a failed publish, such that if a peer joined the topic
after the failed publish (but within the gossip history time window) the message
could still be propagated to the newly connected peers. With this PR, a failed
publish now definitively indicates the message will not be published on the
network and the user is required to re-submit at a later time, once sufficient
peers exist on the topic.
`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
This commit upgrades the current gossipsub implementation to support the [v1.1
spec](https://github.com/libp2p/specs/blob/master/pubsub/gossipsub/gossipsub-v1.1.md).
It adds a number of features, bug fixes and performance improvements.
Besides support for all new 1.1 features, other improvements that are of particular note:
- Improved duplicate LRU-time cache (this was previously a severe bottleneck for
large message throughput topics)
- Extended message validation configuration options
- Arbitrary topics (users can now implement their own hashing schemes)
- Improved message validation handling - Invalid messages are no longer dropped
but sent to the behaviour for application-level processing (including scoring)
- Support for floodsub, gossipsub v1 and gossipsub v2
- Protobuf encoding has been shifted into the behaviour. This has permitted two
improvements:
1. Message size verification during publishing (report to the user if the
message is too large before attempting to send).
2. Message fragmentation. If an RPC is too large it is fragmented into its
sub components and sent in smaller chunks.
Additional Notes
The peer eXchange protocol defined in the v1.1 spec is inactive in its current
form. The current implementation permits sending `PeerId` in `PRUNE` messages,
however a `PeerId` is not sufficient to form a new connection to a peer. A
`Signed Address Record` is required to safely transmit peer identity
information. Once these are confirmed (https://github.com/libp2p/specs/pull/217)
a future PR will implement these and make PX usable.
Co-authored-by: Max Inden <mail@max-inden.de>
Co-authored-by: Rüdiger Klaehn <rklaehn@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: blacktemplar <blacktemplar@a1.net>
Co-authored-by: Rüdiger Klaehn <rklaehn@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: dependabot[bot] <49699333+dependabot[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Roman S. Borschel <roman@parity.io>
Co-authored-by: Roman Borschel <romanb@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: David Craven <david@craven.ch>
* Add "infinite" scores for external addresses.
Extend address scores with an infinite cardinal, permitting
addresses to be retained "forever" or until explicitly removed.
Expose (external) address scores on the API.
* Update swarm/src/registry.rs
Co-authored-by: Pierre Krieger <pierre.krieger1708@gmail.com>
* Fix compilation.
* Update CHANGELOG
Co-authored-by: Pierre Krieger <pierre.krieger1708@gmail.com>