For logging purposes, I added code to handle negative time till start. I forgot
to only sleep on positive time till start.
Should fix the recent CI failure.
It was improperly implemented, as it assumed rounds had a constant time
interval, which they do not. It also is against the spec and was meant to
absolve us of issues with poor performance when post-starting blockchains. The
new, and much more proper, workaround for the latter is a 120-second delay
between the Substrate time and the Tributary start time.
By default, tokio-spawned worker panics will only kill the task, not the
program. Due to our extensive use of panicking on invariants, we should ensure
the program exits.
It's largely unoptimized, and not yet exclusive to validators, yet has basic
sanity (using message content for ID instead of sender + index).
Fixes bugs as found. Notably, we used a time in milliseconds where the
Tributary expected seconds.
Also has Tributary::new jump to the presumed round number. This reduces slashes
when starting new chains (whose times will be before the current time) and was
the only way I was able to observe successful confirmations given current
surrounding infrastructure.
Allows running `cargo build` in monero-serai and message-queue without
erroring, since it'd automatically try to build the binaries which require
additional features.
While we could make those features not optional, it'd increase time to build
and disk space required, which is why the features exist for monero-serai and
message-queue in the first place (since both are frequently used as libs).
This will effectively add msrv protections to the entire project as almost
everything grabs from these.
Doesn't add msrv to coins as coins/bitcoin is still frozen.
Doesn't add msrv to services since cargo msrv doesn't play nice with anything
importing the runtime.
The Processor's coins folder referred to the networks it could process, as did
its Coin trait. This, and other similar cases throughout the codebase, have now
been corrected.
Also corrects dated documentation for a key pair is confirmed under the
validator-sets pallet.
This is a horrible impl which does a full ser of everything on every change.
It's just the minimal changes to resolve this TODO and able testnet deployment.
Due to the ordered message-queue, there's no benefit to multiple emissions as
there's no risk a completion will be missed. If it has yet to be read, sending
another which only be read after isn't helpful.
Simplifies code a decent bit.
This is technically over-agressive, as a dropped output will reduce the fee,
yet this edge case is so minor the flow for it to not be over-aggressive (over
a few fractions of a cent) is by no means worth it.
Fixes the crash causable by the WIP send_test.
Stops work where it does to the processor panickinng for Monero, yet not
Bitcoin, under what's present.
Cleans up processor tests to consolidate shared code.
zstd was recommended for the base layer only, due to its CPU requirements. That
was a misreading on mhy behalf.
lz4 gets ~5% better compression than snappy with ~30% faster performance. zstd
does ~25% better than lz4 yet at ~30% of the performance.