The tests have recently had their timing stilted, causing failures. The tests
are... fine. They're fragile, as obvious, yet they're logical. The simplest fix
is to unstilt their timing rather to make them non-fragile.
The recent change, which presumably caused said stilting, was the the
rebroadcasting added. This de-duplication prevents most of the impact of
rebroadcasting. While there's still the async task, and the lock acquisition on
attempt to rebroadcast, this hopefully is enough.
* fix typos
* remove tributary sleeping
* handle not locally provided txs
* use topic number instead of waiting list
* Clean-up, fixes
1) Uses a single TXN in provided
2) Doesn't continue on non-local provided inside verify_block, skipping further
execution of checks
3) Upon local provision of already on-chain TX, compares
---------
Co-authored-by: Luke Parker <lukeparker5132@gmail.com>
* Revert "Correct the prior documented TOCTOU"
This reverts commit d50fe87801.
* Correct the prior documented TOCTOU
d50fe87801 edited the challenge for the Batch to
fix it. This won't produce Batch n+1 until Batch n is successfully published
and verified. It's an alternative strategy able to be reviewed, with a much
smaller impact to scope.
Now, if a malicious validator set publishes a malicious `Batch` at the last
moment, it'll cause all future `Batch`s signed by the next validator set to
require a bool being set (yet they never will set it).
This will prevent the handover.
The only overhead is having two distinct `batch_message` calls on-chain.
The new set publishing a `Batch` completes the handover protocol. The new set
should only publish a `Batch` once it believes the old set has completed all of
its on-external-chain activity, marking it honest and finite.
With the handover comes the acceptance of liability, hence the requirement for
all of the on-Serai-chain activity also needing verification. While most
activity would be verified in-real-time (upon ::Batch messages), the new set
will now explicitly verify the complete set of `Batch`s before beginning its
preprocess for its own `Batch` (the one accepting the handover).
pre_dispatch is guaranteed by documentation to be called and persisted.
validate_unsigned is not, though the provided pre_dispatch does by default call
validate_unsigned. By explicitly providing our own pre_dispatch, we accomplish
the bounds we require and expect, only being invalidated on Substrate
redefining their API.
We should still test this, yet since we call retire_session in
validate_unsigned, any test of rotation will test it's being properly called.
Sets a stake requirement of 100k for Serai and Monero, as Serai doesn't have
stake requirements and Monero isn't expected to see as much
volume/institutional support as Bitcoin/Ethereum.
The reproducible runtime test failed due to running out of space. If we have
multiple tests failing due to out of space, and all of our tests have these
unused, it makes sense just to always so uninstall.
Also extends the time limit of reproducible-runtime, as 2h has been hit a few
times before.
They assumed processor 0 had keys `i = 1`. Under the new validator-set code,
the first key is the one with the highest amount, In case of tie, the key (or
as of the last commit, a Blake hash) decides order.
This commit kludges in a mapping from processor index to assigned key index, no
longer assuming its value.