I think the core code should generally be agnostic about the witness and
the statedb layer should determine what elements need to be included in
the witness. Because code is accessed via `GetCode`, and
`GetCodeLength`, the statedb will always know when it needs to add that
code into the witness.
The edge case is block hashes, so we continue to add them manually in
the implementation of `BLOCKHASH`.
It probably makes sense to refactor statedb so we have a wrapped
implementation that accumulates the witness, but this is a simpler
change that makes #30078 less aggressive.
Looking at the cpu profile of a burntpix benchmark, I noticed that a lot
of time was spent in gas-used, in the interpreter loop. It's an actual
call (not inlined), which explicitly wants to be ignored by tracing
("tracing.GasChangeIgnored"), so it can be safely and simply inlined.
The other change is in `pushX`. These also do a call to
`common.RightPadBytes`. I replaced that by a doing a corresponding `Lsh`
on the `u256` if needed. Note: it's needed only to make the stack output
look right, for fuzzers. It technically doesn't matter what we put
there: if code ends on a pushdata immediate, nothing will consume the
stack element. We could just as well just ignore it, if we didn't care
about fuzzers (which I do).
Seems quite a lot faster on burntpix, according to my runs.
This PR:
```
EVM gas used: 5642735088
execution time: 34.84609475s
allocations: 915683
allocated bytes: 175334088
```
```
EVM gas used: 5642735088
execution time: 36.671958278s
allocations: 915701
allocated bytes: 175340528
```
Master
```
EVM gas used: 5642735088
execution time: 49.349209526s
allocations: 915684
allocated bytes: 175333368
```
```
EVM gas used: 5642735088
execution time: 46.581006598s
allocations: 915681
allocated bytes: 175330728
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Sina M <1591639+s1na@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
This PR moves the logging/tracing-facilities out of `*state.StateDB`,
in to a wrapping struct which implements `vm.StateDB` instead.
In most places, it is a pretty straight-forward change:
- First, hoisting the invocations from state objects up to the statedb.
- Then making the mutation-methods simply return the previous value, so
that the external logging layer could log everything.
Some internal code uses the direct object-accessors to mutate the state,
particularly in testing and in setting up state overrides, which means
that these changes are unobservable for the hooked layer. Thus, configuring
the overrides are not necessarily part of the API we want to publish.
The trickiest part about the layering is that when the selfdestructs are
finally deleted during `Finalise`, there's the possibility that someone
sent some ether to it, which is burnt at that point, and thus needs to
be logged. The hooked layer reaches into the inner layer to figure out
these events.
In package `vm`, the conversion from `state.StateDB + hooks` into a
hooked `vm.StateDB` is performed where needed.
---------
Co-authored-by: Gary Rong <garyrong0905@gmail.com>
Consistently use `uint64` for indices in `Memory` and drop lots of type
conversions from `uint64` to `int64`.
---------
Co-authored-by: lmittmann <lmittmann@users.noreply.github.com>
* all: add stateless verifications
* all: simplify witness and integrate it into live geth
---------
Co-authored-by: Péter Szilágyi <peterke@gmail.com>
Here we add a Go API for running tracing plugins within the main block import process.
As an advanced user of geth, you can now create a Go file in eth/tracers/live/, and within
that file register your custom tracer implementation. Then recompile geth and select your tracer
on the command line. Hooks defined in the tracer will run whenever a block is processed.
The hook system is defined in package core/tracing. It uses a struct with callbacks, instead of
requiring an interface, for several reasons:
- We plan to keep this API stable long-term. The core/tracing hook API does not depend on
on deep geth internals.
- There are a lot of hooks, and tracers will only need some of them. Using a struct allows you
to implement only the hooks you want to actually use.
All existing tracers in eth/tracers/native have been rewritten to use the new hook system.
This change breaks compatibility with the vm.EVMLogger interface that we used to have.
If you are a user of vm.EVMLogger, please migrate to core/tracing, and sorry for breaking
your stuff. But we just couldn't have both the old and new tracing APIs coexist in the EVM.
---------
Co-authored-by: Matthieu Vachon <matthieu.o.vachon@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Delweng <delweng@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin HS <martin@swende.se>
This change makes use of uin256 to represent balance in state. It touches primarily upon statedb, stateobject and state processing, trying to avoid changes in transaction pools, core types, rpc and tracers.
Adding a space beween function opOrigin() and opcCaller() in instruciton.go.
Adding a space beween function opkeccak256() and opAddress() in instruciton.go.
EIP-6780: SELFDESTRUCT only in same transaction
> SELFDESTRUCT will recover all funds to the caller but not delete the account, except when called in the same transaction as creation
---------
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
This PR removes the Debug field from vmconfig, making it so that if a tracer is set, debug=true is implied.
---------
Co-authored-by: 0xTylerHolmes <tyler@ethereum.org>
Co-authored-by: Sina Mahmoodi <1591639+s1na@users.noreply.github.com>
This change improves reusability of the EVM struct. Two methods are added:
- SetBlockContext(...)
- SetTracer(...)
Other attributes like the TransactionContext and the StateDB can already be updated.
BlockContext and Tracer are partially not updateable right now. This change fixes it and
opens the potential to reuse an EVM struct in more ways.
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
This PR changes the API so that uint64 is used for fork timestamps.
It's a good choice because types.Header also uses uint64 for time.
Co-authored-by: Felix Lange <fjl@twurst.com>
Implementation of https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-3860, limit and meter initcode. This PR enables EIP-3860 as part of the Shanghai fork.
Co-authored-by: lightclient@protonmail.com <lightclient@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
Co-authored-by: Marius van der Wijden <m.vanderwijden@live.de>
This changes the CI / release builds to use the latest Go version. It also
upgrades golangci-lint to a newer version compatible with Go 1.19.
In Go 1.19, godoc has gained official support for links and lists. The
syntax for code blocks in doc comments has changed and now requires a
leading tab character. gofmt adapts comments to the new syntax
automatically, so there are a lot of comment re-formatting changes in this
PR. We need to apply the new format in order to pass the CI lint stage with
Go 1.19.
With the linter upgrade, I have decided to disable 'gosec' - it produces
too many false-positive warnings. The 'deadcode' and 'varcheck' linters
have also been removed because golangci-lint warns about them being
unmaintained. 'unused' provides similar coverage and we already have it
enabled, so we don't lose much with this change.
* core: implement eip-4399 random opcode
* core: make vmconfig threadsafe
* core: miner: pass vmConfig by value not reference
* all: enable 4399 by Rules
* core: remove diff (f)
* tests: set proper difficulty (f)
* smaller diff (f)
* eth/catalyst: nit
* core: make RANDOM a pointer which is only set post-merge
* cmd/evm/internal/t8ntool: fix t8n tracing of 4399
* tests: set difficulty
* cmd/evm/internal/t8ntool: check that baserules are london before applying the merge chainrules
* core/vm: Remove interpreter loop interruption check
* core/vm: Unit test for interpreter loop interruption
* core/vm: Check for interpreter loop abort on every jump
* core/vm: Move interpreter.ReadOnly check into the opcode implementations
Also remove the same check from the interpreter inner loop.
* core/vm: Remove obsolete operation.writes flag
* core/vm: Capture fault states in logger
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
* core/vm: Remove panic added for testing
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
* core/vm: break loop on any error
* core/vm: move ErrExecutionReverted to opRevert()
* core/vm: use "stop token" to stop the loop
* core/vm: unconditionally pc++ in the loop
* core/vm: set return data in instruction impls
This change introduces 2 new optional methods; `enter()` and `exit()` for js tracers, and makes `step()` optiona. The two new methods are invoked when entering and exiting a call frame (but not invoked for the outermost scope, which has it's own methods). Currently these are the data fields passed to each of them:
enter: type (opcode), from, to, input, gas, value
exit: output, gasUsed, error
The PR also comes with a re-write of the callTracer. As a backup we keep the previous tracing script under the name `callTracerLegacy`. Behaviour of both tracers are equivalent for the most part, although there are some small differences (improvements), where the new tracer is more correct / has more information.
Fixes the CaptureStart api to include the EVM, thus being able to set the statedb early on. This pr also exposes the struct we used internally in the interpreter to encapsulate the contract, mem, stack, rstack, so we pass it as a single struct to the tracer, and removes the error returns on the capture methods.
* all: core: split vm.Config into BlockConfig and TxConfig
* core: core/vm: reset EVM between tx in block instead of creating new
* core/vm: added docs
* core/vm: use fixed uint256 library instead of big
* core/vm: remove intpools
* core/vm: upgrade uint256, fixes uint256.NewFromBig
* core/vm: use uint256.Int by value in Stack
* core/vm: upgrade uint256 to v1.0.0
* core/vm: don't preallocate space for 1024 stack items (only 16)
Co-authored-by: Martin Holst Swende <martin@swende.se>
* all: seperate consensus error and evm internal error
There are actually two types of error will be returned when
a tranaction/message call is executed: (a) consensus error
(b) evm internal error. The former should be converted to
a consensus issue, e.g. The sender doesn't enough asset to
purchase the gas it specifies. The latter is allowed since
evm itself is a blackbox and internal error is allowed to happen.
This PR emphasizes the difference by introducing a executionResult
structure. The evm error is embedded inside. So if any error
returned, it indicates consensus issue happens.
And also this PR improve the `EstimateGas` API to return the concrete
revert reason if the transaction always fails
* all: polish
* accounts/abi/bind/backends: add tests
* accounts/abi/bind/backends, internal: cleanup error message
* all: address comments
* core: fix lint
* accounts, core, eth, internal: address comments
* accounts, internal: resolve revert reason if possible
* accounts, internal: address comments
* core/evm, contracts: avoid copying memory for input in calls + make ecrecover not modify input buffer
* core/vm: optimize mstore a bit
* core/vm: change Get -> GetCopy in vm memory access
* params, core/vm: deprecating gastable, part 1
* core/vm, params: deprecate gastable, use both constant and dynamic gas
* core/vm, params: remove gastable, remove copypaste
* core/vm: make use of the chainrules
* interpreter: make tracing count constant+dynamic gas
* core/vm: review concerns (param/method name changes)
* core/vm: make use of chainrules more
* core/vm: remove function call for stack validation from evm runloop
* core/vm: separate gas calc into static + dynamic
* core/vm: optimize push1
* core/vm: reuse pooled bigints for ADDRESS, ORIGIN and CALLER
* core/vm: use generic error message for jump/jumpi, to avoid string interpolation
* testdata: fix tests for new error message
* core/vm: use 64-bit memory calculations
* core/vm: fix error in memory calculation
* core/vm: address review concerns
* core/vm: avoid unnecessary use of big.Int:BitLen()