fafa66e424 ci: Replace soon EOL hirsute with jammy (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
`hirsute` will be EOL in about 1.5 months, at which point the package servers may be shut down. Avoid this by hopping to the next LTS release 22.04 (Jammy Jellyfish).
While the release is currently in development, it seems unlikely that anything will break for us. I am doing the hirsute->jammy hop to avoid a hirsute->impish->jammy hop, but if anything does break, we can fall back to that "double hop".
ACKs for top commit:
fanquake:
ACK fafa66e424
Zero-1729:
crACK fafa66e424
Tree-SHA512: a3626b72519c7f54f260477d04265321af7aefe25cc2a7d653dba77f79caca10db3a6aa4249a934184dcdc99832f6b4c6e50330d7630e58720ab0aba3624ab8a
29173d6c6c ubsan: add minisketch exceptions (Cory Fields)
54b5e1aeab Add thin Minisketch wrapper to pick best implementation (Pieter Wuille)
ee9dc71c1b Add basic minisketch tests (Pieter Wuille)
0659f12b13 Add minisketch dependency (Gleb Naumenko)
0eb7928ab8 Add MSVC build configuration for libminisketch (Pieter Wuille)
8bc166d5b1 build: add minisketch build file and include it (Cory Fields)
b2904ceb85 build: add configure checks for minisketch (Cory Fields)
b6487dc4ef Squashed 'src/minisketch/' content from commit 89629eb2c7 (fanquake)
Pull request description:
This takes over #21859, which has [recently switched](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/21859#issuecomment-921899200) to my integration branch. A few more build issues came up (and have been fixed) since, and after discussing with sipa it was decided I would open a PR to shepherd any final changes through.
> This adds a `src/minisketch` subtree, taken from the master branch of https://github.com/sipa/minisketch, to prepare for Erlay implementation (see #21515). It gets configured for just supporting 32-bit fields (the only ones we're interested in in the context of Erlay), and some code on top is added:
> * A very basic unit test (just to make sure compilation & running works; actual correctness checking is done through minisketch's own tests).
> * A wrapper in `minisketchwrapper.{cpp,h}` that runs a benchmark to determine which field implementation to use.
Only changes since my last update to the branch in the previous PR have been rebasing on master and fixing an issue with a header in an introduced file.
ACKs for top commit:
naumenkogs:
ACK 29173d6c6c
Tree-SHA512: 1217d3228db1dd0de12c2919314e1c3626c18a416cf6291fec99d37e34fb6eec8e28d9e9fb935f8590273b8836cbadac313a15f05b4fd9f9d3024c8ce2c80d02
095f07744c ci: Do not print `git log` for empty COMMIT_RANGE (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
On master (77a2f5d30c) a CI lint task [log](https://api.cirrus-ci.com/v1/task/4817858858319872/logs/lint.log) exceeds 20K lines.
This PR fixes this issue.
ACKs for top commit:
MarcoFalke:
cr ACK 095f07744c
Tree-SHA512: 89180018aeccf1599cdf218924cbab12dcbae0f6674bb90e13b64e342cdd908a880b885039c23f0d1d03493e55a94fe04abf39481616ae6550c6a759f5ca9a35
0f95247246 Integrate univalue into our buildsystem (Cory Fields)
9b49ed656f Squashed 'src/univalue/' changes from 98fadc0909..a44caf65fe (fanquake)
Pull request description:
This PR more tightly integrates building Univalue into our build system. This follows the same approach we use for [LevelDB](https://github.com/bitcoin-core/leveldb/), ([`Makefile.leveldb.include`](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/master/src/Makefile.leveldb.include)), and [CRC32C](https://github.com/bitcoin-core/crc32c) ([`Makefile.crc32c.include`](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/master/src/Makefile.crc32c.include)), and will be the same approach we use for [minisketch](https://github.com/sipa/minisketch); see #23114.
This approach yields a number of benefits, including:
* Faster configuration due to one less subconfigure being run during `./configure` i.e 22s with this PR vs 26s
* Faster autoconf i.e 13s with this PR vs 17s
* Improved caching
* No more issues with compiler flags i.e https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/12467
* More direct control means we can build exactly the objects we want
There might be one argument against making this change, which is that builders should have the option to use "proper shared/system libraries". However, I think that falls down for a few reasons. The first being that we already don't support building with a number of system libraries (secp256k1, leveldb, crc32c); some for good reason. Univalue is really the odd one out at the moment.
Note that the only fork of Core I'm aware of, that actively patches in support for using system libs, also explicitly marks them as ["DANGEROUS"](a886811721/configure.ac (L1430)) and ["NOT SUPPORTED"](a886811721/configure.ac (L1312)). So it would seem they exist more to satisfy a distro requirement, as opposed to something that anyone should, or would actually use in practice.
PRs like #22412 highlight the "issue" with us operating with our own Univalue fork, where we actively fix bugs, and make improvements, when upstream (https://github.com/jgarzik/univalue) may not be taking those improvements, and by all accounts, is not currently actively maintained. Bitcoin Core should not be hamstrung into not being able to fix bugs in a library, and/or have to litter our source with "workarounds", i.e #22412, for bugs we've already fixed, based on the fact that an upstream project is not actively being maintained. Allowing builders to use system libs is really only exacerbating this problem, with little benefit to our project. Bitcoin Core is not quite like your average piece of distro packaged software.
There is the potential for us to give the same treatment to libsecp256k1, however it seems doing that is currently less straightforward.
ACKs for top commit:
dongcarl:
ACK 0f95247246 less my comment above, always nice to have an include-able `sources.mk` which makes integration easier.
theuni:
ACK 0f95247246. Thanks fanquake for keeping this going.
Tree-SHA512: a7f2e41ee7cba06ae72388638e86b264eca1b9a8b81c15d1d7b45df960c88c3b91578b4ade020f8cc61d75cf8d16914575f9a78fa4cef9c12be63504ed804b99
This addresses issues like the one in #12467, where some of our compiler flags
end up being dropped during the subconfigure of Univalue. Specifically, we're
still using the compiler-default c++ version rather than forcing c++17.
We can drop the need subconfigure completely in favor of a tighter build
integration, where the sources are listed separately from the build recipes,
so that they may be included directly by upstream projects. This is
similar to the way leveldb build integration works in Core.
Core benefits of this approach include:
- Better caching (for ex. ccache and autoconf)
- No need for a slow subconfigure
- Faster autoconf
- No more missing compile flags
- Compile only the objects needed
There are no benefits to Univalue itself that I can think of. These changes
should be a no-op there, and to downstreams as well until they take advantage
of the new sources.mk.
This also removes the option to use an external univalue to avoid similar ABI
issues with mystery binaries.
Co-authored-by: fanquake <fanquake@gmail.com>
4747da3a5b Add syscall sandboxing (seccomp-bpf) (practicalswift)
Pull request description:
Add experimental syscall sandboxing using seccomp-bpf (Linux secure computing mode).
Enable filtering of system calls using seccomp-bpf: allow only explicitly allowlisted (expected) syscalls to be called.
The syscall sandboxing implemented in this PR is an experimental feature currently available only under Linux x86-64.
To enable the experimental syscall sandbox the `-sandbox=<mode>` option must be passed to `bitcoind`:
```
-sandbox=<mode>
Use the experimental syscall sandbox in the specified mode
(-sandbox=log-and-abort or -sandbox=abort). Allow only expected
syscalls to be used by bitcoind. Note that this is an
experimental new feature that may cause bitcoind to exit or crash
unexpectedly: use with caution. In the "log-and-abort" mode the
invocation of an unexpected syscall results in a debug handler
being invoked which will log the incident and terminate the
program (without executing the unexpected syscall). In the
"abort" mode the invocation of an unexpected syscall results in
the entire process being killed immediately by the kernel without
executing the unexpected syscall.
```
The allowed syscalls are defined on a per thread basis.
I've used this feature since summer 2020 and I find it to be a helpful testing/debugging addition which makes it much easier to reason about the actual capabilities required of each type of thread in Bitcoin Core.
---
Quick start guide:
```
$ ./configure
$ src/bitcoind -regtest -debug=util -sandbox=log-and-abort
…
2021-06-09T12:34:56Z Experimental syscall sandbox enabled (-sandbox=log-and-abort): bitcoind will terminate if an unexpected (not allowlisted) syscall is invoked.
…
2021-06-09T12:34:56Z Syscall filter installed for thread "addcon"
2021-06-09T12:34:56Z Syscall filter installed for thread "dnsseed"
2021-06-09T12:34:56Z Syscall filter installed for thread "net"
2021-06-09T12:34:56Z Syscall filter installed for thread "msghand"
2021-06-09T12:34:56Z Syscall filter installed for thread "opencon"
2021-06-09T12:34:56Z Syscall filter installed for thread "init"
…
# A simulated execve call to show the sandbox in action:
2021-06-09T12:34:56Z ERROR: The syscall "execve" (syscall number 59) is not allowed by the syscall sandbox in thread "msghand". Please report.
…
Aborted (core dumped)
$
```
---
[About seccomp and seccomp-bpf](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seccomp):
> In computer security, seccomp (short for secure computing mode) is a facility in the Linux kernel. seccomp allows a process to make a one-way transition into a "secure" state where it cannot make any system calls except exit(), sigreturn(), and read() and write() to already-open file descriptors. Should it attempt any other system calls, the kernel will terminate the process with SIGKILL or SIGSYS. In this sense, it does not virtualize the system's resources but isolates the process from them entirely.
>
> […]
>
> seccomp-bpf is an extension to seccomp that allows filtering of system calls using a configurable policy implemented using Berkeley Packet Filter rules. It is used by OpenSSH and vsftpd as well as the Google Chrome/Chromium web browsers on Chrome OS and Linux. (In this regard seccomp-bpf achieves similar functionality, but with more flexibility and higher performance, to the older systrace—which seems to be no longer supported for Linux.)
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review and lightly tested ACK 4747da3a5b
Tree-SHA512: e1c28e323eb4409a46157b7cc0fc29a057ba58d1ee2de268962e2ade28ebd4421b5c2536c64a3af6e9bd3f54016600fec88d016adb49864b63edea51ad838e17
a43b8e9555 build: set OSX_MIN_VERSION to 10.15 (fanquake)
Pull request description:
Taken out of #20744, as splitting up some of the build changes was mentioned [here](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/22937#discussion_r707303172).
This is required to use `std::filesystem` on macOS, as support for it only landed in the libc++.dylib shipped with 10.15. So if we want to move to using `std::filesystem` for `23.0`, this bump is required.
See also: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/xcode-release-notes/xcode-11-release-notes
> Clang now supports the C++17 \<filesystem\> library for iOS 13, macOS 10.15, watchOS 6, and tvOS 13.
macOS 10.15 was released in October 2019. macOS OS's seem to have a life of about 3 years, so it's possible that 10.14 will become officially unsupported by the end of 2021 and prior to the release of 23.0.
Guix builds:
```bash
bash-5.1# find guix-build-$(git rev-parse --short=12 HEAD)/output/ -type f -print0 | env LC_ALL=C sort -z | xargs -r0 sha256sum
abc8b749be65f1339dcdf44bd1ed6ade2533b8e3b5030ad1dde0ae0cede78136 guix-build-a43b8e955558/output/dist-archive/bitcoin-a43b8e955558.tar.gz
1edcc301eb4c02f3baa379beb8d4c78e661abc24a293813bc9d900cf7255b790 guix-build-a43b8e955558/output/x86_64-apple-darwin19/SHA256SUMS.part
e9dbb5594a664519da778dde9ed861c3f0f631525672e17a67eeda599f16ff44 guix-build-a43b8e955558/output/x86_64-apple-darwin19/bitcoin-a43b8e955558-osx-unsigned.dmg
11b23a17c630dddc7594c25625eea3de42db50f355733b9ce9ade2d8eba3a8f3 guix-build-a43b8e955558/output/x86_64-apple-darwin19/bitcoin-a43b8e955558-osx-unsigned.tar.gz
257ba64a327927f94d9aa0a68da3a2695cf880b3ed1a0113c5a966dcc426eb5e guix-build-a43b8e955558/output/x86_64-apple-darwin19/bitcoin-a43b8e955558-osx64.tar.gz
```
ACKs for top commit:
hebasto:
ACK a43b8e9555
jarolrod:
ACK a43b8e9
Tree-SHA512: 9ac77be7cb56c068578860a3b2b8b7487c9e18b71b14aedd77a9c663f5d4bb19756d551770c02ddd12f1797beea5757b261588e7b67fb53509bb998ee8022369
* Bump to debian:bookworm to avoid crash in the zmq functional test
(bitcoind: line 2: 33011 Illegal instruction (core dumped)
qemu-s390x)
* Remove RUN_UNIT_TESTS=true, because it is the default
* Add TEST_RUNNER_EXTRA --exclude to skip failing tests
fa0a5fa744 ci: Fuzz with -ftrivial-auto-var-init=pattern (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
This makes memory bugs deterministic. `-ftrivial-auto-var-init=pattern` is incompatible with other memory sanitizers (like valgrind and msan), but that is irrelevant here, because the address sanitizer in this fuzz CI config is already incompatible with them.
`-ftrivial-auto-var-init=pattern` goes well with `-fsanitize=bool` and `-fsanitize=enum`, but those are already enabled via `-fsanitize=undefined`. See https://clang.llvm.org/docs/UndefinedBehaviorSanitizer.html#available-checks
ACKs for top commit:
practicalswift:
cr ACK fa0a5fa744
Tree-SHA512: ed6be953cd99eadb1ba245ba30170747eff66be54d2773c8d26a3a6aee0fdcd6967c596f4f4ab1d238de6a6526623dac5211f0ba77f1986639395d7921bdc19f
ab9c34237a release: remove gitian (fanquake)
Pull request description:
Note that this doesn't yet touch any glibc back compat related code.
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review ACK ab9c34237a
Tree-SHA512: 8e2fe3ec1097f54bb11ab9136b43818d90eab5dbb0a663ad6a552966ada4bdb49cc12ff4e66f0ec0ec5400bda5c81f3a3ce70a9ebb6fe1e0db612da9f00a51a7
fa001602cd ci: Re-enable verify-commits.py check (MarcoFalke)
fa880b10d6 ci: Unconditionally set the global git author name in cirrys.yml (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
Might be useful to detect bugs in the script itself or an accidentally missed signature.
ACKs for top commit:
josibake:
ACK fa001602cd
Zero-1729:
tACK fa001602cd
fanquake:
untested ACK fa001602cd
Tree-SHA512: 8a13a67d325f2477f4088d1034f0d5e4e04937a01ee3c738435fe66394c02b9f33225529952ad331b0ba19b63ca4b2f26911cb5d264890159840cf3e09085969
b367745cfe ci: Make Cirrus CI Windows build with --enable-werror (Hennadii Stepanov)
c713bb2b24 Fix Windows build with --enable-werror on Ubuntu Focal (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
This PR makes possible to cross-compile Windows build with `--enable-werror --enable-suppress-external-warnings`.
Some problems are fixed, others are silenced.
Also `--enable-werror` is enabled for Cirrus CI Windows build (the last one on Cirrus CI without `--enable-werror`).
ACKs for top commit:
practicalswift:
cr ACK b367745cfe19f6de3f44b3adc90fa08e36e44bb6: patch looks correct
laanwj:
Code review ACK b367745cfe
vasild:
ACK b367745cfe
jarolrod:
ACK b367745cfe
Tree-SHA512: 64f5c99b7dad4c0efce80cd45d7074f275bd8411235dc9e0841287bdab64b812c6f8f9d632c35531d0b8210148531f53aaaac77be7699b29d2d6aaae304dbee0
fa80e10d94 test: Add feature_taproot.py --previous_release (MarcoFalke)
85ccffa266 test: move releases download incantation to README (Sjors Provoost)
29d6b1da2a test: previous releases: add v0.20.1 (Sjors Provoost)
Pull request description:
Disabling the new consensus code at runtime is fine, but potentially fragile and incomplete. Fix that by giving the option to run with a version that has been compiled without any taproot code.
ACKs for top commit:
Sjors:
tACK fa80e10
NelsonGaldeman:
tACK fa80e10d94
Tree-SHA512: 1a1feef823f08c05268759645a8974e1b2d39a024258f5e6acecbe25097aae3fa9302c27262978b40f1aa8e7b525b60c0047199010f2a5d6017dd6434b4066f0
During each CI run, for macos native environment, python packages lief
and zmq are rebuilt everytime which wastes a lot of resources and time.
The latest version of pip directly fetches pre-built binaries. Through
this commit pip version is upgraded in macos environment before
installation of these packages.
46b025e00d test: add new python linter to check file names and permissions (windsok)
6f6bb3ebc7 test: fix file permissions on various scripts (windsok)
Pull request description:
Adds a new python linter test which tests for correct filenames and file permissions in the repository.
Replaces the existing tests in the `test/lint/lint-filenames.sh` and `test/lint/lint-shebang.sh` linter tests, as well as adding some new and increased testing. This increased coverage is intended to catch issues such as in #21728 and https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/16807/files#r345547050
Summary of tests:
* Checks every file in the repository against an allowed regexp to make sure only lowercase or uppercase alphanumerics (a-zA-Z0-9), underscores (_), hyphens (-), at (@) and dots (.) are used in repository filenames.
* Checks only source files (*.cpp, *.h, *.py, *.sh) against a stricter allowed regexp to make sure only lowercase alphanumerics (a-z0-9), underscores (_), hyphens (-) and dots (.) are used in source code filenames. Additionally there is an exception regexp for directories or files which are excepted from matching this regexp (This should replicate the existing `test/lint/lint-filenames.sh` test)
* Checks all files in the repository match an allowed executable or non-executable file permission octal. Additionally checks that for executable files, the file contains a shebang line.
* Checks that for executable `.py` and `.sh` files, the shebang line used matches an allowable list of shebangs (This should replicate the existing `test/lint/lint-shebang.sh` test)
* Checks every file that contains a shebang line to ensure it has an executable permission
Additionally updates the permissions on various files to comply with the new tests.
Fixes#21729
ACKs for top commit:
practicalswift:
cr re-ACK 46b025e00df40724175735eb5606ac73067cb3b8: patch still looks correct
kiminuo:
code review ACK 46b025e00d if `contrib/gitian-descriptors/assign_DISTNAME` permission change is deemed OK.
laanwj:
Code review ACK 46b025e00d
Tree-SHA512: 1c8201a2cee0d9cbce15652b68cec9a6458a8b493fcd5392f98560aca0b1a12e668baab65a47100f116f626dadc3f591deb47f7368468c6a46c6c712c2533455