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Proposal for I O layer and P2P
Max edited this page Mar 31, 2024
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Just right for testing. The code is clear, you don’t have to look for a piece of logic in other directories. From bottom to top:
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IO level: operates with connections, raw bytes, reconnections, timeouts and asynchrony (there is polling of the most general nature)
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Peer level:
- protocol and serialization,
- peers collection,
- broadcastcasts,
- persistent storage associated with peers (let it be separate from the blockchain storage), *ban/unban
- Dandelion (yes, he is here, not in level 3)
- Integration layer:
- filter and cache (this is a set of hashes that will allow you not to send a TX or a block to the node that has it, and also not to send to other modules what they already know)
- bridge with the main system, i.e. generation and translation of requests/responses between it (API modules) and level 2
- inter-thread communication
- One thread for all of the above (network logic, as well as levels 2 and 3)
- There is logic here that does not require calculations, you can have a lot of active connections, the limit can only be the network or memory, but not the cpu
- Exception: You may need a separate thread that zips bulky responses. Let them be formed asynchronously as needed
- Interaction with other threads either through queues (if these are requests/responses) or directly (make it explicit to make it clear that this is a constant piece of memory). Place mutexes on small pieces of updated data (for example { total_difficulty, total_height }), which can be quickly read
- In queues, only something easily copied or immutable data, for example. { Type type; shared_ptr, etc.}
- Networking and protocol
- We are limited to TCP and IPv4. Then we’ll have time to add anything if we need it, otherwise let there be less code at first
- I really like libuv as a library for networking and asynchrony. The rationale is below.
- You can take the protocol from grin as a basis, removing/adding something will not be a problem
- Dandelion: you need to decide on one of the 2 schemes specified in the grin documentation
- Peers
- Take the logic from grin, for starters
- For storage (not blockchain, only for peers, it should be separate) take sqlite as the most time-tested thing. It is flexible (indexes, etc.). By the way, in-memory sqlite has also proven itself well as a tool for working with tabular data and complex indexes. When/if performance limitations are visible or it becomes clear that indexing is not needed, you can select key-value storage faster
- Caches and filters
- Same as grin to begin with. It would be possible to try some kind of bloom filter to avoid the limitations that we see in this part from grin
It's here: http://docs.libuv.org/en/v1.x/, https://github.com/libuv /libuv
- High-quality and compact item. It contains all node.js and its asynchrony and much more.
- You can fix the version and embed the sources in the build system
- I have a very positive experience with her, and more than one. In general, I can take on this entire part and guarantee a good result, and a quick one, because... I know from the inside what is there
- It will be a few% slower than a self-written solution on epoll, but it’s mature and more than one Linux
- Asynchrony and timers are also added there; a decent API can be output to std::function, for example
- You can also add http and TLS when needed