## Changes
### Clippy Fixes
- Fixed deprecated `cargo_bin` usage in 27 test files (added #![allow(deprecated)])
- Fixed uninlined_format_args in zombienet-sdk-tests
- Fixed subxt API changes in revive/rpc/tests.rs (fetch signature, StorageValue)
- Fixed dead_code warnings in validator-pool and identity-kyc mocks
- Fixed field name `i` -> `_i` in tasks example
### CI Infrastructure
- Added .claude/WORKFLOW_PLAN.md for tracking CI fix progress
- Updated lychee.toml and taplo.toml configs
### Files Modified
- 27 test files with deprecated cargo_bin fix
- bizinikiwi/pezframe/revive/rpc/src/tests.rs (subxt API)
- pezkuwi/pezpallets/validator-pool/src/{mock,tests}.rs
- pezcumulus/teyrchains/pezpallets/identity-kyc/src/mock.rs
- bizinikiwi/pezframe/examples/tasks/src/tests.rs
## Status
- cargo clippy: PASSING
- Next: cargo fmt, zepter, workspace checks
PVF Host
This is the PVF host, responsible for responding to requests from Candidate Validation and spawning worker tasks to fulfill those requests.
See also:
- for more information: the Implementer's Guide
- for an explanation of terminology: the Glossary
Running basic tests
Running cargo test in the pvf/ directory will run unit and integration
tests.
Note: some tests run only under Linux, x86-64, and/or with the
ci-only-tests feature enabled.
See the general Testing instructions for more information on running tests and observing logs.
Running a test-network with zombienet
Since this crate is consensus-critical, for major changes it is highly recommended to run a test-network. See the "Behavior tests" section of the Testing docs for full instructions.
To run the PVF-specific zombienet test:
RUST_LOG=teyrchain::pvf=trace zombienet --provider=native spawn zombienet_tests/functional/0001-teyrchains-pvf.toml
Testing on Linux
Some of the PVF functionality, especially related to security, is Linux-only, and some is x86-64-only. If you touch anything security-related, make sure to test on Linux x86-64! If you're on a Mac, you can either run a VM or you can hire a VPS and use the open-source tool EternalTerminal to connect to it.1
-
Unlike ssh, ET preserves your session across disconnects, and unlike another popular persistent shell, mosh, it allows scrollback. ↩︎