* filter again if it's the first statement and spam slots were applied
* Update runtime/parachains/src/disputes.rs
Co-authored-by: Andronik <write@reusable.software>
* fixins
* add a proper test case, simplify some code
Co-authored-by: Andronik <write@reusable.software>
* Use into_account_truncating
Signed-off-by: Oliver Tale-Yazdi <oliver.tale-yazdi@parity.io>
* more truncating
* more truncating
* more
* clean up parachain primitives
* more truncating
* update lockfile for {"substrate"}
Co-authored-by: Shawn Tabrizi <shawntabrizi@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: parity-processbot <>
* explicitly tag network requests with version
* fmt
* make PeerSet more aware of versioning
* some generalization of the network bridge to support upgrades
* walk back some renaming
* walk back some version stuff
* extract version from fallback
* remove V1 from NetworkBridgeUpdate
* add accidentally-removed timer
* implement focusing for versioned messages
* fmt
* fix up network bridge & tests
* remove inaccurate version check in bridge
* remove some TODO [now]s
* fix fallout in statement distribution
* fmt
* fallout in gossip-support
* fix fallout in collator-protocol
* fix fallout in bitfield-distribution
* fix fallout in approval-distribution
* fmt
* use never!
* fmt
* Move `trait ParachainHost` to a separate version independent module
`trait ParachainHost` is no longer part of a specific primitives
version. Instead there is a single trait for stable and staging api
versions. The trait contains stable AND staging methods. The latter are
explicitly marked as unstable.
* Fix `use` primitives
`polkadot_primitives::v2` becomes `polkadot_primitives::runtime_api`
* Staging API declaration and stubs
Introduces the concept for 'staging functions' in runtime API. These
functions are still in testing and they are meant to be used only
within test networks (Westend).
They coexist with the stable calls for technical reasons - maintaining
different runtime APIs for different networks is hard to implement.
Check the doc comments in source files for more details how the staging
API should be used.
* Add new staging method - get_session_disputes()
Add `staging_get_session_disputes` to `ParachainHost` as the first
method of the staging API.
* Hide vstaging runtime api implementations behind feature flag
* Fix test runtime
* fn staging_get_session_disputes() is renamed to fn staging_get_disputes()
* paras: `include_pvf_check_statement` rt bench
Resolves#4933
This PR adds a benchmark for the `include_pvf_check_statement`
dispatchable. This is a necessary step to make it work without
modifications. That enables us to proceed with testing on Versi.
This introduces 5 new benchmarks. Those measure performance of the
`include_pvf_check_statement` under 2 different conditions:
1. regular vote submission. That's the common case.
2. submission of the last vote. That happens only once and leads to a
heavy finalization stage.
There are 2 different types of finalization (one for onboarding, one for
upgrading) and there are two outcomes: accepted and rejected. Those 4
are similar but I decided to cover them all and assign the maximum of
all 4. This is to avoid a situation when one of those paths becomes more
heavier than others and opens up an attack venue.
The regular vote submission weight is drastically different from the
submission last vote weight. That's why in case during runtime
finalization was not executed the weight consumed value will be lowered
down to the regular vote submission.
The finalization weight is proportional to the number of "causes", i.e.
the events that caused the PVF pre-checking vote in the first place, and
here we assume that the maximum number of causes is 100.
Theoretically, there is nothing that prevents an adversary to
register/upgrade to more than 100 parachains. In that case, the consumed
weight will be lower than the actual time consumed by the finalization
process. That can enable a DoS vector.
However, practically, it is not very possible. Right now it is very
expensive to call `schedule_para_initialize` because it requires a very
large lock up of funds. Moreover, finalizing a vote with 100 causes
leads to around 31ms time spent. Finalizing more will require more time.
However, finalizing with 200 causes will cause ≈62ms delay. This is not
that bad since even though we had a full block and the adversary tried
to finalize 200 causes it won't be able to even exceed the operational
extrinsic boundary of 250ms and even if so it won't make big difference.
That said, this should be addressed later on, esp. when we enable
parathreads, which will make creating causes easier. One of potential
solutions will be shifting the logic of finalization into
`on_initialize`/`on_finalize`. Another is to create a maximum number of
causes and then reject upgrades or onboardings if that was reached.
* cargo run --quiet --profile=production --features=runtime-benchmarks -- benchmark --chain=polkadot-dev --steps=50 --repeat=20 --pallet=runtime_parachains::paras --extrinsic=* --execution=wasm --wasm-execution=compiled --heap-pages=4096 --header=./file_header.txt --output=./runtime/polkadot/src/weights/runtime_parachains_paras.rs
* cargo run --quiet --profile=production --features=runtime-benchmarks -- benchmark --chain=kusama-dev --steps=50 --repeat=20 --pallet=runtime_parachains::paras --extrinsic=* --execution=wasm --wasm-execution=compiled --heap-pages=4096 --header=./file_header.txt --output=./runtime/kusama/src/weights/runtime_parachains_paras.rs
* cargo run --quiet --profile=production --features=runtime-benchmarks -- benchmark --chain=westend-dev --steps=50 --repeat=20 --pallet=runtime_parachains::paras --extrinsic=* --execution=wasm --wasm-execution=compiled --heap-pages=4096 --header=./file_header.txt --output=./runtime/westend/src/weights/runtime_parachains_paras.rs
* cargo run --quiet --profile=production --features runtime-benchmarks -- benchmark --chain=rococo-dev --steps=50 --repeat=20 --pallet=runtime_parachains::paras --extrinsic=* --execution=wasm --wasm-execution=compiled --heap-pages=4096 --header=./file_header.txt --output=./runtime/rococo/src/weights/runtime_parachains_paras.rs
* Fix import error
Co-authored-by: Parity Bot <admin@parity.io>
Co-authored-by: Robert Klotzner <robert.klotzner@gmx.at>
Co-authored-by: Lldenaurois <Ljdenaurois@gmail.com>
* remove v0 primitives from polkadot-primitives
* first pass: remove v0
* fix fallout in erasure-coding
* remove v1 primitives, consolidate to v2
* the great import update
* update runtime_api_impl_v1 to v2 as well
* guide: add `Version` request for runtime API
* add version query to runtime API
* reintroduce OldV1SessionInfo in a limited way
This commit adds a new primitive called `ParachainsCache` to manipulate
the `Parachains` storage entry in a more convenient way.
Then, on top of that, this commit changes the logic of
`initialize_para_now` so that it is identical to what is used for
initialization of onboarding.
* Add `without_storage_info`
The MaxEncodedLen trait is now enforced by default in Substrate.
All pallets missing an implementation need to be marked with
`without_storage_info` now.
Signed-off-by: Oliver Tale-Yazdi <oliver.tale-yazdi@parity.io>
* Remove `generate_storage_info`
Signed-off-by: Oliver Tale-Yazdi <oliver.tale-yazdi@parity.io>
* Add more `without_storage_info`
Signed-off-by: Oliver Tale-Yazdi <oliver.tale-yazdi@parity.io>
* update lockfile for {"substrate"}
Co-authored-by: parity-processbot <>
* fix miscalculation of remaining weight
* rename a var
* move out enforcing filtering by dropping inherents
* prepare for dispute statement validity check being split off
* refactor
* refactor, only check disputes we actually want to include
* more refactor and documentation
* refactor and minimize inherent checks
* chore: warnings
* fix a few tests
* fix dedup regression
* fix
* more asserts in tests
* remove some asserts
* chore: fmt
* skip signatures checks, some more
* undo unwatend changes
* Update runtime/parachains/src/paras_inherent/mod.rs
Co-authored-by: sandreim <54316454+sandreim@users.noreply.github.com>
* cleanups, checking CheckedDisputeStatments makes no sense
* integrity, if called create_inherent_inner, it shall do the checks, and not rely on enter_inner
* review comments
* use from impl rather than into
* remove outdated comment
* adjust tests accordingly
* assure no weight is lost
* address review comments
* remove unused import
* split error into two and document
* use assurance, O(n)
* Revert "adjust tests accordingly"
This reverts commit 3cc9a3c449f82db38cea22c48f4a21876603374b.
* fix comment
* fix sorting
* comment
Co-authored-by: sandreim <54316454+sandreim@users.noreply.github.com>
if the PVF pre-checking is disabled the runtime dispatchable will reject
any attempts of submission. This is also concern the unsigned tx
validation.
Right now, the `include_pvf_check_statement` dispatchable is effectively
uncallable because of the weight set to the maximum value. If we were to
benchmark it, it would become includable in a block, but since there
will be no active votes, the dispatchable won't do anything.
However, it will execute some code, like signature validation and
querying some storage entries. To be completely safe, we can bail out
early if the `pvf_checking_enabled` config is disabled. That's what this
PR does.