Adds a function for querying the last runtime upgrade spec version. This
can be useful for when writing runtime level migrations to ensure that
they are not executed multiple times. An example would be a session key
migration.
---------
Co-authored-by: Liam Aharon <liam.aharon@hotmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Oliver Tale-Yazdi <oliver.tale-yazdi@parity.io>
The goal of this PR is to migrate Identity deposits from the Relay Chain
to a system parachain.
The problem I want to solve is that `IdentityOf` and `SubsOf` both store
an amount that's held in reserve as a storage deposit. When migrating to
a parachain, we can take a snapshot of the actual `IdentityInfo` and
sub-account mappings, but should migrate (off chain) the `deposit`s to
zero, since the chain (and by extension, accounts) won't have any funds
at genesis.
The good news is that we expect parachain deposits to be significantly
lower (possibly 100x) on the parachain. That is, a deposit of 21 DOT on
the Relay Chain would need 0.21 DOT on a parachain. This PR proposes to
migrate the deposits in the following way:
1. Introduces a new pallet with two extrinsics:
- `reap_identity`: Has a configurable `ReapOrigin`, which would be set
to `EnsureSigned` on the Relay Chain (i.e. callable by anyone) and
`EnsureRoot` on the parachain (we don't want identities reaped from
there).
- `poke_deposit`: Checks what deposit the pallet holds (at genesis,
zero) and attempts to update the amount based on the calculated deposit
for storage data.
2. `reap_identity` clears all storage data for a `target` account and
unreserves their deposit.
3. A `ReapIdentityHandler` teleports the necessary DOT to the parachain
and calls `poke_deposit`. Since the parachain deposit is much lower, and
was just unreserved, we know we have enough.
One awkwardness I ran into was that the XCMv3 instruction set does not
provide a way for the system to teleport assets without a fee being
deducted on reception. Users shouldn't have to pay a fee for the system
to migrate their info to a more efficient location. So I wrote my own
program and did the `InitiateTeleport` accounting on my own to send a
program with `UnpaidExecution`. Have discussed an
`InitiateUnpaidTeleport` instruction with @franciscoaguirre . Obviously
any chain executing this would have to pass a `Barrier` for free
execution.
TODO:
- [x] Confirm People Chain ParaId
- [x] Confirm People Chain deposit rates (determined in
https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot-sdk/pull/2281)
- [x] Add pallet to Westend
---------
Co-authored-by: Bastian Köcher <git@kchr.de>
Get rid of public `ChainSync::..._requests()` functions and return all
requests as actions.
---------
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Kunert <skunert49@gmail.com>
This PR introduces:
- XCM host functions `xcm_send`, `xcm_execute`
- An Xcm trait into the config. that proxy these functions to to
`pallet_xcm`, or disable their usage by using `()`.
- A mock_network and xcm_test files to test the newly added xcm-related
functions.
---------
Co-authored-by: Keith Yeung <kungfukeith11@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Sasha Gryaznov <hi@agryaznov.com>
Co-authored-by: command-bot <>
Co-authored-by: Francisco Aguirre <franciscoaguirreperez@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Alexander Theißen <alex.theissen@me.com>
This PR adds support for multiple hashes being passed to the
`chainHeda_unpin` parameters.
The `hash` parameter is renamed to `hash_or_hashes` per
https://github.com/paritytech/json-rpc-interface-spec/pull/111.
While at it, a new integration test is added to check the unpinning of
multiple hashes. The API is checked against a hash or a vector of
hashes.
cc @paritytech/subxt-team
---------
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Vasile <alexandru.vasile@parity.io>
add details in `--dev` flag to tell that it disables local peer
discovery
### Context
When adding automated end-to-end tests, we replaced `--dev` by
```
`--chain=dev`, `--force-authoring`, `--rpc-cors=all`, `--alice`, and `--tmp` flags
```
as stated in the command line documentation. But the tests started
failing due to the nodes connecting to each other.
### Fix
This PR includes additional command line documentation to explain more
in detail what `--dev` flag inludes.
BEEFY ECDSA signatures are on keccak has of the messages. As such we can
not simply call
`EcdsaBlsPair::verify(signature.as_inner_ref(), msg,
self.as_inner_ref())`
because that invokes ecdsa default verification which perfoms blake2
hash which we don't want.
This bring up the second issue makes: This makes `sign` and `verify`
function in `pair_crypto` useless, at least for BEEFY use case.
Moreover, there is no obvious clean way to generate the signature given
that pair_crypto does not exposes `sign_prehashed`. You could in theory
query the keystore for the pair (could you?), invoke `to_raw` and
re-generate each sub-pair and sign using each. But that sounds extremely
anticlimactic and will be frow upon by auditors . So I appreciate any
alternative suggestion.
---------
Co-authored-by: Davide Galassi <davxy@datawok.net>
Co-authored-by: Robert Hambrock <roberthambrock@gmail.com>
Fixes https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot-sdk/issues/1725
This PR adds the following changes:
1. An attribute `pallet::feeless_if` that can be optionally attached to
a call like so:
```rust
#[pallet::feeless_if(|_origin: &OriginFor<T>, something: &u32| -> bool {
*something == 0
})]
pub fn do_something(origin: OriginFor<T>, something: u32) -> DispatchResult {
....
}
```
The closure passed accepts references to arguments as specified in the
call fn. It returns a boolean that denotes the conditions required for
this call to be "feeless".
2. A signed extension `SkipCheckIfFeeless<T: SignedExtension>` that
wraps a transaction payment processor such as
`pallet_transaction_payment::ChargeTransactionPayment`. It checks for
all calls annotated with `pallet::feeless_if` to see if the conditions
are met. If so, the wrapped signed extension is not called, essentially
making the call feeless.
In order to use this, you can simply replace your existing signed
extension that manages transaction payment like so:
```diff
- pallet_transaction_payment::ChargeTransactionPayment<Runtime>,
+ pallet_skip_feeless_payment::SkipCheckIfFeeless<
+ Runtime,
+ pallet_transaction_payment::ChargeTransactionPayment<Runtime>,
+ >,
```
### Todo
- [x] Tests
- [x] Docs
- [x] Prdoc
---------
Co-authored-by: Nikhil Gupta <>
Co-authored-by: Oliver Tale-Yazdi <oliver.tale-yazdi@parity.io>
Co-authored-by: Francisco Aguirre <franciscoaguirreperez@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Liam Aharon <liam.aharon@hotmail.com>
Remove the `GRANDPA_AUTHORITIES_KEY` key and its usage. Apparently this
was used in the early days to communicate the grandpa authorities to the
node. However, we have now a runtime api that does this for us. So, this
pull request is moving from the custom managed storage item to a FRAME
managed storage item.
This pr also includes a migration for doing the switch on a running
chain.
---------
Co-authored-by: Davide Galassi <davxy@datawok.net>
Optimizes the `rerun-if-changed` logic by ignoring `dev-dependencies`
and also not outputting paths. Because outputting paths could lead to
include unwanted crates in the rerun checks.
All `ChainSync` actions that `SyncingEngine` should perform are unified
under one `ChainSyncAction`. Processing of these actions put into a
single place after `select!` in `SyncingEngine::run` instead of multiple
places where calling `ChainSync` methods.
A utility function I consider quite useful to declare string literals
that are backed by an array.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bastian Köcher <git@kchr.de>
Co-authored-by: Davide Galassi <davxy@datawok.net>
These changes are required so that the bridgehub system runtimes can
more easily be configured with multiple message processors
Example usage:
```rust
use frame_support::traits::QueuePausedQuery;
impl pallet_message_queue::Config for Runtime {
type QueuePausedQuery = (A, B, C)
}
When warp syncing we import the target block with all its state.
However, we didn't store the `LAST_PRUNED` block which would then lead
to `pruning` to forget about the imported block after a restart of the
node. We just set `LAST_PRUNED` to the parent block of the warp sync
target block to fix this issue.
Genesis building in runtime may involve calling some custom host
functions. This PR allows to pass `HostFunctions` into the `ChainSpec`
struct, which in turn are passed to `WasmExecutor`. The `ChainSpec` now
has extended host functions type parameter:
```
pub struct ChainSpec<G, E = NoExtension, EHF = ()>
```
which will be combined with the default set
(`sp_io::SubstrateHostFunctions`) in an instance of `WasmExecutor` used
to build the genesis config.
Fix for #2188
---------
Co-authored-by: Davide Galassi <davxy@datawok.net>
Co-authored-by: Bastian Köcher <git@kchr.de>
The trie cache implementation was ignoring the `storage_root` when
setting up the value cache. The problem with this is that the value
cache works using `storage_keys` and these keys are not unique across
different tries. A block can actually have different tries (main trie
and multiple child tries). This pull request fixes the issue by not
ignoring the `storage_root` and returning an unique `value_cache` per
`storage_root`. It also adds a test for the seen bug and improves
documentation that this doesn't happen again.
Changes:
- Adds a new call `remove_key` to the sudo pallet to permanently remove
the sudo key.
- Remove some clones and general maintenance
---------
Signed-off-by: Oliver Tale-Yazdi <oliver.tale-yazdi@parity.io>
Co-authored-by: Bastian Köcher <git@kchr.de>
Co-authored-by: command-bot <>
Original PR https://github.com/paritytech/substrate/pull/14641
---
Closes https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot-sdk/issues/109
### Problem
Quoting from the above issue:
> When adding a pallet to chain after genesis we currently don't set the
StorageVersion. So, when calling on_chain_storage_version it returns 0
while the pallet is maybe already at storage version 9 when it was added
to the chain. This could lead to issues when running migrations.
### Solution
- Create a new trait `BeforeAllRuntimeMigrations` with a single method
`fn before_all_runtime_migrations() -> Weight` trait with a noop default
implementation
- Modify `Executive` to call
`BeforeAllRuntimeMigrations::before_all_runtime_migrations` for all
pallets before running any other hooks
- Implement `BeforeAllRuntimeMigrations` in the pallet proc macro to
initialize the on-chain version to the current pallet version if the
pallet has no storage set (indicating it has been recently added to the
runtime and needs to have its version initialised).
### Other changes in this PR
- Abstracted repeated boilerplate to access the `pallet_name` in the
pallet expand proc macro.
### FAQ
#### Why create a new hook instead of adding this logic to the pallet
`pre_upgrade`?
`Executive` currently runs `COnRuntimeUpgrade` (custom migrations)
before `AllPalletsWithSystem` migrations. We need versions to be
initialized before the `COnRuntimeUpgrade` migrations are run, because
`COnRuntimeUpgrade` migrations may use the on-chain version for critical
logic. e.g. `VersionedRuntimeUpgrade` uses it to decide whether or not
to execute.
We cannot reorder `COnRuntimeUpgrade` and `AllPalletsWithSystem` so
`AllPalletsWithSystem` runs first, because `AllPalletsWithSystem` have
some logic in their `post_upgrade` hooks to verify that the on-chain
version and current pallet version match. A common use case of
`COnRuntimeUpgrade` migrations is to perform a migration which will
result in the versions matching, so if they were reordered these
`post_upgrade` checks would fail.
#### Why init the on-chain version for pallets without a current storage
version?
We must init the on-chain version for pallets even if they don't have a
defined storage version so if there is a future version bump, the
on-chain version is not automatically set to that new version without a
proper migration.
e.g. bad scenario:
1. A pallet with no 'current version' is added to the runtime
2. Later, the pallet is upgraded with the 'current version' getting set
to 1 and a migration is added to Executive Migrations to migrate the
storage from 0 to 1
a. Runtime upgrade occurs
b. `before_all` hook initializes the on-chain version to 1
c. `on_runtime_upgrade` of the migration executes, and sees the on-chain
version is already 1 therefore think storage is already migrated and
does not execute the storage migration
Now, on-chain version is 1 but storage is still at version 0.
By always initializing the on-chain version when the pallet is added to
the runtime we avoid that scenario.
---------
Co-authored-by: Kian Paimani <5588131+kianenigma@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Bastian Köcher <git@kchr.de>
### This PR is a port of this [PR for
substrate](https://github.com/paritytech/substrate/pull/13013) by
@kianenigma
Add infrastructure needed to have a Pallet::decode_entire_state(), which
makes sure all "typed" storage items defined in the pallet are
decode-able.
This is not enforced in any way at the moment. Teams who wish to
integrate/use this in the try-runtime feature flag should add
frame_support::storage::migration::EnsureStateDecodes as the LAST ITEM
of the runtime's custom migrations, and pass it to frame-executive. This
will make it usable in try-runtime on-runtime-upgrade.
This now catches cases like
https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot-sdk/pull/1969:
```pre
ERROR runtime::executive] failed to decode the value at key: Failed to decode value at key: 0x94eadf0156a8ad5156507773d0471e4ab8ebad86f546c7e0b135a4212aace339. Storage info StorageInfo { pallet_name: Ok("ParaScheduler"), storage_name: Ok("AvailabilityCores"), prefix: Err(Utf8Error { valid_up_to: 0, error_len: Some(1) }), max_values: Some(1), max_size: None }. Raw value: Some("0x0c010101010101")
```
... or:

Closes#241
---------
Signed-off-by: Oliver Tale-Yazdi <oliver.tale-yazdi@parity.io>
Co-authored-by: Oliver Tale-Yazdi <oliver.tale-yazdi@parity.io>
Co-authored-by: Liam Aharon <liam.aharon@hotmail.com>
This PR is a follow up to #1661
- [x] rename the `simple` module to `legacy`
- [x] fix benchmarks to disregard the number of additional fields
- [x] change the storage deposits to charge per encoded byte of the
identity information instance, removing the need for `fn
additional(&self) -> usize` in `IdentityInformationProvider`
- [x] ~add an extrinsic to rejig deposits to account for the change
above~
- [ ] ~ensure through proper configuration that the new byte-based
deposit is always lower than whatever is reserved now~
- [x] remove `IdentityFields` from the `set_fields` extrinsic signature,
as per [this
discussion](https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot-sdk/pull/1661#discussion_r1371703403)
> ensure through proper configuration that the new byte-based deposit is
always lower than whatever is reserved now
Not sure this is needed anymore. If the new deposits are higher than
what is currently on chain and users don't have enough funds to reserve
what is needed, the extrinisc fails and they're basically grandfathered
and frozen until they add more funds and/or make a change to their
identity. This behavior seems fine to me. Original idea
[here](https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot-sdk/pull/1661#issuecomment-1779606319).
> add an extrinsic to rejig deposits to account for the change above
This was initially implemented but now removed from this PR in favor of
the implementation detailed
[here](https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot-sdk/pull/2088).
---------
Signed-off-by: georgepisaltu <george.pisaltu@parity.io>
Co-authored-by: joepetrowski <joe@parity.io>
The `BlockBuilderProvider` was a trait that was defined in
`sc-block-builder`. The trait was implemented for `Client`. This
basically meant that you needed to import `sc-block-builder` any way to
have access to the block builder. So, this trait was not providing any
real value. This pull request is removing the said trait. Instead of the
trait it introduces a builder for creating a `BlockBuilder`. The builder
currently has the quite fabulous name `BlockBuilderBuilder` (I'm open to
any better name 😅). The rest of the pull request is about
replacing the old trait with the new builder.
# Downstream code changes
If you used `new_block` or `new_block_at` before you now need to switch
it over to the new `BlockBuilderBuilder` pattern:
```rust
// `new` requires a type that implements `CallApiAt`.
let mut block_builder = BlockBuilderBuilder::new(client)
// Then you need to specify the hash of the parent block the block will be build on top of
.on_parent_block(at)
// The block builder also needs the block number of the parent block.
// Here it is fetched from the given `client` using the `HeaderBackend`
// However, there also exists `with_parent_block_number` for directly passing the number
.fetch_parent_block_number(client)
.unwrap()
// Enable proof recording if required. This call is optional.
.enable_proof_recording()
// Pass the digests. This call is optional.
.with_inherent_digests(digests)
.build()
.expect("Creates new block builder");
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Kunert <skunert49@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: command-bot <>
The check_hardware functions does not give us too much information as to
what is failing, so let's return the list of failed metrics, so that callers can print
it.
This would make debugging easier, rather than try to guess which
dimension is actually failing.
Signed-off-by: Alexandru Gheorghe <alexandru.gheorghe@parity.io>
(imported from https://github.com/paritytech/cumulus/pull/2157)
## Changes
This MR refactores the XCMP, Parachains System and DMP pallets to use
the [MessageQueue](https://github.com/paritytech/substrate/pull/12485)
for delayed execution of incoming messages. The DMP pallet is entirely
replaced by the MQ and thereby removed. This allows for PoV-bounded
execution and resolves a number of issues that stem from the current
work-around.
All System Parachains adopt this change.
The most important changes are in `primitives/core/src/lib.rs`,
`parachains/common/src/process_xcm_message.rs`,
`pallets/parachain-system/src/lib.rs`, `pallets/xcmp-queue/src/lib.rs`
and the runtime configs.
### DMP Queue Pallet
The pallet got removed and its logic refactored into parachain-system.
Overweight message management can be done directly through the MQ
pallet.
Final undeployment migrations are provided by
`cumulus_pallet_dmp_queue::UndeployDmpQueue` and `DeleteDmpQueue` that
can be configured with an aux config trait like:
```rust
parameter_types! {
pub const DmpQueuePalletName: &'static str = \"DmpQueue\" < CHANGE ME;
pub const RelayOrigin: AggregateMessageOrigin = AggregateMessageOrigin::Parent;
}
impl cumulus_pallet_dmp_queue::MigrationConfig for Runtime {
type PalletName = DmpQueuePalletName;
type DmpHandler = frame_support::traits::EnqueueWithOrigin<MessageQueue, RelayOrigin>;
type DbWeight = <Runtime as frame_system::Config>::DbWeight;
}
// And adding them to your Migrations tuple:
pub type Migrations = (
...
cumulus_pallet_dmp_queue::UndeployDmpQueue<Runtime>,
cumulus_pallet_dmp_queue::DeleteDmpQueue<Runtime>,
);
```
### XCMP Queue pallet
Removed all dispatch queue functionality. Incoming XCMP messages are now
either: Immediately handled if they are Signals, enqueued into the MQ
pallet otherwise.
New config items for the XCMP queue pallet:
```rust
/// The actual queue implementation that retains the messages for later processing.
type XcmpQueue: EnqueueMessage<ParaId>;
/// How a XCM over HRMP from a sibling parachain should be processed.
type XcmpProcessor: ProcessMessage<Origin = ParaId>;
/// The maximal number of suspended XCMP channels at the same time.
#[pallet::constant]
type MaxInboundSuspended: Get<u32>;
```
How to configure those:
```rust
// Use the MessageQueue pallet to store messages for later processing. The `TransformOrigin` is needed since
// the MQ pallet itself operators on `AggregateMessageOrigin` but we want to enqueue `ParaId`s.
type XcmpQueue = TransformOrigin<MessageQueue, AggregateMessageOrigin, ParaId, ParaIdToSibling>;
// Process XCMP messages from siblings. This is type-safe to only accept `ParaId`s. They will be dispatched
// with origin `Junction::Sibling(…)`.
type XcmpProcessor = ProcessFromSibling<
ProcessXcmMessage<
AggregateMessageOrigin,
xcm_executor::XcmExecutor<xcm_config::XcmConfig>,
RuntimeCall,
>,
>;
// Not really important what to choose here. Just something larger than the maximal number of channels.
type MaxInboundSuspended = sp_core::ConstU32<1_000>;
```
The `InboundXcmpStatus` storage item was replaced by
`InboundXcmpSuspended` since it now only tracks inbound queue suspension
and no message indices anymore.
Now only sends the most recent channel `Signals`, as all prio ones are
out-dated anyway.
### Parachain System pallet
For `DMP` messages instead of forwarding them to the `DMP` pallet, it
now pushes them to the configured `DmpQueue`. The message processing
which was triggered in `set_validation_data` is now being done by the MQ
pallet `on_initialize`.
XCMP messages are still handed off to the `XcmpMessageHandler`
(XCMP-Queue pallet) - no change here.
New config items for the parachain system pallet:
```rust
/// Queues inbound downward messages for delayed processing.
///
/// Analogous to the `XcmpQueue` of the XCMP queue pallet.
type DmpQueue: EnqueueMessage<AggregateMessageOrigin>;
```
How to configure:
```rust
/// Use the MQ pallet to store DMP messages for delayed processing.
type DmpQueue = MessageQueue;
```
## Message Flow
The flow of messages on the parachain side. Messages come in from the
left via the `Validation Data` and finally end up at the `Xcm Executor`
on the right.

## Further changes
- Bumped the default suspension, drop and resume thresholds in
`QueueConfigData::default()`.
- `XcmpQueue::{suspend_xcm_execution, resume_xcm_execution}` errors when
they would be a noop.
- Properly validate the `QueueConfigData` before setting it.
- Marked weight files as auto-generated so they wont auto-expand in the
MR files view.
- Move the `hypothetical` asserts to `frame_support` under the name
`experimental_hypothetically`
Questions:
- [ ] What about the ugly `#[cfg(feature = \"runtime-benchmarks\")]` in
the runtimes? Not sure how to best fix. Just having them like this makes
tests fail that rely on the real message processor when the feature is
enabled.
- [ ] Need a good weight for `MessageQueueServiceWeight`. The scheduler
already takes 80% so I put it to 10% but that is quite low.
TODO:
- [x] Remove c&p code after
https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot/pull/6271
- [x] Use `HandleMessage` once it is public in Substrate
- [x] fix `runtime-benchmarks` feature
https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot/pull/6966
- [x] Benchmarks
- [x] Tests
- [ ] Migrate `InboundXcmpStatus` to `InboundXcmpSuspended`
- [x] Possibly cleanup Migrations (DMP+XCMP)
- [x] optional: create `TransformProcessMessageOrigin` in Substrate and
replace `ProcessFromSibling`
- [ ] Rerun weights on ref HW
---------
Signed-off-by: Oliver Tale-Yazdi <oliver.tale-yazdi@parity.io>
Co-authored-by: Liam Aharon <liam.aharon@hotmail.com>
Co-authored-by: joe petrowski <25483142+joepetrowski@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Kian Paimani <5588131+kianenigma@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: command-bot <>
# Description
We derive few useful traits on `ErrorOrigin` and `ExecError`, including
`codec::Encode` and `codec::Decode`, so that `ExecResult` is
en/decodable as well. This is required for a contract mocking feature
(already prepared in drink:
https://github.com/Cardinal-Cryptography/drink/pull/61). In more detail:
`ExecResult` must be passed from runtime extension, through runtime
interface, back to the pallet, which requires that it is serializable to
bytes in some form (or implements some rare, auxiliary traits).
**Impact on runtime size**: Since most of these traits is used directly
in the pallet now, compiler should be able to throw it out (and thus we
bring no new overhead). However, they are very useful in secondary tools
like drink or other testing libraries.
# Checklist
- [x] My PR includes a detailed description as outlined in the
"Description" section above
- [ ] My PR follows the [labeling requirements](CONTRIBUTING.md#Process)
of this project (at minimum one label for `T`
required)
- [x] I have made corresponding changes to the documentation (if
applicable)
- [x] I have added tests that prove my fix is effective or that my
feature works (if applicable)
Changes:
- Change the fungible(s) logic to treat a self-transfer as No-OP (as
long as all pre-checks pass).
Note that the self-transfer case will not emit an event since no state
was changed.
---------
Signed-off-by: Oliver Tale-Yazdi <oliver.tale-yazdi@parity.io>
# Description
This PR updates the node-template-release generation binary as well as
the `node-template-release.sh` file so that we can automatically push
updates to the [substrate-node-template
repository](https://github.com/substrate-developer-hub/substrate-node-template).
I assume this part was not updated after the substrate project has been
moved into the polkadot-sdk mono repo.
# Adjustments
- extend the `node-template-release.sh` to support the substrate
child-folder
- update the `SUBSTRATE_GIT_URL`
- fix the Cargo.toml filter (so that it does not include any
non-relevant .toml files)
- set the workspace-edition to 2021
# Note
In order to auto-generate the artifacts [this
line](https://github.com/paritytech/polkadot-sdk/blob/master/.gitlab/pipeline/build.yml#L320C15-L320C15)
needs to be included in the build.yml script again. Since I do not have
access to the (probably) internal gitlab environment I hope that someone
with actual access can introduce that change.
I also do not know how the auto-publish feature works so that would be
another thing to add later on.
---------
Co-authored-by: Bastian Köcher <git@kchr.de>