Before this, the %watch to eth-watcher was happening before the %poke,
and so eth-watcher was responding with its entire history immediately.
This is bad because it takes a lot of memory to process that many logs,
and also because those logs are stale.
Now, the %poke happens first, which clears the history.
%kick is supposed to start back from the snapshot and move forward.
Without this, we would only fetch logs that we hadn't already fetched.
Thus, if you were up-to-date when you kicked, you would miss anything
that happened between the time the snapshot was taken and the present,
though you would see things after the present.
Also reverted lull change to make this a safer upgrade.
Previously, when the larva got to processing enqueued events, it was
doing so without loading state into the adult beforehand, resulting in
incorrect processing of events.
Here, we make the larva call +molt more eagerly, ensuring that the adult
always has its state available when we use it.
Yes, there is a global timer for closing flows, but all that does is
enqueue a cork message. +on-stir needs to set _pump_ timers for all
flows that might still have messages to send, which includes closing
flows.
When ames notifies us that our subscription has been kicked, we enqueue
a cork to clean up the flow. Unlike the %leave case, however, we were
not registering the cork in the queue of outstanding comms. We would
eventually get an ack, but not know what for, and erroneously inject
%poke-acks and %watch-acks.
Here we simply add a %cork entry to the queue before sending it.
This is sufficient to bring the normal (non-prerelease-bugged) cases
into the new world.
For the prerelease ships that ran a buggier version of the new gall
subscription logic, we note that the conditional may trigger for the
nonce=1 case where it had already triggered for their
(shouldn't-be-possible) nonce=0 case. This results in a %leave on a wire
that wasn't in use. This no-ops on the publisher side though, and the
flow gets corked right away, so this is considered harmless.
In response to clog notification from remote ames, we were sending a
%cork to clean up the flow. However, the wire we were using had the /sys
prefix already stripped off. Here, we put it back in.
Start by killing subscription nonce 0, then work our way up instead of
down. We enhance the printf with a "total nonces" indicator so we can
still easily see the progress being made.
Previous +ap-doff kicked the agent repeatedly. We needed to kick
it only once. Now publisher agents clear their incoming subscription
state without the subscriber making lots of new subscriptions because
of repeated kicking.
+on-plea gets called in two very different ways:
1) handling request from local vane to send %plea to peer
2) handling %cork request from another ship, which our local ames has %pass'ed
to ourselves
In the second case, we shouldn't print misleadingly, or bind a duct in the ossuary.
+ap-nuke was not including the nonce, but should.
+ap-handle-peers was potentially including a zero nonce.
(The latter shouldn't have been possible, but there's a bug in +load
where sub-nonce.yoke gets initialized as 0 instead of 1.)
Gall tells ames to %cork flows for subscriptions it has closed.
Receiving a kick also closes a subscription, but gall wasn't issuing a
%cork in that case. We correct that here.
Inlines +mo-handle-ames-response's logic at its only callsite.
seems that this structure has been unused since
e75ab631a4 and confuses
newbies trying to figure out exactly what the commit
structure is (which is how I came across this)
Without this, a ship would send a cork on a max of one flow per
recork timer, which could take years to clear for some ships.
This starts a hot loop of trying the next cork once one gets
positively acked.
The previous recork timer queued up %cork messages without sending them.
It also relied on making sure pump timers didn't get set for recork bones.
This was fragile.
The new design enqueues up to one new %cork message per ship during each
recork timer, based on the state of the flow. If the flow is closing but
there are no outstanding messages in it, then it needs to be recorked.
Flows will be recorked in ascending numerical order by bone.
The condition got butchered during refactor: instead of avoiding the creation
of pump timers during recork wake, it was setting them _exclusively_ during
recork wake.
This test started failing presumably somewhere during #5886. Testing
with a comet on the network, the test seems inaccurate: the comet can
communicate and be communicated to just fine.
this refactors the parser for %brcn and %brpt to separate the optional
argument(s) from the required argument(s).
also adds +blab, which allows for a minor refactor of a couple other
arms as well as being used for %brcn and %brpt
Problem:
by-channel has its own copy of server-state from line 2182. discard-channel returns an altered state, with one channel removed from the state of by-channel.
but the state of by-channel isn't changing with each iteration, so |trim is only removing one channel per invocation.
Solution:
update by-channel on each iteration.
this commit replaces the previous intermediate parsing structure, $whit,
with a new one better suited for batch comments and taking into account
that {# %label} syntax is no longer being used anywhere. basically,
this makes it so that all doccords are batch comments, where if they are
preceded by a (list link) then they will try to attach to the given
link (only utilizes first link for now), and a blank link means it will
try to attach to the following hoon or spec
This is a temporary fix, and first part of the gall-request-queue-fix
release in two stages. This gives a publisher ship the ability to
understand a %cork and handle it properly, but no subscriber will
be sending %corks at this stage when leaving a subscription.
We still add a nonce to all subscription wires but it doesn't
increment it when resubscribing, allowing flows to be reused.
Tested locally with toy pub/sub agents and Group join/leaving
Previously, the initial Azimuth snapshot was stored in Clay and shipped
in the pill. This causes several problems:
- It bloats the pill
- Updating the snapshot added large blobs to Clay's state. Even now
that tombstoning is possible, you don't want to have to do that
regularly.
- As a result, the snapshot was never updated.
- Even if you did tombstone those files, it could only be updated as
often as the pill
- And those updates would be sent over the network to people who didn't
need them
This moves the snapshot out of the pill and refactors Azimuth's
initialization process. On boot, when app/azimuth starts up, it first
downloads a snapshot from bootstrap.urbit.org and uses that to
initialize its state. As before, updates after this initial snapshot
come from an Ethereum node directly and are verified locally.
Relevant commands are:
- `-azimuth-snap-state %filename` creates a snapshot file
- `-azimuth-load "url"` downloads and inits from a snapshot, with url
defaulting to https://bootstrap.urbit.org/mainnet.azimuth-snapshot
- `:azimuth &azimuth-poke-data %load snap-state` takes a snap-state any
way you have it
Note the snapshot is downloaded from the same place as the pill, so this
doesn't introduce additional trust beyond what was already required.
When remote scry is released, we should consider allowing downloading
the snapshot in that way.
using col as a seperate made it look like a bunch of =<, which doesn't
make sense for e.g. pritning chapters. paths aren't quite right either,
so we don't use +stap, and just want identifiers separated by fas
without any leading fas
changes $whit to have a (unit link) instead of (unit term). this holds
the identifier for where a comment is supposed to go. changes to parsers
in docs:vast to accomodate this.
this only allows for batch comments written for arms within a given
core. someday, the feature should allow you to write comments
virtually anywhere. the (unit link) in $whit should become a (unit (list
link)) to accommodate this
Because the publisher will send the cork plea back to the subscriber on
the next bone, we are not able to know the bone for the original cork.
To handle it, we add the cork bone to the plea path
still wip: it keeps resending the cork plea faster than its ~h1 timer
Removes the !: at the top of gall, so that it no longer gets included in traces about agent builds or crashes.
We also refine intentional crashes with ~_s, so that we still see a crash reason even if we don't get a full trace.
Lastly, flops the trace for +on-load crashes, which were getting printed bottom-first.
It's too easy to get trapped in the dojo %dy-edit-busy escape room. Just
type something like:
-build-file /=base/gen/ls/hoon
This modifies the dojo output to tell the user how to get out.
Fixes#1462.
Incorporates @Fang- suggested changes (thanks!).
Drops the path serialization as it will print on two separate lines,
and it is already displayed in dojo immediately above the error message:
> =dir /=base=/ge
dojo: dir does not exist
this is almost a revert of the commit that added in the %funk tag, but
not quite, so its a new commit. i apparently forgot that product docs
are actually built by +wrap, not +boog, so it was treating postfix
arm-docs as if they were product docs
i thought this would be a neat feature but ted called it too clever and
probably not what you really want. this code is atrocious though and
needs some serious cleanup
not actually sure this is correct yet, but it fixed the issue where
there would be a crash when looking for docs in an arm like +bar in
|%
++ foo 'foo'
++ bar foo
--
If a desk already existed, we would crash the generator, embedding a
message in the resulting stack trace.
To improve legibility, we turn this into an %ask generator, prompting
only if we are about to overwrite an existing desk.
We also update the =force argument to be =hard instead, to match |nuke.
Stale lanes may cause forwarding loops. Imagine the following:
1) Planet A is live. Galaxy B, its indirect sponsor, learns of its route.
2) A goes offline. Another ship, C, is started in its place, at the same route.
3) B receives a packet for A, forwards it to the known route.
4) C received the packet, forwards it to B.
5) Repeat from 3.
Here, we update the forward lane(s) scry used by the runtime to not produce a
peer's lane if they haven't communicated with us in the last hour. Everyone's
supposed to ping their sponsorship chain every 30 seconds. If those aren't
going through, you shouldn't expect to be reachable anyway.
We may or may not want to update +send-blob to match.
Previously, if the pointer for a syntax error pointed to the end of the file
(and the file ended in a newline) the code snippet rendering would try to
display a line _beyond_ the end of the file, causing a crash.
Here, we detect that case, and display `<<end of file>>` instead.
Changes the test command to check if args contains a single path and
wraps it in a list. Now a test thread can be started without providing
a list:
-test %/tests/lib
And passing a list still works:
test %/tests/lib ~
One nit in this change is the lark expression to reach into args: if
args is ~ then instead of getting a useful need/have error, the test
ends in a "false-start". Perhaps this could be fixed by detecting ~
and setting it to %/tests.
This accounts for a possible race condition where ames expects a
response, but regresses into the larval state. Upon receiving the
$sign on +take, we would remain stuck as a larva. Now we check
that we have enough information to re-evolve and then start a
/larval timer to begin draining the queue.
Previously we stored the nonce in $boat, which changed the $bowl of each
agent. This compiles and all agents reload, but more testing is needed.
It also renames inbound/outbound watches to $bitt/$boat.