The `branch` of the operation contains enough information to induce
the `net_id`, and the code of the validator/prevalidator is now mature
enough to efficiently determine the `net_id` of an incoming operation.
The single validation module is split in multiple (simpler)
modules. In the process, we introduce one "validation worker" per
peer. This worker handle all the `New_head` and `New_branch`
advertised by a given peer. For so, it sends "fetching request" and
"validation request" to respectively the `Distributed_db` and and the
`Block_validator`. These two global workers are responsible of the
'fair' allocation of network and CPU ressources amongst the connected
'peers'.
Operations now include a block hash in their header. Such an operation
could only be included in a successor of this block.
Furthermore, when validating a block, the economic protocol now
returns---together with the context---an integer `max_operations_ttl`.
Then, when validating a successor, the shell will fail if it contains
an operation whose header's block hash is not one the
`max_operations_ttl` predecessors of the block.
As a bonus, the shell is now able to detect and forbid replayed
operations. Then, we might decide to remove some replay
detection-mechanism that we previously implemented in the economic
protocol.
It now takes a `proto_header` in parameter, and it returns a full
`shell_header`. This prepares the inclusion of the context's hash in the
`shell_header`.
Let's get serious. The full index of operations is not sustainable in
the production code. We now only keep the index of operations not yet
in the chain (i.e. the mempool/prevalidation). Operations from the
chain are now only accesible through a block. For instance, see the
RPC:
/blocks/<hash>/proto/operations
The minimal header now (classically) contains the root of a Merkle tree,
wrapping a list of lists of operations. Currently, the validator only
accept a single list of operations, but the 3+pass validator will
requires at least two lists.
This refactors `src/node/shell/state.ml` in order to trace the source of
blocks and operations. This prepares the node for the three-pass
validator.
In the procces, it adds an in-memory overlay for blocks and operations.