Costs are yet to be tweaked.
This patch is joint work between:
Milo Davis <davis.mil@husky.neu.edu>
Benjamin Canou <benjamin@canou.fr>
Pierre Chambart <pierre.chambart@ocamlpro.com>
Now a tez cent is 10_000L. All constants are now in the
Constants_repr module and expressed as multiples of one_cent.
Add new function Qty_repr.mul_exn to multiply `tez` by `int`
eg. `10 tez = Tez_repr.(mul_exn one 10)`
`10 cents = Tez_repr.(mul_exn one_cents 10)`
Remove `Tez.{to,of}_cents` and replace them with `Tez.{to,of}_mutez`.
- `lib_node_p2p_base`: Base datatypes for the P2P layers
- `lib_node_services`: RPC service definitions (depends on `node_p2p_base`)
- `lib_node_http`: RPC http server
- `lib_node_p2p`: the P2P workers
* `lib_stdlib`: basic extended OCaml stdlib and generic data structures
* `lib_data_encoding`: almost independant 'Data_encoding'
* `lib_error_monad`: almost independant 'Error_monad'
* `lib_stdlib_lwt`: extended Lwt library
* `lib_crypto`: all the crypto stuff (hashing, signing, cryptobox).
* `lib_base`:
- basic type definitions (Block_header, Operation, ...)
- a module `TzPervasives` to bind them all and to be the
single module opened everywhere.
In the process, I splitted `Tezos_data` and `Hash` in multiple
submodules, thus removing a lot of `-open`.
The following two modules may not have found their place yet:
- Base58 (currently in `lib_crypto`)
- Cli_entries (currently in `lib_stdlib_lwt`)
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'.