mirror of
https://gitlab.com/pulsechaincom/erigon-pulse.git
synced 2024-12-25 13:07:17 +00:00
cac316dc82
* t8ntool: add output basedir * t8ntool: add txhash to trace filename * t8ntool: don't default to '.' basedir, allow absolute paths # Conflicts: # cmd/evm/internal/t8ntool/execution.go # cmd/evm/internal/t8ntool/transition.go
192 lines
6.4 KiB
Bash
192 lines
6.4 KiB
Bash
#!/bin/bash
|
|
ticks="\`\`\`"
|
|
|
|
function showjson(){
|
|
echo "\`$1\`:"
|
|
echo "${ticks}json"
|
|
cat $1
|
|
echo ""
|
|
echo "$ticks"
|
|
}
|
|
function demo(){
|
|
echo "$ticks"
|
|
echo "$1"
|
|
echo "$ticks"
|
|
echo ""
|
|
}
|
|
function tick(){
|
|
echo "$ticks"
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
cat << EOF
|
|
## EVM state transition tool
|
|
|
|
The \`evm t8n\` tool is a stateless state transition utility. It is a utility
|
|
which can
|
|
|
|
1. Take a prestate, including
|
|
- Accounts,
|
|
- Block context information,
|
|
- Previous blockshashes (*optional)
|
|
2. Apply a set of transactions,
|
|
3. Apply a mining-reward (*optional),
|
|
4. And generate a post-state, including
|
|
- State root, transaction root, receipt root,
|
|
- Information about rejected transactions,
|
|
- Optionally: a full or partial post-state dump
|
|
|
|
## Specification
|
|
|
|
The idea is to specify the behaviour of this binary very _strict_, so that other
|
|
node implementors can build replicas based on their own state-machines, and the
|
|
state generators can swap between a \`geth\`-based implementation and a \`parityvm\`-based
|
|
implementation.
|
|
|
|
### Command line params
|
|
|
|
Command line params that has to be supported are
|
|
$(tick)
|
|
|
|
` ./evm t8n -h | grep "trace\|output\|state\."`
|
|
|
|
$(tick)
|
|
|
|
### Error codes and output
|
|
|
|
All logging should happen against the \`stderr\`.
|
|
There are a few (not many) errors that can occur, those are defined below.
|
|
|
|
#### EVM-based errors (\`2\` to \`9\`)
|
|
|
|
- Other EVM error. Exit code \`2\`
|
|
- Failed configuration: when a non-supported or invalid fork was specified. Exit code \`3\`.
|
|
- Block history is not supplied, but needed for a \`BLOCKHASH\` operation. If \`BLOCKHASH\`
|
|
is invoked targeting a block which history has not been provided for, the program will
|
|
exit with code \`4\`.
|
|
|
|
#### IO errors (\`10\`-\`20\`)
|
|
|
|
- Invalid input json: the supplied data could not be marshalled.
|
|
The program will exit with code \`10\`
|
|
- IO problems: failure to load or save files, the program will exit with code \`11\`
|
|
|
|
EOF
|
|
|
|
# This should exit with 3
|
|
./evm t8n --input.alloc=./testdata/1/alloc.json --input.txs=./testdata/1/txs.json --input.env=./testdata/1/env.json --state.fork=Frontier+1346 2>/dev/null
|
|
if [ $? != 3 ]; then
|
|
echo "Failed, exitcode should be 3"
|
|
fi
|
|
cat << EOF
|
|
## Examples
|
|
### Basic usage
|
|
|
|
Invoking it with the provided example files
|
|
EOF
|
|
cmd="./evm t8n --input.alloc=./testdata/1/alloc.json --input.txs=./testdata/1/txs.json --input.env=./testdata/1/env.json"
|
|
tick;echo "$cmd"; tick
|
|
$cmd 2>/dev/null
|
|
echo "Two resulting files:"
|
|
echo ""
|
|
showjson alloc.json
|
|
showjson result.json
|
|
echo ""
|
|
|
|
echo "We can make them spit out the data to e.g. \`stdout\` like this:"
|
|
cmd="./evm t8n --input.alloc=./testdata/1/alloc.json --input.txs=./testdata/1/txs.json --input.env=./testdata/1/env.json --output.result=stdout --output.alloc=stdout"
|
|
tick;echo "$cmd"; tick
|
|
output=`$cmd 2>/dev/null`
|
|
echo "Output:"
|
|
echo "${ticks}json"
|
|
echo "$output"
|
|
echo "$ticks"
|
|
|
|
cat << EOF
|
|
|
|
## About Ommers
|
|
|
|
Mining rewards and ommer rewards might need to be added. This is how those are applied:
|
|
|
|
- \`block_reward\` is the block mining reward for the miner (\`0xaa\`), of a block at height \`N\`.
|
|
- For each ommer (mined by \`0xbb\`), with blocknumber \`N-delta\`
|
|
- (where \`delta\` is the difference between the current block and the ommer)
|
|
- The account \`0xbb\` (ommer miner) is awarded \`(8-delta)/ 8 * block_reward\`
|
|
- The account \`0xaa\` (block miner) is awarded \`block_reward / 32\`
|
|
|
|
To make \`state_t8n\` apply these, the following inputs are required:
|
|
|
|
- \`state.reward\`
|
|
- For ethash, it is \`5000000000000000000\` \`wei\`,
|
|
- If this is not defined, mining rewards are not applied,
|
|
- A value of \`0\` is valid, and causes accounts to be 'touched'.
|
|
- For each ommer, the tool needs to be given an \`address\` and a \`delta\`. This
|
|
is done via the \`env\`.
|
|
|
|
Note: the tool does not verify that e.g. the normal uncle rules apply,
|
|
and allows e.g two uncles at the same height, or the uncle-distance. This means that
|
|
the tool allows for negative uncle reward (distance > 8)
|
|
|
|
Example:
|
|
EOF
|
|
|
|
showjson ./testdata/5/env.json
|
|
|
|
echo "When applying this, using a reward of \`0x08\`"
|
|
cmd="./evm t8n --input.alloc=./testdata/5/alloc.json -input.txs=./testdata/5/txs.json --input.env=./testdata/5/env.json --output.alloc=stdout --state.reward=0x80"
|
|
output=`$cmd 2>/dev/null`
|
|
echo "Output:"
|
|
echo "${ticks}json"
|
|
echo "$output"
|
|
echo "$ticks"
|
|
|
|
echo "### Future EIPS"
|
|
echo ""
|
|
echo "It is also possible to experiment with future eips that are not yet defined in a hard fork."
|
|
echo "Example, putting EIP-1344 into Frontier: "
|
|
cmd="./evm t8n --state.fork=Frontier+1344 --input.pre=./testdata/1/pre.json --input.txs=./testdata/1/txs.json --input.env=/testdata/1/env.json"
|
|
tick;echo "$cmd"; tick
|
|
echo ""
|
|
|
|
echo "### Block history"
|
|
echo ""
|
|
echo "The \`BLOCKHASH\` opcode requires blockhashes to be provided by the caller, inside the \`env\`."
|
|
echo "If a required blockhash is not provided, the exit code should be \`4\`:"
|
|
echo "Example where blockhashes are provided: "
|
|
cmd="./evm t8n --input.alloc=./testdata/3/alloc.json --input.txs=./testdata/3/txs.json --input.env=./testdata/3/env.json --trace"
|
|
tick && echo $cmd && tick
|
|
$cmd 2>&1 >/dev/null
|
|
cmd="cat trace-0-0x72fadbef39cd251a437eea619cfeda752271a5faaaa2147df012e112159ffb81.jsonl | grep BLOCKHASH -C2"
|
|
tick && echo $cmd && tick
|
|
echo "$ticks"
|
|
cat trace-0-0x72fadbef39cd251a437eea619cfeda752271a5faaaa2147df012e112159ffb81.jsonl | grep BLOCKHASH -C2
|
|
echo "$ticks"
|
|
echo ""
|
|
|
|
echo "In this example, the caller has not provided the required blockhash:"
|
|
cmd="./evm t8n --input.alloc=./testdata/4/alloc.json --input.txs=./testdata/4/txs.json --input.env=./testdata/4/env.json --trace"
|
|
tick && echo $cmd && tick
|
|
tick
|
|
$cmd
|
|
errc=$?
|
|
tick
|
|
echo "Error code: $errc"
|
|
|
|
|
|
echo "### Chaining"
|
|
echo ""
|
|
echo "Another thing that can be done, is to chain invocations:"
|
|
cmd1="./evm t8n --input.alloc=./testdata/1/alloc.json --input.txs=./testdata/1/txs.json --input.env=./testdata/1/env.json --output.alloc=stdout"
|
|
cmd2="./evm t8n --input.alloc=stdin --input.env=./testdata/1/env.json --input.txs=./testdata/1/txs.json"
|
|
echo "$ticks"
|
|
echo "$cmd1 | $cmd2"
|
|
output=$($cmd1 | $cmd2 )
|
|
echo $output
|
|
echo "$ticks"
|
|
echo "What happened here, is that we first applied two identical transactions, so the second one was rejected. "
|
|
echo "Then, taking the poststate alloc as the input for the next state, we tried again to include"
|
|
echo "the same two transactions: this time, both failed due to too low nonce."
|
|
echo ""
|
|
echo "In order to meaningfully chain invocations, one would need to provide meaningful new \`env\`, otherwise the"
|
|
echo "actual blocknumber (exposed to the EVM) would not increase."
|
|
echo ""
|