Eric Lombrozo [ARCHIVE] on Nostr: 📅 Original date posted:2015-09-22 📝 Original message:I should also add that the ...
📅 Original date posted:2015-09-22
📝 Original message:I should also add that the mempool should exist in (2). This way the
peer services layer can manage all relay policy and mempool management.
------ Original Message ------
From: "Eric Lombrozo" <elombrozo at gmail.com>
To: "Jorge Timón" <jtimon at jtimon.cc>; "Wladimir J. van der Laan"
<laanwj at gmail.com>
Cc: "Bitcoin development mailing list"
<bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org>
Sent: 9/22/2015 5:07:22 PM
Subject: Re: [bitcoin-dev] Long-term vision for bitcoind (was
libconsensus and bitcoin development process)
>Here's what I propose as a long-term plan:
>
>1) libconsensus
>==========
>We should probably start by defining an API for libconsensus. It should
>support an abstract DB model, track chain state, provide query
>mechanisms for blocks and transactions with optional pruning and
>indexing, expose a subscription mechanism for events such as NEW_TIP,
>REORG, etc, and contain a script interpreter.
>
>We can develop the library in parallel with Bitcoin Core without too
>much refactoring of Bitcoin Core itself...just moving pieces of Bitcoin
>Core's consensus code into the new library, tracking code movements to
>make merging easier. Yes, this is a bit ugly as it requires code
>duplication...but it will temporarily avoid much of the downstream
>pushback we're getting. The idea is that we can prove out the library
>with some simple projects, then start removing the consensus stuff from
>Bitcoin Core once we have greater acceptance of the library and better
>documentation.
>
>
>2) peer services
>==========
>We develop a peer services library that performs the tasks of peer
>discovery and relay, with the ability to connect to appropriate peers
>and queue messages. It uses libconsensus for all validation
>functionality and as a datastore for the consensus state but maintains
>its own database for peer history and statistics. I believe Cory has
>been working on this already using libevent. I've already developed an
>async library for this as well.
>
>
>3) API/RPC
>=======
>We provide high level calls and pub/sub mechanisms. ZMQ has been
>implemented and added already, but we could support other transports as
>well.
>
>
>4) Wallet
>======
>The wallet is split out into a separate process that connects to the
>stack via the API/RPC layer.
>
>
>- Eric
>
>------ Original Message ------
>From: "Jorge Timón" <bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org>
>To: "Wladimir J. van der Laan" <laanwj at gmail.com>
>Cc: "Bitcoin development mailing list"
><bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org>
>Sent: 9/22/2015 11:36:14 AM
>Subject: [bitcoin-dev] Long-term vision for bitcoind (was libconsensus
>and bitcoin development process)
>
>>On Fri, Sep 18, 2015 at 2:07 AM, Wladimir J. van der Laan via
>>bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
>>> My long-term vision of bitcoind is a P2P node with validation and
>>>blockchain store, with a couple of data sources that can be
>>>subscribed to or pulled from.
>>
>>I agree with this long term vision.
>>Here's how I think it could happen:
>>
>>1) Libconsensus is completed and moved to a subtree (which has libsecp
>>as an internal subtree)
>>
>>2) Bitcoind becomes a subtree of bitcoin-wallet (which has
>>bitcoin-wallet and bitcoin-qt)
>>
>>Without aggressively changing it for this purpose, libconsensus should
>>tend to become C, like libsecp, which is better for proving
>>correctness.
>>Hopefully at some point it won't take much to move to C.
>>
>>Upper layers should move to C++11
>>
>>Don't focus on the git subtrees, the basic architecture is bitcoin-qt
>>on top of bitcoin-wallet, bitcoin-wallet on top of bitcoind (and
>>friends like bitcoin-cli and bitcoin-tx), bitcoind on top of
>>libconsensus on top of libsecp256k1.
>>
>>I believe this would maximize the number of people who can safely
>>contribute to the project.
>>I also believe this is the architecture most contributors have in mind
>>for the long term, but I may be wrong about it.
>>
>>Criticisms to this plan?
>>_______________________________________________
>>bitcoin-dev mailing list
>>bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org
>>https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev
📝 Original message:I should also add that the mempool should exist in (2). This way the
peer services layer can manage all relay policy and mempool management.
------ Original Message ------
From: "Eric Lombrozo" <elombrozo at gmail.com>
To: "Jorge Timón" <jtimon at jtimon.cc>; "Wladimir J. van der Laan"
<laanwj at gmail.com>
Cc: "Bitcoin development mailing list"
<bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org>
Sent: 9/22/2015 5:07:22 PM
Subject: Re: [bitcoin-dev] Long-term vision for bitcoind (was
libconsensus and bitcoin development process)
>Here's what I propose as a long-term plan:
>
>1) libconsensus
>==========
>We should probably start by defining an API for libconsensus. It should
>support an abstract DB model, track chain state, provide query
>mechanisms for blocks and transactions with optional pruning and
>indexing, expose a subscription mechanism for events such as NEW_TIP,
>REORG, etc, and contain a script interpreter.
>
>We can develop the library in parallel with Bitcoin Core without too
>much refactoring of Bitcoin Core itself...just moving pieces of Bitcoin
>Core's consensus code into the new library, tracking code movements to
>make merging easier. Yes, this is a bit ugly as it requires code
>duplication...but it will temporarily avoid much of the downstream
>pushback we're getting. The idea is that we can prove out the library
>with some simple projects, then start removing the consensus stuff from
>Bitcoin Core once we have greater acceptance of the library and better
>documentation.
>
>
>2) peer services
>==========
>We develop a peer services library that performs the tasks of peer
>discovery and relay, with the ability to connect to appropriate peers
>and queue messages. It uses libconsensus for all validation
>functionality and as a datastore for the consensus state but maintains
>its own database for peer history and statistics. I believe Cory has
>been working on this already using libevent. I've already developed an
>async library for this as well.
>
>
>3) API/RPC
>=======
>We provide high level calls and pub/sub mechanisms. ZMQ has been
>implemented and added already, but we could support other transports as
>well.
>
>
>4) Wallet
>======
>The wallet is split out into a separate process that connects to the
>stack via the API/RPC layer.
>
>
>- Eric
>
>------ Original Message ------
>From: "Jorge Timón" <bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org>
>To: "Wladimir J. van der Laan" <laanwj at gmail.com>
>Cc: "Bitcoin development mailing list"
><bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org>
>Sent: 9/22/2015 11:36:14 AM
>Subject: [bitcoin-dev] Long-term vision for bitcoind (was libconsensus
>and bitcoin development process)
>
>>On Fri, Sep 18, 2015 at 2:07 AM, Wladimir J. van der Laan via
>>bitcoin-dev <bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org> wrote:
>>> My long-term vision of bitcoind is a P2P node with validation and
>>>blockchain store, with a couple of data sources that can be
>>>subscribed to or pulled from.
>>
>>I agree with this long term vision.
>>Here's how I think it could happen:
>>
>>1) Libconsensus is completed and moved to a subtree (which has libsecp
>>as an internal subtree)
>>
>>2) Bitcoind becomes a subtree of bitcoin-wallet (which has
>>bitcoin-wallet and bitcoin-qt)
>>
>>Without aggressively changing it for this purpose, libconsensus should
>>tend to become C, like libsecp, which is better for proving
>>correctness.
>>Hopefully at some point it won't take much to move to C.
>>
>>Upper layers should move to C++11
>>
>>Don't focus on the git subtrees, the basic architecture is bitcoin-qt
>>on top of bitcoin-wallet, bitcoin-wallet on top of bitcoind (and
>>friends like bitcoin-cli and bitcoin-tx), bitcoind on top of
>>libconsensus on top of libsecp256k1.
>>
>>I believe this would maximize the number of people who can safely
>>contribute to the project.
>>I also believe this is the architecture most contributors have in mind
>>for the long term, but I may be wrong about it.
>>
>>Criticisms to this plan?
>>_______________________________________________
>>bitcoin-dev mailing list
>>bitcoin-dev at lists.linuxfoundation.org
>>https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/mailman/listinfo/bitcoin-dev