22b5952c5a
* Add LLMQ parameters to consensus params * Add DIP6 quorum commitment special TX * Implement CQuorumBlockProcessor which validates and handles commitments * Add quorum commitments to new blocks * Propagate QFCOMMITMENT messages to all nodes * Allow special transactions in blocks which have no inputs/outputs But only for TRANSACTION_QUORUM_COMMITMENT for now. * Add quorum commitments to self-crafted blocks in DIP3 tests * Add simple fork logic for current testnet This should avoid a fork on the current testnet. It only applies to the current chain which activated DIP3 at height 264000 and block 00000048e6e71d4bd90e7c456dcb94683ae832fcad13e1760d8283f7e89f332f. When we revert the chain to retest the DIP3 deployment, this fork logic can be removed again. * Use quorumVvecHash instead of quorumHash to make null commitments unique Implementation of https://github.com/dashpay/dips/pull/31 * Re-add quorum commitments after pruning mempool selected blocks * Refactor CQuorumBlockProcessor::ProcessBlock to have less nested if/else statements Also add BEGIN/END markers for temporary code. * Add comments/documentation to LLMQParams * Move code which determines if a commitment is required into IsCommitmentRequired This should make the code easier to read and also removes some duplication. The also changes the error types that are possible from 3 to 2 now. Instead of having "bad-qc-already-mined" and "bad-qc-not-mining-phase", there is only "bad-qc-not-allowed" now. * Use new parameter from consensus parames for the temporary fork |
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pull-tester | ||
rpc-tests | ||
README.md |
The pull-tester folder contains a script to call multiple tests from the rpc-tests folder.
Every pull request to the Dash Core repository is built and run through the regression test suite. You can also run all or only individual tests locally.
Test dependencies
Before running the tests, the following must be installed.
Unix
The python3-zmq library is required. On Ubuntu or Debian it can be installed via:
sudo apt-get install python3-zmq
OS X
pip3 install pyzmq
Running tests
You can run any single test by calling
qa/pull-tester/rpc-tests.py <testname>
Or you can run any combination of tests by calling
qa/pull-tester/rpc-tests.py <testname1> <testname2> <testname3> ...
Run the regression test suite with
qa/pull-tester/rpc-tests.py
Run all possible tests with
qa/pull-tester/rpc-tests.py -extended
By default, tests will be run in parallel. To specify how many jobs to run,
append -parallel=n
(default n=4).
If you want to create a basic coverage report for the rpc test suite, append --coverage
.
Possible options, which apply to each individual test run:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--nocleanup Leave dashds and test.* datadir on exit or error
--noshutdown Don't stop dashds after the test execution
--srcdir=SRCDIR Source directory containing dashd/dash-cli
(default: ../../src)
--tmpdir=TMPDIR Root directory for datadirs
--tracerpc Print out all RPC calls as they are made
--coveragedir=COVERAGEDIR
Write tested RPC commands into this directory
If you set the environment variable PYTHON_DEBUG=1
you will get some debug
output (example: PYTHON_DEBUG=1 qa/pull-tester/rpc-tests.py wallet
).
A 200-block -regtest blockchain and wallets for four nodes is created the first time a regression test is run and is stored in the cache/ directory. Each node has 25 mature blocks (25*500=12500 DASH) in its wallet.
After the first run, the cache/ blockchain and wallets are copied into a temporary directory and used as the initial test state.
If you get into a bad state, you should be able to recover with:
rm -rf cache
killall dashd
Writing tests
You are encouraged to write tests for new or existing features. Further information about the test framework and individual rpc tests is found in qa/rpc-tests.