dash/test/functional/p2p_invalid_messages.py

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#!/usr/bin/env python3
# Copyright (c) 2015-2020 The Bitcoin Core developers
# Distributed under the MIT software license, see the accompanying
# file COPYING or http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php.
"""Test node responses to invalid network messages."""
from test_framework.messages import (
CBlockHeader,
CInv,
msg_ping,
ser_string,
msg_getdata,
msg_headers,
msg_inv,
MSG_TX,
)
Merge #19760: test: Remove confusing mininode terminology d5800da5199527a366024bc80cad7fcca17d5c4a [test] Remove final references to mininode (John Newbery) 5e8df3312e47a73e747ee892face55ed9ababeea test: resort imports (John Newbery) 85165d4332b0f72d30e0c584b476249b542338e6 scripted-diff: Rename mininode to p2p (John Newbery) 9e2897d020b114a10c860f90c5405be029afddba scripted-diff: Rename mininode_lock to p2p_lock (John Newbery) Pull request description: New contributors are often confused by the terminology in the test framework, and what the difference between a _node_ and a _peer_ is. To summarize: - a 'node' is a bitcoind instance. This is the thing whose behavior is being tested. Each bitcoind node is managed by a python `TestNode` object which is used to start/stop the node, manage the node's data directory, read state about the node (eg process status, log file), and interact with the node over different interfaces. - one of the interfaces that we can use to interact with the node is the p2p interface. Each connection to a node using this interface is managed by a python `P2PInterface` or derived object (which is owned by the `TestNode` object). We can open zero, one or many p2p connections to each bitcoind node. The node sees these connections as 'peers'. For historic reasons, the word 'mininode' has been used to refer to those p2p interface objects that we use to connect to the bitcoind node (the code was originally taken from the 'mini-node' branch of https://github.com/jgarzik/pynode/tree/mini-node). However that name has proved to be confusing for new contributors, so rename the remaining references. ACKs for top commit: amitiuttarwar: ACK d5800da519 MarcoFalke: ACK d5800da5199527a366024bc80cad7fcca17d5c4a 🚞 Tree-SHA512: 2c46c2ac3c4278b6e3c647cfd8108428a41e80788fc4f0e386e5b0c47675bc687d94779496c09a3e5ea1319617295be10c422adeeff2d2bd68378e00e0eeb5de
2024-01-15 20:35:29 +01:00
from test_framework.p2p import (
P2PDataStore, P2PInterface
)
from test_framework.test_framework import BitcoinTestFramework
from test_framework.util import (
assert_equal,
wait_until,
)
MSG_LIMIT = 3 * 1024 * 1024 # 3MB, per MAX_PROTOCOL_MESSAGE_LENGTH
VALID_DATA_LIMIT = MSG_LIMIT - 5 # Account for the 5-byte length prefix
class msg_unrecognized:
"""Nonsensical message. Modeled after similar types in test_framework.messages."""
msgtype = b'badmsg'
def __init__(self, *, str_data):
self.str_data = str_data.encode() if not isinstance(str_data, bytes) else str_data
def serialize(self):
return ser_string(self.str_data)
def __repr__(self):
return "{}(data={})".format(self.msgtype, self.str_data)
class InvalidMessagesTest(BitcoinTestFramework):
def set_test_params(self):
self.num_nodes = 1
self.setup_clean_chain = True
def run_test(self):
self.test_buffer()
self.test_magic_bytes()
self.test_checksum()
self.test_size()
self.test_msgtype()
self.test_large_inv()
self.test_resource_exhaustion()
def test_buffer(self):
self.log.info("Test message with header split across two buffers, should be received")
conn = self.nodes[0].add_p2p_connection(P2PDataStore())
# Create valid message
msg = conn.build_message(msg_ping(nonce=12345))
cut_pos = 12 # Chosen at an arbitrary position within the header
# Send message in two pieces
before = int(self.nodes[0].getnettotals()['totalbytesrecv'])
conn.send_raw_message(msg[:cut_pos])
# Wait until node has processed the first half of the message
wait_until(lambda: int(self.nodes[0].getnettotals()['totalbytesrecv']) != before)
middle = int(self.nodes[0].getnettotals()['totalbytesrecv'])
# If this assert fails, we've hit an unlikely race
# where the test framework sent a message in between the two halves
assert_equal(middle, before + cut_pos)
conn.send_raw_message(msg[cut_pos:])
conn.sync_with_ping(timeout=1)
self.nodes[0].disconnect_p2ps()
def test_magic_bytes(self):
conn = self.nodes[0].add_p2p_connection(P2PDataStore())
with self.nodes[0].assert_debug_log(['HEADER ERROR - MESSAGESTART (badmsg, 2 bytes), received ffffffff']):
msg = conn.build_message(msg_unrecognized(str_data="d"))
# modify magic bytes
msg = b'\xff' * 4 + msg[4:]
conn.send_raw_message(msg)
conn.wait_for_disconnect(timeout=5)
self.nodes[0].disconnect_p2ps()
def test_checksum(self):
conn = self.nodes[0].add_p2p_connection(P2PDataStore())
with self.nodes[0].assert_debug_log(['CHECKSUM ERROR (badmsg, 2 bytes), expected 78df0a04 was ffffffff']):
msg = conn.build_message(msg_unrecognized(str_data="d"))
# Checksum is after start bytes (4B), message type (12B), len (4B)
cut_len = 4 + 12 + 4
# modify checksum
msg = msg[:cut_len] + b'\xff' * 4 + msg[cut_len + 4:]
self.nodes[0].p2p.send_raw_message(msg)
conn.sync_with_ping(timeout=1)
self.nodes[0].disconnect_p2ps()
def test_size(self):
conn = self.nodes[0].add_p2p_connection(P2PDataStore())
with self.nodes[0].assert_debug_log(['']):
# Create a message with oversized payload
msg = msg_unrecognized(str_data="d"*(VALID_DATA_LIMIT + 1))
msg = conn.build_message(msg)
self.nodes[0].p2p.send_raw_message(msg)
conn.wait_for_disconnect(timeout=5)
self.nodes[0].disconnect_p2ps()
def test_msgtype(self):
conn = self.nodes[0].add_p2p_connection(P2PDataStore())
with self.nodes[0].assert_debug_log(['HEADER ERROR - COMMAND']):
msg = msg_unrecognized(str_data="d")
msg = conn.build_message(msg)
# Modify msgtype
msg = msg[:7] + b'\x00' + msg[7 + 1:]
self.nodes[0].p2p.send_raw_message(msg)
conn.sync_with_ping(timeout=1)
self.nodes[0].disconnect_p2ps()
def test_large_inv(self):
conn = self.nodes[0].add_p2p_connection(P2PInterface())
with self.nodes[0].assert_debug_log(['Misbehaving', '(0 -> 20): message inv size() = 50001']):
msg = msg_inv([CInv(MSG_TX, 1)] * 50001)
conn.send_and_ping(msg)
with self.nodes[0].assert_debug_log(['Misbehaving', '(20 -> 40): message getdata size() = 50001']):
msg = msg_getdata([CInv(MSG_TX, 1)] * 50001)
conn.send_and_ping(msg)
with self.nodes[0].assert_debug_log(['Misbehaving', '(40 -> 60): headers message size = 2001']):
msg = msg_headers([CBlockHeader()] * 2001)
conn.send_and_ping(msg)
self.nodes[0].disconnect_p2ps()
def test_resource_exhaustion(self):
conn = self.nodes[0].add_p2p_connection(P2PDataStore())
conn2 = self.nodes[0].add_p2p_connection(P2PDataStore())
msg_at_size = msg_unrecognized(str_data="b" * VALID_DATA_LIMIT)
assert len(msg_at_size.serialize()) == MSG_LIMIT
self.log.info("Sending a bunch of large, junk messages to test memory exhaustion. May take a bit...")
# Run a bunch of times to test for memory exhaustion.
for _ in range(80):
conn.send_message(msg_at_size)
# Check that, even though the node is being hammered by nonsense from one
# connection, it can still service other peers in a timely way.
for _ in range(20):
conn2.sync_with_ping(timeout=2)
# Peer 1, despite being served up a bunch of nonsense, should still be connected.
self.log.info("Waiting for node to drop junk messages.")
conn.sync_with_ping(timeout=400)
assert conn.is_connected
self.nodes[0].disconnect_p2ps()
if __name__ == '__main__':
InvalidMessagesTest().main()