dash/test/functional/conf_args.py
Wladimir J. van der Laan b0dc2ab3c1
Merge #11862: Network specific conf sections
c25321f Add config changes to release notes (Anthony Towns)
5e3cbe0 [tests] Unit tests for -testnet/-regtest in [test]/[regtest] sections (Anthony Towns)
005ad26 ArgsManager: special handling for -regtest and -testnet (Anthony Towns)
608415d [tests] Unit tests for network-specific config entries (Anthony Towns)
68797e2 ArgsManager: Warn when ignoring network-specific config setting (Anthony Towns)
d1fc4d9 ArgsManager: limit some options to only apply on mainnet when in default section (Anthony Towns)
8a9817d [tests] Use regtest section in functional tests configs (Anthony Towns)
30f9407 [tests] Unit tests for config file sections (Anthony Towns)
95eb66d ArgsManager: support config file sections (Anthony Towns)
4d34fcc ArgsManager: drop m_negated_args (Anthony Towns)
3673ca3 ArgsManager: keep command line and config file arguments separate (Anthony Towns)

Pull request description:

  The weekly meeting on [2017-12-07](http://www.erisian.com.au/meetbot/bitcoin-core-dev/2017/bitcoin-core-dev.2017-12-07-19.00.log.html) discussed allowing options to bitcoin to have some sensitivity to what network is in use. @theuni suggested having sections in the config file:

      <cfields> an alternative to that would be sections in a config file. and on the
                cmdline they'd look like namespaces. so, [testnet] port=5. or -testnet::port=5.

  This approach is (more or less) supported by `boost::program_options::detail::config_file_iterator` -- when it sees a `[testnet]` section with `port=5`, it will treat that the same as "testnet.port=5". So `[testnet] port=5` (or `testnet.port=5` without the section header) in bitcoin.conf and `-testnet.port=5` on the command line.

  The other aspect to this question is possibly limiting some options so that there is no possibility of accidental cross-contamination across networks. For example, if you're using a particular wallet.dat on mainnet, you may not want to accidentally use the same wallet on testnet and risk reusing keys.

  I've set this up so that the `-addnode` and `-wallet` options are `NETWORK_ONLY`, so that if you have a bitcoin.conf:

      wallet=/secret/wallet.dat
      upnp=1

  and you run `bitcoind -testnet` or `bitcoind -regtest`, then the `wallet=` setting will be ignored, and should behave as if your bitcoin.conf had specified:

      upnp=1

      [main]
      wallet=/secret/wallet.dat

  For any `NETWORK_ONLY` options, if you're using `-testnet` or `-regtest`, you'll have to add the prefix to any command line options. This was necessary for `multiwallet.py` for instance.

  I've left the "default" options as taking precedence over network specific ones, which might be backwards. So if you have:

      maxmempool=200
      [regtest]
      maxmempool=100

  your maxmempool will still be 200 on regtest. The advantage of doing it this way is that if you have `[regtest] maxmempool=100` in bitcoin.conf, and then say `bitcoind -regtest -maxmempool=200`, the same result is probably in line with what you expect...

  The other thing to note is that I'm using the chain names from `chainparamsbase.cpp` / `ChainNameFromCommandLine`, so the sections are `[main]`, `[test]` and `[regtest]`; not `[mainnet]` or `[testnet]` as might be expected.

  Thoughts? Ping @MeshCollider @laanwj @jonasschnelli @morcos

Tree-SHA512: f00b5eb75f006189987e5c15e154a42b66ee251777768c1e185d764279070fcb7c41947d8794092b912a03d985843c82e5189871416995436a6260520fb7a4db
2020-05-10 11:15:58 -05:00

55 lines
2.4 KiB
Python
Executable File

#!/usr/bin/env python3
# Copyright (c) 2017 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 various command line arguments and configuration file parameters."""
import os
from test_framework.test_framework import BitcoinTestFramework
from test_framework.util import get_datadir_path
class ConfArgsTest(BitcoinTestFramework):
def set_test_params(self):
self.setup_clean_chain = True
self.num_nodes = 1
def run_test(self):
self.stop_node(0)
# Remove the -datadir argument so it doesn't override the config file
self.nodes[0].args = [arg for arg in self.nodes[0].args if not arg.startswith("-datadir")]
default_data_dir = get_datadir_path(self.options.tmpdir, 0)
new_data_dir = os.path.join(default_data_dir, 'newdatadir')
new_data_dir_2 = os.path.join(default_data_dir, 'newdatadir2')
# Check that using -datadir argument on non-existent directory fails
self.nodes[0].datadir = new_data_dir
self.assert_start_raises_init_error(0, ['-datadir='+new_data_dir], 'Error: Specified data directory "' + new_data_dir + '" does not exist.')
# Check that using non-existent datadir in conf file fails
conf_file = os.path.join(default_data_dir, "dash.conf")
# datadir needs to be set before [regtest] section
conf_file_contents = open(conf_file, encoding='utf8').read()
with open(conf_file, 'w', encoding='utf8') as f:
f.write("datadir=" + new_data_dir + "\n")
f.write(conf_file_contents)
self.assert_start_raises_init_error(0, ['-conf='+conf_file], 'Error reading configuration file: specified data directory "' + new_data_dir + '" does not exist.')
# Create the directory and ensure the config file now works
os.mkdir(new_data_dir)
self.start_node(0, ['-conf='+conf_file, '-wallet=w1'])
self.stop_node(0)
assert os.path.exists(os.path.join(new_data_dir, 'regtest', 'wallets', 'w1'))
# Ensure command line argument overrides datadir in conf
os.mkdir(new_data_dir_2)
self.nodes[0].datadir = new_data_dir_2
self.start_node(0, ['-datadir='+new_data_dir_2, '-conf='+conf_file, '-wallet=w2'])
assert os.path.exists(os.path.join(new_data_dir_2, 'regtest', 'wallets', 'w2'))
if __name__ == '__main__':
ConfArgsTest().main()