Since Go 1.22 a "for" statement with a "range" clause is able
to iterate through integer values from zero to an upper limit.
gopatch script:
@@
var i, e expression
@@
-for i := 0; i <= e - 1; i++ {
+for i := range e {
...
}
@@
var i, e expression
@@
-for i := 0; i <= e; i++ {
+for i := range e + 1 {
...
}
@@
var i, e expression
@@
-for i := 0; i < e; i++ {
+for i := range e {
...
}
Signed-off-by: Ekaterina Lebedeva <ekaterina.lebedeva@yadro.com>
After 75d7891ca1
`neo-go` does claim that an empty invocation script is the only way to
fill missing signature for unsigned notary requests. The new notary actor
does it that way and, therefore, breaks notary request parsing by the
Alphabet because of skipping any request that is not filled with a dummy (64
zeros) invocation script. Support both way. The "Dummy" approach will be
dropped later.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Karpy <p.karpy@yadro.com>
With non-blocking pool restricted by 10 in capacity, the probability of
dropping events is unexpectedly big. Notifications are an essential part of the FrostFS,
we should not drop anything, especially new epochs.
```
Mar 31 07:07:03 vedi neofs-ir[19164]: 2023-03-31T07:07:03.901Z debug subscriber/subscriber.go:154 new notification event from sidechain {"name": "NewEpoch"}
Mar 31 07:07:03 vedi neofs-ir[19164]: 2023-03-31T07:07:03.901Z warn event/listener.go:248 listener worker pool drained {"chain": "morph", "capacity": 10}
```
Signed-off-by: Evgenii Stratonikov <e.stratonikov@yadro.com>
It led to a neo-go dead-lock in the `subscriber` component. Subscribing to
notifications is the same RPC as any others, so it could also be blocked
forever if no async listening (reading the notification channel) routine
exists. If a number of subscriptions is big enough (or a caller is lucky
enough) subscribing loop might have not finished subscribing before the
first notification is received and then: subscribing RPC is blocked by
received notification (non)handling and listening notifications routine is
blocked by not finished subscription loop.
That commit starts listening notification channel _before_ any subscription
actions.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Karpy <p.karpy@yadro.com>
Make it store its internal `zap.Logger`'s level. Also, make all the
components to accept internal `logger.Logger` instead of `zap.Logger`; it
will simplify future refactor.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Karpy <carpawell@nspcc.ru>
After recent Netmap contract changes all read methods which return
network map (either candidates or snapshots) encode node descriptors
into same structure.
Decode `netmap.Node` contract-side structure from the call results.
Replace node state with the value from the `netmap.Node.State` field.
Signed-off-by: Leonard Lyubich <ctulhurider@gmail.com>
After recent changes Netmap contract can send `UpdateState` notification
event with `MAINTENANCE` node's state. There is a need to provide
functionality to work with the status.
Provide `UpdatePeer.Maintenance` method. Support new state in
`ParseUpdatePeer` and `ParseUpdatePeerNotary` functions.
Signed-off-by: Leonard Lyubich <leonard@nspcc.ru>
New network status of storage nodes is going to be introduced. To
simplify the addition, it would be useful to prepare the code for this.
Signed-off-by: Leonard Lyubich <leonard@nspcc.ru>
There is a need to sync container-related caching mechanism with the
actual Sidechain changes. To do this, node should be able to listen
incoming notifications about container ops.
Define `PutSuccess` / `DeleteSuccess` notification event's parsers.
Subscribe to these events in node app. As initial implementation node
will log event receipts. Later handling is going to be practically
complicated.
Signed-off-by: Leonard Lyubich <leonard@nspcc.ru>
Handling notification in a synchronous manner may lead to a blocking state
if a handler uses neo-go client.
Signed-off-by: Pavel Karpy <carpawell@nspcc.ru>