We have additional logic for getting BaseExecFee policy value. This
logic should be moved to interop context instead of being in Policer,
because Policer is just an interface over Policy contract.
After moving this logic to interop context, we need to use it to define
BaseExecFee instead of (Policer).BaseExecFee. Thus, moving
(*Blockchain).GetPrice to (*Context).GetPrice is necessary.
But don't change the way we process/store transactions and blocks. Effectively
it's just an interface for smart contracts that replaces old syscalls.
Transaction definition is moved temporarily to runtime package and Block
definition is removed (till we solve #1691 properly).
pkg/core/interop/storage/find.go:19:6: exported type Iterator should have comment or be unexported
pkg/core/interop/storage/find.go:25:1: exported function NewIterator should have comment or be unexported
pkg/core/interop/storage/find.go:33:1: exported method Iterator.Next should have comment or be unexported
pkg/core/interop/storage/find.go:35:3: should replace s.index += 1 with s.index++
pkg/core/interop/storage/find.go:40:1: exported method Iterator.Value should have comment or be unexported
Prices are defined in as a coefficients to `BaseExecFee` which
is defined by Policy contract (TBD later).
Native method prices are defined without need to multiply.
`interop.Contex.AddMethod` sets `Safe` flag for native
contracts. This allows not to forget to change manifest
when changing call flags.
Also fixed invalid `Safe` flags for `Notary` and `Designate` contracts.
This optimizes out DB access for non-deployed contracts under the assumption
that deployed ones are always loaded via `LoadScriptWithHash` (and if they're
not --- it's a bug anyway with the new hashing model) which actually is a very
popular case (every entry script does that).
They follow C# conversion rules, but differ from our `bigint` module
conversions:
1. String must be big-endian.
2. Sign extension is 4-bit in size (single hex character)
and not 8-byte.
Removed unreachable code, see
8fed383523
runtime.CheckHashedWitness can only be used for transaction
verification, the other two options from reference implementation (block
and consensus payload) have separate methods for verification.
At the moment we should have 3 possible options to check return state
during vm context unloading:
* no check
* ensure the stack is empty
* ensure the stack is not empty
It is necessary to distinguish them because new _deploy method shouldn't
left anything on stack. Example: if we use _deploy method before some
ordinary contract method which returns one value. Without these changes
the contract invocation will fail due to 2 elements on stack left after
invocation (the first `null` element is from _deploy, the second element
is return-value from the ordinary contract method).