Problem:
```
--- FAIL: TestMakeDirForFile_HappyPath (0.01s)
testing.go:894: TempDir RemoveAll cleanup: remove C:\Users\Anna\AppData\Local\Temp\TestMakeDirForFile_HappyPath402638411\001\testDir\testFile.test: The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another process.
--- FAIL: TestMakeDirForFile_Negative (0.01s)
testing.go:894: TempDir RemoveAll cleanup: remove C:\Users\Anna\AppData\Local\Temp\TestMakeDirForFile_Negative672737582\001\testFile.test: The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another process.
FAIL
```
Solution:
Release resources occupied by os.Create.
Problem:
```
--- FAIL: TestMemCachedPersist (0.07s)
--- FAIL: TestMemCachedPersist/BoltDBStore (0.07s)
testing.go:894: TempDir RemoveAll cleanup: remove C:\Users\Anna\AppData\Local\Temp\TestMemCachedPersist_BoltDBStore294966711\001\test_bolt_db: The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another process.
```
Solution:
Release the resources occupied by the DB.
Oracle responses must use the same set of signers as oracle requests even
though the transaction itself is signed by oracle nodes/contract.
We can probably improve interop.Context by removing Tx field completely and
adding more functionality to Container, but it's not very convenient for
VerifyWitness and will require adding more stub-like methods for Block, so Tx
is used for now (and we do have it in every relevant case).
I don't think it's possible with regular service functioning, but it happens
during testing because of pointer reuse:
WARNING: DATA RACE
Read at 0x00c003a0e3f0 by goroutine 114:
github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/pkg/services/notary.(*Notary).verifyIncompleteWitnesses()
/home/runner/work/neo-go/neo-go/pkg/services/notary/notary.go:441 +0x1dc
github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/pkg/services/notary.(*Notary).OnNewRequest()
/home/runner/work/neo-go/neo-go/pkg/services/notary/notary.go:188 +0x205
github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/pkg/core.TestNotary.func11()
/home/runner/work/neo-go/neo-go/pkg/core/notary_test.go:347 +0x612
github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/pkg/core.TestNotary()
/home/runner/work/neo-go/neo-go/pkg/core/notary_test.go:443 +0xe33
testing.tRunner()
/opt/hostedtoolcache/go/1.16.10/x64/src/testing/testing.go:1193 +0x202
Previous write at 0x00c003a0e3f0 by goroutine 104:
github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/pkg/services/notary.(*Notary).finalize()
/home/runner/work/neo-go/neo-go/pkg/services/notary/notary.go:338 +0x50a
github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/pkg/services/notary.(*Notary).PostPersist()
/home/runner/work/neo-go/neo-go/pkg/services/notary/notary.go:314 +0x297
github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/pkg/services/notary.(*Notary).Run()
/home/runner/work/neo-go/neo-go/pkg/services/notary/notary.go:169 +0x4a7
Serializing/deserializing the payload yields this:
Error: Received unexpected error:
both main and fallback transactions should have the same ValidUntil value
CONVERT call base price is 8192. DUP, ISTYPE and JMPIF all cost 2. So we add
0.07% overhead in the worst case and save 99.93% otherwise.
At the same time, old code was just two bytes and new one is seven, but I
think it's tolerable considering how much GAS it can potentially save.
Fix#2250.
See neo-project/neo#2622. The implementation is somewhat asymmetric (and not
very efficient) for binary/JSON encoding/decoding, but it should be
sufficient.
Sometimes user needs to construct transaction by itself, so it's better
to unify nonce sources for auto-generated and manually-generated
transactions to avoid nonce collisions in tests.
Eventually this will be replaced by `pkg/neotest` invocations but for
now it allows us to remove NNS constants together with the tests.
Signed-off-by: Evgeniy Stratonikov <evgeniy@nspcc.ru>
Implementing a separate `Signer` interface is beneficial in multiple
ways:
1. Support both single and multiple transaction witnesses.
2. It should be easy to add contract signer this way.
Tests should use accounts created with `NewAccount` so hiding all
details doesn't seem to be an issue.
Signed-off-by: Evgeniy Stratonikov <evgeniy@nspcc.ru>
Use circular buffer which is a bit more appropriate. The problem is that
priority queue accepts and stores equal items which wastes memory even in
normal usage scenario, but it's especially dangerous if the node is stuck for
some reason. In this case it'll accept from peers and put into queue the same
blocks again and again leaking memory up to OOM condition.
Notice that queue length calculation might be wrong in case circular buffer
wraps, but it's not very likely to happen (usually blocks not coming from the
queue are added by consensus and it's not very fast in doing so).