When money is being sent usually they go away from someone's pocket, so that
there is a little less money left there. Not in our case as it turns out, we
actually were adding money both to sender and receiver which is nice, but a
bit different from usual economic's expectations.
This syscall should only work for contracts created by current transaction and
that is what is supposed to be checked here. Do so by looking at the
differences between ic.dao and original lower DAO.
Our block.Block was JSONized in a bit different fashion than result.Block in
its NextConsensus and Index fields. It's not good for notifications because
third-party clients would probably expect to see the same format. Also, using
completely different Block representation is probably making our client a bit
weaker as this representation is harder to use with other neo-go components.
So use the same approach we took for Transactions and wrap block.Block which is
to be serialized in proper way.
Fix `Script` JSONization along the way, 3.0 node wraps it within `witnesses`.
Getting batch, updating Prometheus metrics and pushing events doesn't require
any locking: batch is a local cache batch that no one outside cares about,
Prometheus metrics are not critical to be in perfect sync and events are
asynchronous anyway.
Native contracts also don't require any locks and they should be processed
before dumping storage changes.
`NewNEO()` and `NewGAS()` methods are trying to initialise
both `onPersist` and `incBalance` methods of NEO and GAS AFTER
nep5TokenNative is set to the VALUE of created nep5 token.
In this situation an attemmpt to call the corresponding native contracts
methods (e.g. transfer native GAS) leads to contract invocation failure,
as far as `nep5TokenNative.incBalance` method is nil.
Fixed this by initializing both `onPersist` and `incBalance` methods
before getting the value of nep5 contract.
Native contracts deployment creates `Transfer` notifications and adds
them into interop context. However, these notifications were not stored
for two reasons:
1. typo in `Transfer` (so these notifications were not recognised during
processing of the invocation tx in (*Blockchain).storeBlock(...) method)
2. these notifications have `from` adress setted to null, so conversion
to []byte fails. Same thing could happen with `to`.
Related C# issue: https://github.com/neo-project/neo/issues/1646
For now, made both `transfer` and `Transfer` valid.
Rename THROWIFNOT to ASSERT, add ABORT opcode.
ABORT cannot be caught, but the implementation should be postponed until
exception handling is implemented.