And fix contract create to really update the ID, eliminating this difference
in the storage (preview2 testnet):
file BlockStorage_100000/dump-block-39000.json: block 38043: key mismatch: 0c000000617373657464df4ebe92334d1fc7e64b10f1d1e33942d9905e510000000000000009 vs 00000000617373657464df4ebe92334d1fc7e64b10f1d1e33942d9905e510000000000000009
Preview2 testnet:
file BlockStorage_100000/dump-block-12000.json: block 11562: key mismatch: feffffff1454a6cb279fbcedc66162ad4ad5d1d910202b92743e000000000000000000000005 vs feffffff1431b7e7aea5131f74721e002c6a56b610885813f79e000000000000000000000005
Originally this code was written to run after transactions processing, but
after 0fa4c49735 it works in different manner.
ValidatorsCount is not initialized at block 0 with C# node (the first voter
initializes it) and until that initialization happens the standby validators
list is being returned as is without sorting.
Fixes state mismatch for the key ffffffff0e00000000000000000000000000000001 in
the first blocks.
It also affects tests as now the first validator is different and it receives
the network fees.
After block was stored it's possible to have new FeePerByte constraint,
so we should remove all transactions which do not meet this requirement.
Also caching of FeePerByte was added in order not to re-verify
transactions each time mempool needs to be updated.
MarshalJSON should be defined on structure (not pointer), as we use
structures to marshal parameters (e.g. in NotificationEvent and
Invoke of RPC result package) and never use pointers for that purpose.
Also added marshalling of nil array into `[]` instead of `null` to
follow C# implementation.
part of #904
1. We now have MaxTransactionsPerBlock set in native Policy contract,
so this value should be used in (dbft).GetVerified method instead
of passing it as an argument.
2. Removed (dbft).WithTxPerBlock.
2. DBFT API has changed, so update it's version.
3. Removed MaxTransactionsPerBlock from node configuration, as we
have it set in native Policy contract.
C# implementation uses NEWARRAY for creating arguments.
Don't change our implementation in `emit`, because PACK is cheaper and
this script must not depend on the internal details of `emit` package anyway.
There is no such thing as high/low priority transactions, as there are
no free transactions anymore and they are ordered by fees contained
in transaction itself.
Closes#1063.
It's just JSON, io.Serializable is only used for DB storage where the length
should be obtained from the stream. Fixes:
2020-06-18T22:14:10.571+0300 WARN contract invocation failed {"tx": "1ffd475a9c246495d6206cb80a9a78e9d14a433ded60cd37aa87d897655606e1", "block": 25893, "error": "error encountered at instruction 3696 (SYSCALL): failed to invoke syscall: invalid character ':' after top-level value"}
We make it explicit in the appropriate Block/Transaction structures, not via a
singleton as C# node does. I think this approach has a bit more potential and
allows better packages reuse for different purposes.
And implement it for Transaction, the only user of ParameterContext for
now. Which make correct signing/verifying possible for cases when
serialization for general transmission and signing differ.