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p2p/discover: refactor node and endpoint representation #29844
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Halimao
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update some functions' comments
lightclient
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Can confirm it fixes the race.
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Co-authored-by: Halimao <[email protected]>
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Rebased on #29836 |
lightclient
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SGTM
Here we clean up internal uses of type discover.node, converting most code to use enode.Node instead. The discover.node type used to be the canonical representation of network hosts before ENR was introduced. Most code worked with *node to avoid conversions when interacting with Table methods. Since *node also contains internal state of Table and is a mutable type, using *node outside of Table code is prone to data races. It's also cleaner not having to wrap/unwrap *enode.Node all the time. discover.node has been renamed to tableNode to clarify its purpose. While here, we also change most uses of net.UDPAddr into netip.AddrPort. While this is technically a separate refactoring from the *node -> *enode.Node change, it is more convenient because *enode.Node handles IP addresses as netip.Addr. The switch to package netip in discovery would've happened very soon anyway. The change to netip.AddrPort stops at certain interface points. For example, since package p2p/netutil has not been converted to use netip.Addr yet, we still have to convert to net.IP/net.UDPAddr in a few places.
Here we clean up internal uses of type discover.node, converting most code to use enode.Node instead. The discover.node type used to be the canonical representation of network hosts before ENR was introduced. Most code worked with *node to avoid conversions when interacting with Table methods. Since *node also contains internal state of Table and is a mutable type, using *node outside of Table code is prone to data races. It's also cleaner not having to wrap/unwrap *enode.Node all the time. discover.node has been renamed to tableNode to clarify its purpose. While here, we also change most uses of net.UDPAddr into netip.AddrPort. While this is technically a separate refactoring from the *node -> *enode.Node change, it is more convenient because *enode.Node handles IP addresses as netip.Addr. The switch to package netip in discovery would've happened very soon anyway. The change to netip.AddrPort stops at certain interface points. For example, since package p2p/netutil has not been converted to use netip.Addr yet, we still have to convert to net.IP/net.UDPAddr in a few places.
Here we clean up internal uses of type discover.node, converting most code to use enode.Node instead. The discover.node type used to be the canonical representation of network hosts before ENR was introduced. Most code worked with *node to avoid conversions when interacting with Table methods. Since *node also contains internal state of Table and is a mutable type, using *node outside of Table code is prone to data races. It's also cleaner not having to wrap/unwrap *enode.Node all the time. discover.node has been renamed to tableNode to clarify its purpose. While here, we also change most uses of net.UDPAddr into netip.AddrPort. While this is technically a separate refactoring from the *node -> *enode.Node change, it is more convenient because *enode.Node handles IP addresses as netip.Addr. The switch to package netip in discovery would've happened very soon anyway. The change to netip.AddrPort stops at certain interface points. For example, since package p2p/netutil has not been converted to use netip.Addr yet, we still have to convert to net.IP/net.UDPAddr in a few places.
Here we clean up internal uses of type discover.node, converting most code to use enode.Node instead. The discover.node type used to be the canonical representation of network hosts before ENR was introduced. Most code worked with *node to avoid conversions when interacting with Table methods. Since *node also contains internal state of Table and is a mutable type, using *node outside of Table code is prone to data races. It's also cleaner not having to wrap/unwrap *enode.Node all the time. discover.node has been renamed to tableNode to clarify its purpose. While here, we also change most uses of net.UDPAddr into netip.AddrPort. While this is technically a separate refactoring from the *node -> *enode.Node change, it is more convenient because *enode.Node handles IP addresses as netip.Addr. The switch to package netip in discovery would've happened very soon anyway. The change to netip.AddrPort stops at certain interface points. For example, since package p2p/netutil has not been converted to use netip.Addr yet, we still have to convert to net.IP/net.UDPAddr in a few places.
Here we clean up internal uses of type discover.node, converting most code to use enode.Node instead. The discover.node type used to be the canonical representation of network hosts before ENR was introduced. Most code worked with *node to avoid conversions when interacting with Table methods. Since *node also contains internal state of Table and is a mutable type, using *node outside of Table code is prone to data races. It's also cleaner not having to wrap/unwrap *enode.Node all the time. discover.node has been renamed to tableNode to clarify its purpose. While here, we also change most uses of net.UDPAddr into netip.AddrPort. While this is technically a separate refactoring from the *node -> *enode.Node change, it is more convenient because *enode.Node handles IP addresses as netip.Addr. The switch to package netip in discovery would've happened very soon anyway. The change to netip.AddrPort stops at certain interface points. For example, since package p2p/netutil has not been converted to use netip.Addr yet, we still have to convert to net.IP/net.UDPAddr in a few places.
Here we clean up internal uses of type discover.node, converting most code to use enode.Node instead. The discover.node type used to be the canonical representation of network hosts before ENR was introduced. Most code worked with *node to avoid conversions when interacting with Table methods. Since *node also contains internal state of Table and is a mutable type, using *node outside of Table code is prone to data races. It's also cleaner not having to wrap/unwrap *enode.Node all the time. discover.node has been renamed to tableNode to clarify its purpose. While here, we also change most uses of net.UDPAddr into netip.AddrPort. While this is technically a separate refactoring from the *node -> *enode.Node change, it is more convenient because *enode.Node handles IP addresses as netip.Addr. The switch to package netip in discovery would've happened very soon anyway. The change to netip.AddrPort stops at certain interface points. For example, since package p2p/netutil has not been converted to use netip.Addr yet, we still have to convert to net.IP/net.UDPAddr in a few places.
Here we clean up internal uses of type
discover.node, converting most code to useenode.Nodeinstead. Thediscover.nodetype used to be the canonical representation of network hosts before ENR was introduced. Most code worked with*nodeto avoid conversions when interacting withTablemethods. Since*nodealso contains internal state ofTableand is a mutable type, using*nodeoutside ofTablecode is prone to data races. It's also cleaner not having to wrap/unwrap*enode.Nodeall the time.discover.nodehas been renamed totableNodeto clarify its purpose.While here, we also change most uses of
net.UDPAddrintonetip.AddrPort. While this is technically a separate refactoring from the*node->*enode.Nodechange, it is more convenient because*enode.Nodehandles IP addresses asnetip.Addr. The switch to package netip in discovery would've happened very soon anyway.The change to
netip.AddrPortstops at certain interface points. For example, since package p2p/netutil has not been converted to usenetip.Addryet, we still have to convert tonet.IP/net.UDPAddrin a few places.