020628e3a4e88e36647eaf92bac4b3552796ac6a Tests for PSBT (Andrew Chow) a4b06fb42eb0ad94e562ca839391b57e69285136 Create wallet RPCs for PSBT (Andrew Chow) c27fe419efb3b6588c400d764122ffb33375e028 Create utility RPCs for PSBT (Andrew Chow) 8b5ef2793748065727a9a2498805ae5b269dcb4f SignPSBTInput wrapper function (Andrew Chow) 58a8e28918025c28f19ba19cbaa4a72374162942 Refactor transaction creation and transaction funding logic (Andrew Chow) e9d86a43ad8b1ab83b324e9a7a64c43a61337501 Methods for interacting with PSBT structs (Andrew Chow) 12bcc64f277f642ece03c25653e726f2276f0d51 Add pubkeys and whether input was witness to SignatureData (Andrew Chow) 41c607f09badb2c3ed58ff6fb17a8ebbef2cdabd Implement PSBT Structures and un/serialization methods per BIP 174 (Andrew Chow) Pull request description: This Pull Request fully implements the [updated](https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/pull/694) BIP 174 specification. It is based upon #13425 which implements the majority of the signing logic. BIP 174 specifies a binary transaction format which contains the information necessary for a signer to produce signatures for the transaction and holds the signatures for an input while the input does not have a complete set of signatures. This PR contains structs for PSBT, serialization, and deserialzation code. Some changes to `SignatureData` have been made to support detection of UTXO type and storing public keys. *** Many RPCs have been added to handle PSBTs. `walletprocesspsbt` takes a PSBT format transaction, updates the PSBT with any inputs related to this wallet, signs, and finalizes the transaction. There is also an option to not sign and just update. `walletcreatefundedpsbt` creates a PSBT from user provided data in the same form as createrawtransaction. It also funds the transaction and takes an options argument in the same form as `fundrawtransaction`. The resulting PSBT is blank with no input or output data filled in. It is analogous to a combination of `createrawtransaction` and `fundrawtransaction` `decodepsbt` takes a PSBT and decodes it to JSON. It is analogous to `decoderawtransaction` `combinepsbt` takes multiple PSBTs for the same tx and combines them. It is analogous to `combinerawtransaction` `finalizepsbt` takes a PSBT and finalizes the inputs. If all inputs are final, it extracts the network serialized transaction and returns that instead of a PSBT unless instructed otherwise. `createpsbt` is like `createrawtransaction` but for PSBTs instead of raw transactions. `convertpsbt` takes a network serialized transaction and converts it into a psbt. The resulting psbt will lose all signature data and an explicit flag must be set to allow transactions with signature data to be converted. *** This supersedes #12136 Tree-SHA512: 1ac7a79e5bc669933f0a6fcc93ded55263fdde9e8c144a30266b13ef9f62aacf43edd4cbca1ffbe003090b067e9643c9298c79be69d7c1b10231b32acafb6338
This directory contains integration tests that test bitcoind and its utilities in their entirety. It does not contain unit tests, which can be found in /src/test, /src/wallet/test, etc.
There are currently two sets of tests in this directory:
- functional which test the functionality of bitcoind and bitcoin-qt by interacting with them through the RPC and P2P interfaces.
- util which tests the bitcoin utilities, currently only bitcoin-tx.
The util tests are run as part of make check
target. The functional
tests are run by the travis continuous build process whenever a pull
request is opened. Both sets of tests can also be run locally.
Running tests locally
Build for your system first. Be sure to enable wallet, utils and daemon when you configure. Tests will not run otherwise.
Functional tests
Dependencies
The ZMQ functional test requires a python ZMQ library. To install it:
- on Unix, run
sudo apt-get install python3-zmq
- on mac OS, run
pip3 install pyzmq
Running the tests
Individual tests can be run by directly calling the test script, eg:
test/functional/feature_rbf.py
or can be run through the test_runner harness, eg:
test/functional/test_runner.py feature_rbf.py
You can run any combination (incl. duplicates) of tests by calling:
test/functional/test_runner.py <testname1> <testname2> <testname3> ...
Run the regression test suite with:
test/functional/test_runner.py
Run all possible tests with
test/functional/test_runner.py --extended
By default, up to 4 tests will be run in parallel by test_runner. To specify
how many jobs to run, append --jobs=n
The individual tests and the test_runner harness have many command-line
options. Run test_runner.py -h
to see them all.
Troubleshooting and debugging test failures
Resource contention
The P2P and RPC ports used by the bitcoind nodes-under-test are chosen to make conflicts with other processes unlikely. However, if there is another bitcoind process running on the system (perhaps from a previous test which hasn't successfully killed all its bitcoind nodes), then there may be a port conflict which will cause the test to fail. It is recommended that you run the tests on a system where no other bitcoind processes are running.
On linux, the test_framework will warn if there is another bitcoind process running when the tests are started.
If there are zombie bitcoind processes after test failure, you can kill them by running the following commands. Note that these commands will kill all bitcoind processes running on the system, so should not be used if any non-test bitcoind processes are being run.
killall bitcoind
or
pkill -9 bitcoind
Data directory cache
A pre-mined blockchain with 200 blocks is generated the first time a functional test is run and is stored in test/cache. This speeds up test startup times since new blockchains don't need to be generated for each test. However, the cache may get into a bad state, in which case tests will fail. If this happens, remove the cache directory (and make sure bitcoind processes are stopped as above):
rm -rf cache
killall bitcoind
Test logging
The tests contain logging at different levels (debug, info, warning, etc). By default:
- when run through the test_runner harness, all logs are written to
test_framework.log
and no logs are output to the console. - when run directly, all logs are written to
test_framework.log
and INFO level and above are output to the console. - when run on Travis, no logs are output to the console. However, if a test
fails, the
test_framework.log
and bitcoinddebug.log
s will all be dumped to the console to help troubleshooting.
To change the level of logs output to the console, use the -l
command line
argument.
test_framework.log
and bitcoind debug.log
s can be combined into a single
aggregate log by running the combine_logs.py
script. The output can be plain
text, colorized text or html. For example:
combine_logs.py -c <test data directory> | less -r
will pipe the colorized logs from the test into less.
Use --tracerpc
to trace out all the RPC calls and responses to the console. For
some tests (eg any that use submitblock
to submit a full block over RPC),
this can result in a lot of screen output.
By default, the test data directory will be deleted after a successful run.
Use --nocleanup
to leave the test data directory intact. The test data
directory is never deleted after a failed test.
Attaching a debugger
A python debugger can be attached to tests at any point. Just add the line:
import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
anywhere in the test. You will then be able to inspect variables, as well as call methods that interact with the bitcoind nodes-under-test.
If further introspection of the bitcoind instances themselves becomes
necessary, this can be accomplished by first setting a pdb breakpoint
at an appropriate location, running the test to that point, then using
gdb
to attach to the process and debug.
For instance, to attach to self.node[1]
during a run:
2017-06-27 14:13:56.686000 TestFramework (INFO): Initializing test directory /tmp/user/1000/testo9vsdjo3
use the directory path to get the pid from the pid file:
cat /tmp/user/1000/testo9vsdjo3/node1/regtest/bitcoind.pid
gdb /home/example/bitcoind <pid>
Note: gdb attach step may require sudo
Util tests
Util tests can be run locally by running test/util/bitcoin-util-test.py
.
Use the -v
option for verbose output.
Writing functional tests
You are encouraged to write functional tests for new or existing features. Further information about the functional test framework and individual tests is found in test/functional.