Files
bitcoin/test
merge-script b1821d8dd3 Merge bitcoin/bitcoin#27286: wallet: Keep track of the wallet's own transaction outputs in memory
215e5999e2 wallet: Remove unused CachedTxGet{Available,Immature}Credit (Ava Chow)
49675de035 wallet: Have GetDebit use the wallet's TXO set (Ava Chow)
17d453cb3a wallet: Recompute wallet TXOs after descriptor migration (Ava Chow)
764016eb22 wallet: Retrieve TXO directly in FetchSelectedInputs (Ava Chow)
c1801b78f1 wallet: Use wallet's TXO set in AvailableCoins (Ava Chow)
dde7cbe105 wallet: Change balance calculation to use m_txos (Ava Chow)
96e7a89c5e wallet: Recalculate the wallet's txos after any imports (Ava Chow)
ae888c38d0 wallet: Exit IsTrustedTx early if wtx is already in trusted_parents (Ava Chow)
ae0876ec42 wallet: Keep track of transaction outputs owned by the wallet (Ava Chow)
0f269bc48c walletdb: Load Txs last (Ava Chow)
5cc32ee2a7 test: Test for balance update due to untracked output becoming spendable (Ava Chow)
8222341d4f wallet: MarkDirty after AddWalletDescriptor (Ava Chow)
e02f2d331c bench: Have AvailableCoins benchmark include a lot of unrelated utxos (Ava Chow)

Pull request description:

  Currently, the wallet is not actually aware about its own transaction outputs. Instead, it will iterate all of the transactions stored in `mapWallet`, and then all of the outputs of those transactions, in order to figure out what belongs to it for the purposes of coin selection and balance calculation. For balance calculation, there is caching that results in it only iterating all of the transactions, but not all of the outputs. However when the cache is dirty, everything is iterated. This is especially problematic for wallets that have a lot of transactions, or transactions that have a lot of unrelated outputs (as may occur with coinjoins or batched payments).

  This PR helps to resolve this issue by making the wallet track all of the outputs that belong to it in a new member `m_txos`. Note that this includes outputs that may have already been spent. Both balance calculation (`GetBalance`) and coin selection (`AvailableCoins`) are updated to iterate `m_txos`. This is generally faster since it ignores all of the unrelated outputs, and it is not slower as in the worst case of wallets containing only single output transactions, it's exactly the same number of outputs iterated.

  `m_txos` is memory only, and it is populated during wallet loading. When each transaction is loaded, all of its outputs are checked to see if it is `IsMine`, and if so, an entry added to `m_txos`. When new transactions are received, the same procedure is done.

  Since imports can change the `IsMine` status of a transaction (although they can only be "promoted" from watchonly to spendable), all of the import RPCs will be a bit slower as they re-iterate all transactions and all outputs to update `m_txos`.

  Each output in `m_txos` is stored in a new `WalletTXO` class. This class contains references to the parent `CWalletTx` and the `CTxOut` itself. It also caches the `IsMine` value of the txout. This should be safe as `IsMine` should not change unless there are imports. This allows us to have additional performance improvements in places that use these `WalletTXO`s as they can use the cached `IsMine` rather than repeatedly calling `IsMine` which can be expensive.

  The existing `WalletBalance` benchmark demonstrates the performance improvement that this PR makes. The existing `WalletAvailableCoins` benchmark doesn't as all of the outputs used in that benchmark belong to the test wallet. I've updated that benchmark to have a bunch of unrelated outputs in each transaction so that the difference is demonstrated.

  This is part of a larger project to have the wallet actually track and store a set of its UTXOs.

  Built on #24914 as it requires loading the txs last in order for `m_txos` to be built correctly.

  ***

  ## Benchmarks:

  Master:

  |               ns/op |                op/s |    err% |          ins/op |          cyc/op |    IPC |         bra/op |   miss% |     total | benchmark
  |--------------------:|--------------------:|--------:|----------------:|----------------:|-------:|---------------:|--------:|----------:|:----------
  |       34,590,013.00 |               28.91 |    0.0% |  812,669,269.00 |  148,360,642.50 |  5.478 |  18,356,853.00 |    0.2% |      0.76 | `WalletAvailableCoins`
  |            3,193.46 |          313,139.91 |    0.4% |       96,868.06 |       13,731.82 |  7.054 |      26,238.01 |    0.1% |      0.01 | `WalletBalanceClean`
  |           26,871.18 |           37,214.59 |    3.3% |      768,179.50 |      115,544.39 |  6.648 |     154,171.09 |    0.1% |      0.01 | `WalletBalanceDirty`
  |            3,177.30 |          314,732.47 |    0.2% |       96,868.06 |       13,646.20 |  7.099 |      26,238.01 |    0.1% |      0.01 | `WalletBalanceMine`
  |               10.73 |       93,186,952.53 |    0.1% |          157.00 |           46.14 |  3.403 |          36.00 |    0.0% |      0.01 | `WalletBalanceWatch`
  |      590,497,920.00 |                1.69 |    0.1% |12,761,692,005.00 |2,536,899,595.00 |  5.030 | 129,124,399.00 |    0.7% |      6.50 | `WalletCreateEncrypted`
  |      182,929,529.00 |                5.47 |    0.0% |4,199,271,397.00 |  785,477,302.00 |  5.346 |  75,363,377.00 |    1.1% |      2.01 | `WalletCreatePlain`
  |          699,337.20 |            1,429.93 |    0.7% |   18,054,294.00 |    3,005,072.20 |  6.008 |     387,756.60 |    0.3% |      0.04 | `WalletCreateTxUseOnlyPresetInputs`
  |       32,068,583.80 |               31.18 |    0.5% |  562,026,110.00 |  137,457,635.60 |  4.089 |  90,667,459.40 |    0.3% |      1.78 | `WalletCreateTxUsePresetInputsAndCoinSelection`
  |               36.62 |       27,306,578.40 |    0.5% |          951.00 |          157.05 |  6.056 |         133.00 |    0.0% |      0.01 | `WalletIsMineDescriptors`
  |               35.00 |       28,569,989.42 |    0.7% |          937.00 |          150.33 |  6.233 |         129.00 |    0.0% |      0.01 | `WalletIsMineMigratedDescriptors`
  |      203,284,889.00 |                4.92 |    0.0% |4,622,691,895.00 |  872,875,275.00 |  5.296 |  90,345,002.00 |    1.2% |      1.02 | `WalletLoadingDescriptors`
  |    1,165,766,084.00 |                0.86 |    0.0% |24,139,316,211.00 |5,005,218,705.00 |  4.823 |2,664,455,775.00 |    0.1% |      1.17 | `WalletMigration`

  PR:

  |               ns/op |                op/s |    err% |          ins/op |          cyc/op |    IPC |         bra/op |   miss% |     total | benchmark
  |--------------------:|--------------------:|--------:|----------------:|----------------:|-------:|---------------:|--------:|----------:|:----------
  |       33,975,750.50 |               29.43 |    0.1% |  794,719,150.50 |  145,763,550.00 |  5.452 |  16,036,630.50 |    0.2% |      0.75 | `WalletAvailableCoins`
  |            2,442.01 |          409,498.46 |    0.2% |       60,782.04 |       10,500.60 |  5.788 |       9,492.01 |    0.3% |      0.01 | `WalletBalanceClean`
  |            2,763.12 |          361,909.21 |    0.2% |       61,493.05 |       11,859.48 |  5.185 |       9,625.01 |    0.2% |      0.01 | `WalletBalanceDirty`
  |            2,347.98 |          425,898.72 |    0.3% |       60,782.04 |       10,082.73 |  6.028 |       9,492.01 |    0.2% |      0.01 | `WalletBalanceMine`
  |               11.67 |       85,654,630.36 |    0.2% |          176.00 |           50.18 |  3.508 |          40.00 |    0.0% |      0.01 | `WalletBalanceWatch`
  |      590,119,519.00 |                1.69 |    0.1% |12,754,398,258.00 |2,534,998,522.00 |  5.031 | 129,078,027.00 |    0.7% |      6.50 | `WalletCreateEncrypted`
  |      183,124,790.00 |                5.46 |    0.1% |4,199,212,926.00 |  786,323,886.00 |  5.340 |  75,354,437.00 |    1.1% |      2.02 | `WalletCreatePlain`
  |          669,643.00 |            1,493.33 |    0.1% |   17,213,904.20 |    2,877,336.40 |  5.983 |     394,292.80 |    0.3% |      0.04 | `WalletCreateTxUseOnlyPresetInputs`
  |       26,205,987.80 |               38.16 |    0.8% |  365,551,340.80 |  112,376,905.20 |  3.253 |  65,684,276.20 |    0.4% |      1.44 | `WalletCreateTxUsePresetInputsAndCoinSelection`
  |               34.75 |       28,778,846.38 |    0.1% |          937.00 |          149.41 |  6.271 |         129.00 |    0.0% |      0.01 | `WalletIsMineDescriptors`
  |               29.91 |       33,428,072.85 |    0.2% |          920.00 |          128.63 |  7.152 |         126.00 |    0.0% |      0.01 | `WalletIsMineMigratedDescriptors`
  |      202,437,985.00 |                4.94 |    0.1% |4,626,686,256.00 |  869,439,274.00 |  5.321 |  90,961,305.00 |    1.1% |      1.02 | `WalletLoadingDescriptors`
  |    1,158,394,152.00 |                0.86 |    0.0% |24,143,589,972.00 |4,971,946,380.00 |  4.856 |2,665,355,654.00 |    0.1% |      1.16 | `WalletMigration`

ACKs for top commit:
  davidgumberg:
    untested reACK 215e599
  murchandamus:
    reACK 215e5999e2
  ishaanam:
    reACK 215e5999e2
  w0xlt:
    reACK 215e5999e2

Tree-SHA512: d6b929de56f67930678db654e46f15fb71008390189c701a026b2d76af8f14a7c9769e49835ce7e2b6515d2934a77aad8de0b1a82231a2e1de5337de25db9629
2025-07-01 08:56:21 -04:00
..

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.

This directory contains the following sets of tests:

  • fuzz A runner to execute all fuzz targets from /src/test/fuzz.
  • functional which test the functionality of bitcoind and bitcoin-qt by interacting with them through the RPC and P2P interfaces.
  • lint which perform various static analysis checks.

The fuzz tests, functional tests and lint scripts can be run as explained in the sections below.

Running tests locally

Before tests can be run locally, Bitcoin Core must be built. See the building instructions for help.

The following examples assume that the build directory is named build.

Fuzz tests

See /doc/fuzzing.md

Functional tests

Dependencies and prerequisites

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

On Windows the PYTHONUTF8 environment variable must be set to 1:

set PYTHONUTF8=1

Running the tests

Individual tests can be run by directly calling the test script, e.g.:

build/test/functional/feature_rbf.py

or can be run through the test_runner harness, eg:

build/test/functional/test_runner.py feature_rbf.py

You can run any combination (incl. duplicates) of tests by calling:

build/test/functional/test_runner.py <testname1> <testname2> <testname3> ...

Wildcard test names can be passed, if the paths are coherent and the test runner is called from a bash shell or similar that does the globbing. For example, to run all the wallet tests:

build/test/functional/test_runner.py test/functional/wallet*
functional/test_runner.py functional/wallet*  # (called from the build/test/ directory)
test_runner.py wallet*  # (called from the build/test/functional/ directory)

but not

build/test/functional/test_runner.py wallet*

Combinations of wildcards can be passed:

build/test/functional/test_runner.py ./test/functional/tool* test/functional/mempool*
test_runner.py tool* mempool*

Run the regression test suite with:

build/test/functional/test_runner.py

Run all possible tests with

build/test/functional/test_runner.py --extended

In order to run backwards compatibility tests, first run:

test/get_previous_releases.py -b

to download the necessary previous release binaries.

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 build/test/functional/test_runner.py -h to see them all.

Speed up test runs with a RAM disk

If you have available RAM on your system you can create a RAM disk to use as the cache and tmp directories for the functional tests in order to speed them up. Speed-up amount varies on each system (and according to your RAM speed and other variables), but a 2-3x speed-up is not uncommon.

Linux

To create a 4 GiB RAM disk at /mnt/tmp/:

sudo mkdir -p /mnt/tmp
sudo mount -t tmpfs -o size=4g tmpfs /mnt/tmp/

Configure the size of the RAM disk using the size= option. The size of the RAM disk needed is relative to the number of concurrent jobs the test suite runs. For example running the test suite with --jobs=100 might need a 4 GiB RAM disk, but running with --jobs=32 will only need a 2.5 GiB RAM disk.

To use, run the test suite specifying the RAM disk as the cachedir and tmpdir:

build/test/functional/test_runner.py --cachedir=/mnt/tmp/cache --tmpdir=/mnt/tmp

Once finished with the tests and the disk, and to free the RAM, simply unmount the disk:

sudo umount /mnt/tmp

macOS

To create a 4 GiB RAM disk named "ramdisk" at /Volumes/ramdisk/:

diskutil erasevolume HFS+ ramdisk $(hdiutil attach -nomount ram://8388608)

Configure the RAM disk size, expressed as the number of blocks, at the end of the command (4096 MiB * 2048 blocks/MiB = 8388608 blocks for 4 GiB). To run the tests using the RAM disk:

build/test/functional/test_runner.py --cachedir=/Volumes/ramdisk/cache --tmpdir=/Volumes/ramdisk/tmp

To unmount:

umount /Volumes/ramdisk

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 build/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 build/test/cache
killall bitcoind
Test logging

The tests contain logging at five different levels (DEBUG, INFO, WARNING, ERROR and CRITICAL). From within your functional tests you can log to these different levels using the logger included in the test_framework, e.g. self.log.debug(object). 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 by our CI (Continuous Integration), no logs are output to the console. However, if a test fails, the test_framework.log and bitcoind debug.logs will all be dumped to the console to help troubleshooting.

These log files can be located under the test data directory (which is always printed in the first line of test output):

  • <test data directory>/test_framework.log
  • <test data directory>/node<node number>/regtest/debug.log.

The node number identifies the relevant test node, starting from node0, which corresponds to its position in the nodes list of the specific test, e.g. self.nodes[0].

To change the level of logs output to the console, use the -l command line argument.

test_framework.log and bitcoind debug.logs 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:

build/test/functional/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 (or lldb on macOS) to attach to the process and debug.

For instance, to attach to self.node[1] during a run you can get the pid of the node within pdb.

(pdb) self.node[1].process.pid

Alternatively, you can find the pid by inspecting the temp folder for the specific test you are running. The path to that folder is printed at the beginning of every test run:

2017-06-27 14:13:56.686000 TestFramework (INFO): Initializing test directory /tmp/user/1000/testo9vsdjo3

Use the path to find the pid file in the temp folder:

cat /tmp/user/1000/testo9vsdjo3/node1/regtest/bitcoind.pid

Then you can use the pid to start gdb:

gdb /home/example/bitcoind <pid>

Note: gdb attach step may require ptrace_scope to be modified, or sudo preceding the gdb. See this link for considerations: https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/security/Yama.txt

Often while debugging RPC calls in functional tests, the test might time out before the process can return a response. Use --timeout-factor 0 to disable all RPC timeouts for that particular functional test. Ex: build/test/functional/wallet_hd.py --timeout-factor 0.

Profiling

An easy way to profile node performance during functional tests is provided for Linux platforms using perf.

Perf will sample the running node and will generate profile data in the node's datadir. The profile data can then be presented using perf report or a graphical tool like hotspot.

To generate a profile during test suite runs, use the --perf flag.

To see render the output to text, run

perf report -i /path/to/datadir/send-big-msgs.perf.data.xxxx --stdio | c++filt | less

For ways to generate more granular profiles, see the README in test/functional.

Lint tests

See the README in test/lint.

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.