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18 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
TheCharlatan
80e535c95a
wallet2: adapt to deterministic unlock time 2020-09-15 11:40:31 +00:00
SomaticFanatic
5ef0607da6 Update copyright year to 2020
Update copyright year to 2020
2020-05-06 22:36:54 -04:00
moneromooo-monero
2899379791
daemon, wallet: new pay for RPC use system
Daemons intended for public use can be set up to require payment
in the form of hashes in exchange for RPC service. This enables
public daemons to receive payment for their work over a large
number of calls. This system behaves similarly to a pool, so
payment takes the form of valid blocks every so often, yielding
a large one off payment, rather than constant micropayments.

This system can also be used by third parties as a "paywall"
layer, where users of a service can pay for use by mining Monero
to the service provider's address. An example of this for web
site access is Primo, a Monero mining based website "paywall":
https://github.com/selene-kovri/primo

This has some advantages:
 - incentive to run a node providing RPC services, thereby promoting the availability of third party nodes for those who can't run their own
 - incentive to run your own node instead of using a third party's, thereby promoting decentralization
 - decentralized: payment is done between a client and server, with no third party needed
 - private: since the system is "pay as you go", you don't need to identify yourself to claim a long lived balance
 - no payment occurs on the blockchain, so there is no extra transactional load
 - one may mine with a beefy server, and use those credits from a phone, by reusing the client ID (at the cost of some privacy)
 - no barrier to entry: anyone may run a RPC node, and your expected revenue depends on how much work you do
 - Sybil resistant: if you run 1000 idle RPC nodes, you don't magically get more revenue
 - no large credit balance maintained on servers, so they have no incentive to exit scam
 - you can use any/many node(s), since there's little cost in switching servers
 - market based prices: competition between servers to lower costs
 - incentive for a distributed third party node system: if some public nodes are overused/slow, traffic can move to others
 - increases network security
 - helps counteract mining pools' share of the network hash rate
 - zero incentive for a payer to "double spend" since a reorg does not give any money back to the miner

And some disadvantages:
 - low power clients will have difficulty mining (but one can optionally mine in advance and/or with a faster machine)
 - payment is "random", so a server might go a long time without a block before getting one
 - a public node's overall expected payment may be small

Public nodes are expected to compete to find a suitable level for
cost of service.

The daemon can be set up this way to require payment for RPC services:

  monerod --rpc-payment-address 4xxxxxx \
    --rpc-payment-credits 250 --rpc-payment-difficulty 1000

These values are an example only.

The --rpc-payment-difficulty switch selects how hard each "share" should
be, similar to a mining pool. The higher the difficulty, the fewer
shares a client will find.
The --rpc-payment-credits switch selects how many credits are awarded
for each share a client finds.
Considering both options, clients will be awarded credits/difficulty
credits for every hash they calculate. For example, in the command line
above, 0.25 credits per hash. A client mining at 100 H/s will therefore
get an average of 25 credits per second.
For reference, in the current implementation, a credit is enough to
sync 20 blocks, so a 100 H/s client that's just starting to use Monero
and uses this daemon will be able to sync 500 blocks per second.

The wallet can be set to automatically mine if connected to a daemon
which requires payment for RPC usage. It will try to keep a balance
of 50000 credits, stopping mining when it's at this level, and starting
again as credits are spent. With the example above, a new client will
mine this much credits in about half an hour, and this target is enough
to sync 500000 blocks (currently about a third of the monero blockchain).

There are three new settings in the wallet:

 - credits-target: this is the amount of credits a wallet will try to
reach before stopping mining. The default of 0 means 50000 credits.

 - auto-mine-for-rpc-payment-threshold: this controls the minimum
credit rate which the wallet considers worth mining for. If the
daemon credits less than this ratio, the wallet will consider mining
to be not worth it. In the example above, the rate is 0.25

 - persistent-rpc-client-id: if set, this allows the wallet to reuse
a client id across runs. This means a public node can tell a wallet
that's connecting is the same as one that connected previously, but
allows a wallet to keep their credit balance from one run to the
other. Since the wallet only mines to keep a small credit balance,
this is not normally worth doing. However, someone may want to mine
on a fast server, and use that credit balance on a low power device
such as a phone. If left unset, a new client ID is generated at
each wallet start, for privacy reasons.

To mine and use a credit balance on two different devices, you can
use the --rpc-client-secret-key switch. A wallet's client secret key
can be found using the new rpc_payments command in the wallet.
Note: anyone knowing your RPC client secret key is able to use your
credit balance.

The wallet has a few new commands too:

 - start_mining_for_rpc: start mining to acquire more credits,
regardless of the auto mining settings
 - stop_mining_for_rpc: stop mining to acquire more credits
 - rpc_payments: display information about current credits with
the currently selected daemon

The node has an extra command:

 - rpc_payments: display information about clients and their
balances

The node will forget about any balance for clients which have
been inactive for 6 months. Balances carry over on node restart.
2019-10-25 09:34:38 +00:00
moneromooo-monero
91f4c7f45f
Make difficulty 128 bit instead of 64 bit
Based on Boolberry work by:
  jahrsg <jahr@jahr.me>
  cr.zoidberg <crypto.zoidberg@gmail.com>
2019-03-24 21:03:19 +00:00
Riccardo Spagni
848591c4d8
Merge pull request #5190
551104fb daemon: add --public-node mode, RPC port propagation over P2P (xiphon)
2019-03-17 17:56:04 +02:00
binaryFate
1f2930ce0b Update 2019 copyright 2019-03-05 22:05:34 +01:00
xiphon
551104fbf1 daemon: add --public-node mode, RPC port propagation over P2P 2019-02-25 02:40:23 +03:00
moneromooo-monero
b750fb27b0
Pruning
The blockchain prunes seven eighths of prunable tx data.
This saves about two thirds of the blockchain size, while
keeping the node useful as a sync source for an eighth
of the blockchain.

No other data is currently pruned.

There are three ways to prune a blockchain:

- run monerod with --prune-blockchain
- run "prune_blockchain" in the monerod console
- run the monero-blockchain-prune utility

The first two will prune in place. Due to how LMDB works, this
will not reduce the blockchain size on disk. Instead, it will
mark parts of the file as free, so that future data will use
that free space, causing the file to not grow until free space
grows scarce.

The third way will create a second database, a pruned copy of
the original one. Since this is a new file, this one will be
smaller than the original one.

Once the database is pruned, it will stay pruned as it syncs.
That is, there is no need to use --prune-blockchain again, etc.
2019-01-22 20:30:51 +00:00
Jethro Grassie
517f25efd1
rpc: add version to get_info 2018-11-21 12:56:34 -05:00
Lee Clagett
6097472a19 Update ZMQ fee estimate and add ZMQ output distribution 2018-10-23 23:46:31 -04:00
moneromooo-monero
5ffb2ff9b7
v8: per byte fee, pad bulletproofs, fixed 11 ring size 2018-09-11 13:38:07 +00:00
Lee Clagett
4616cf2641 Fixed ZMQ-RPC for transactions and GET_BLOCKS_FAST 2018-08-02 07:30:20 +00:00
victorsintnicolaas
9e1403e155 update get_info RPC and bump RPC version 2018-06-29 10:06:18 +02:00
stoffu
af773211cb
Stagenet 2018-03-05 11:55:05 +09:00
xmr-eric
18216f19dd Update 2018 copyright 2018-01-26 10:03:20 -05:00
moneromooo-monero
ccf53a566c
track double spending in the txpool
Transactions in the txpool are marked when another transaction
is seen double spending one or more of its inputs.
This is then exposed wherever appropriate.

Note that being marked with this "double spend seen" flag does
NOT mean this transaction IS a double spend and will never be
mined: it just means that the network has seen at least another
transaction spending at least one of the same inputs, so care
should be taken to wait for a few confirmations before acting
upon that transaction (ie, mostly of use for merchants wanting
to accept unconfirmed transactions).
2017-11-06 00:05:44 +00:00
Thomas Winget
0299cb77ca
Fix various oversights/bugs in ZMQ RPC server code
- Add some RPC commands (and touch up a couple others)
- some bounds checking
- some better pointer management
- const correctness and error handling

-- Thanks @vtnerd for type help with serialization and CMake changes
2017-09-05 12:20:40 -04:00
Thomas Winget
77986023c3
json serialization for rpc-relevant monero types
Structured {de-,}serialization methods for (many new) types
which are used for requests or responses in the RPC.

New types include RPC requests and responses, and structs which compose
types within those.

# Conflicts:
#	src/cryptonote_core/blockchain.cpp
2017-09-05 12:20:27 -04:00