`sanitize` could be misused in two ways:
* accidentally modifying the addresses in the address book itself
* forgetting to sanitize new fields added to `MetaAddr`
This change prevents accidental modification by taking `&self`, and
explicitly creates a new sanitized `MetaAddr` with all fields listed.
Design:
- Add a `PeerAddrState` to each `MetaAddr`
- Use a single peer set for all peers, regardless of state
- Implement time-based liveness as an `AddressBook` method, rather than
a `PeerAddrState` variant
- Delete `AddressBook.by_state`
Implementation:
- Simplify `AddressBook` changes using `update` and `take` modifier
methods
- Simplify the `AddressBook` iterator implementation, replacing it with
methods that are more obviously correct
- Consistently collect peer set metrics
Documentation:
- Expand and update the peer set documentation
We can optimise later, but for now we want simple code that is more
obviously correct.
* network: move gossiped peer selection logic into address book.
* network: return BoxService from init.
* zebrad: add note on why we truncate thegossiped peer list
Co-authored-by: Jane Lusby <jlusby42@gmail.com>
* Remove unused .rustfmt.toml
Many of these options are never actually loaded by our CI because of a channel
mismatch, where they're not applied on stable but only on nightly (see the logs
from a rustfmt job). This means that we can get different settings when
running `cargo fmt` on the nightly and stable channels, which was causing a CI
failure on this PR. Reverting back to the default rustfmt settings avoids this
problem and keeps us in line with upstream rustfmt. There's no loss to us
since we were using the defaults anyways.
Co-authored-by: Jane Lusby <jlusby42@gmail.com>
The previous implementation failed when timestamps were duplicated between
peers, because there was not a 1-1 relationship between timestamps and peers.
The disconnected_peers() function allows us to prevent duplicate
connections without maintaining shared state between the peerset and the
dial-additional-peers task.
This allows us to hide the `TimestampCollector` and to expose only the
address book data required by the inbound request service. It also lets
us have a common data structure (the `AddressBook`) for collecting peer
information that can be used to manage information that other peers
report to us.