A new config API is introduced, and ~all of the codebase is adapted to it.
The old API is kept but mainly only for dynamic usage where its extra flexibility is needed.
Using examples, the old config API looked this:
```
>>> config.get("request_expiry", 86400)
604800
>>> config.set_key("request_expiry", 86400)
>>>
```
The new config API instead:
```
>>> config.WALLET_PAYREQ_EXPIRY_SECONDS
604800
>>> config.WALLET_PAYREQ_EXPIRY_SECONDS = 86400
>>>
```
The old API operated on arbitrary string keys, the new one uses
a static ~enum-like list of variables.
With the new API:
- there is a single centralised list of config variables, as opposed to
these being scattered all over
- no more duplication of default values (in the getters)
- there is now some (minimal for now) type-validation/conversion for
the config values
closes https://github.com/spesmilo/electrum/pull/5640
closes https://github.com/spesmilo/electrum/pull/5649
Note: there is yet a third API added here, for certain niche/abstract use-cases,
where we need a reference to the config variable itself.
It should only be used when needed:
```
>>> var = config.cv.WALLET_PAYREQ_EXPIRY_SECONDS
>>> var
<ConfigVarWithConfig key='request_expiry'>
>>> var.get()
604800
>>> var.set(3600)
>>> var.get_default_value()
86400
>>> var.is_set()
True
>>> var.is_modifiable()
True
```
follow-up to 4346d2fc76
It's not just about the Synchronizer, the Verifier should not starve other jobs either...
(previously I thought the Verifier is not too important as it only makes
requests if there are new txs; however with LNWatcher its progress is not persisted)
after a reorg, in a many fork/orphan chains scenario,
we would sometimes not undo SPV for enough blocks
functions in blockchain.py somewhat based on kyuupichan/bitcoinX@5126bd15ef0c9ba36e17a455513452ebed7b2328
The --skipmerklecheck optional flag makes Electrum tolerate invalid
merkle proofs from the server. This is useful for building Electrum
servers that need a minimum amount of storage, though of course users
should only enable it if they completely trust the connected server.
If auto_connect is enabled, allow jumping between forks too.
(Previously auto_connect was only switching servers on a given fork,
not across forks)
If there is a preferred fork set, jump to that (and stay);
if there isn't, always jump to the longest fork.
blockchain.read_header is expensive. do cheap tests first
on a wallet with 11k txns, that is synced except for spv proofs,
finishing sync now takes 80 sec instead of 180 sec
related: 41e088693d
If our guess of a txn getting confirmed at the same height in the new chain
as it was at in the old chain is incorrect, there is a race between the
verifier and the synchronizer. If the verifier wins, the exception will cause
us to disconnect.
fixes race between verifier and block header download.
scenario: client starts, connects to server. while client was offline,
there was a reorg. txn A was not mined in the old chain, but is mined
after reorg. client subscribes to addresses and starts downloading headers,
concurrently. server tells client txn A is mined at height H >= reorg height.
client sees it has block header at height H, asks for SPV proof for txn A.
but the header the client has is still the old one, the verifier was faster
than the block header download (race...). client receives proof. proof is
incorrect for old header. client disconnects.
This makes the method easier to read.
Skip negative tx heights too. A transaction height can be negative too, see the
wallet modules TX_HEIGHT_LOCAL and TX_HEIGHT_UNCONF_PARENT constants.