grin/core/tests/transaction.rs

240 lines
7.9 KiB
Rust

// Copyright 2021 The Grin Developers
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
//! Transaction integration tests
pub mod common;
use crate::common::tx1i10_v2_compatible;
use crate::core::core::transaction::{self, Error};
use crate::core::core::{
FeeFields, KernelFeatures, Output, OutputFeatures, Transaction, TxKernel, Weighting,
};
use crate::core::global;
use crate::core::libtx::proof::{self, ProofBuilder};
use crate::core::libtx::{build, tx_fee};
use crate::core::{consensus, ser};
use grin_core as core;
use keychain::{ExtKeychain, Keychain};
// We use json serialization between wallet->node when pushing transactions to the network.
// This test ensures we exercise this serialization/deserialization code.
#[test]
fn test_transaction_json_ser_deser() {
let tx1 = tx1i10_v2_compatible();
let value = serde_json::to_value(&tx1).unwrap();
println!("{:?}", value);
assert!(value["offset"].is_string());
assert_eq!(value["body"]["inputs"][0]["features"], "Plain");
assert!(value["body"]["inputs"][0]["commit"].is_string());
assert_eq!(value["body"]["outputs"][0]["features"], "Plain");
assert!(value["body"]["outputs"][0]["commit"].is_string());
assert!(value["body"]["outputs"][0]["proof"].is_string());
// Note: Tx kernel "features" serialize in a slightly unexpected way.
assert_eq!(value["body"]["kernels"][0]["features"]["Plain"]["fee"], 2);
assert!(value["body"]["kernels"][0]["excess"].is_string());
assert!(value["body"]["kernels"][0]["excess_sig"].is_string());
let tx2: Transaction = serde_json::from_value(value).unwrap();
assert_eq!(tx1, tx2);
let str = serde_json::to_string(&tx1).unwrap();
println!("{}", str);
let tx2: Transaction = serde_json::from_str(&str).unwrap();
assert_eq!(tx1, tx2);
}
#[test]
fn test_output_ser_deser() {
let keychain = ExtKeychain::from_random_seed(false).unwrap();
let key_id = ExtKeychain::derive_key_id(1, 1, 0, 0, 0);
let switch = keychain::SwitchCommitmentType::Regular;
let commit = keychain.commit(5, &key_id, switch).unwrap();
let builder = ProofBuilder::new(&keychain);
let proof = proof::create(&keychain, &builder, 5, &key_id, switch, commit, None).unwrap();
let out = Output::new(OutputFeatures::Plain, commit, proof);
let mut vec = vec![];
ser::serialize_default(&mut vec, &out).expect("serialized failed");
let dout: Output = ser::deserialize_default(&mut &vec[..]).unwrap();
assert_eq!(dout.features(), OutputFeatures::Plain);
assert_eq!(dout.commitment(), out.commitment());
assert_eq!(dout.proof, out.proof);
}
// Test coverage for verifying cut-through during transaction validation.
// It is not valid for a transaction to spend an output and produce a new output with the same commitment.
// This test covers the case where a plain output is spent, producing a plain output with the same commitment.
#[test]
fn test_verify_cut_through_plain() -> Result<(), Error> {
global::set_local_chain_type(global::ChainTypes::UserTesting);
let keychain = ExtKeychain::from_random_seed(false)?;
let key_id1 = ExtKeychain::derive_key_id(1, 1, 0, 0, 0);
let key_id2 = ExtKeychain::derive_key_id(1, 2, 0, 0, 0);
let key_id3 = ExtKeychain::derive_key_id(1, 3, 0, 0, 0);
let builder = proof::ProofBuilder::new(&keychain);
let mut tx = build::transaction(
KernelFeatures::Plain {
fee: FeeFields::zero(),
},
&[
build::input(10, key_id1.clone()),
build::input(10, key_id2.clone()),
build::output(10, key_id1.clone()),
build::output(6, key_id2.clone()),
build::output(4, key_id3.clone()),
],
&keychain,
&builder,
)
.expect("valid tx");
// Transaction should fail validation due to cut-through.
assert_eq!(
tx.validate(Weighting::AsTransaction),
Err(Error::CutThrough),
);
// Transaction should fail lightweight "read" validation due to cut-through.
assert_eq!(tx.validate_read(), Err(Error::CutThrough));
// Apply cut-through to eliminate the offending input and output.
let mut inputs: Vec<_> = tx.inputs().into();
let mut outputs = tx.outputs().to_vec();
let (inputs, outputs, _, _) = transaction::cut_through(&mut inputs[..], &mut outputs[..])?;
tx.body = tx
.body
.replace_inputs(inputs.into())
.replace_outputs(outputs);
// Transaction validates successfully after applying cut-through.
tx.validate(Weighting::AsTransaction)?;
// Transaction validates via lightweight "read" validation as well.
tx.validate_read()?;
Ok(())
}
// Test coverage for verifying cut-through during transaction validation.
// It is not valid for a transaction to spend an output and produce a new output with the same commitment.
// This test covers the case where a coinbase output is spent, producing a plain output with the same commitment.
#[test]
fn test_verify_cut_through_coinbase() -> Result<(), Error> {
global::set_local_chain_type(global::ChainTypes::UserTesting);
let keychain = ExtKeychain::from_random_seed(false)?;
let key_id1 = ExtKeychain::derive_key_id(1, 1, 0, 0, 0);
let key_id2 = ExtKeychain::derive_key_id(1, 2, 0, 0, 0);
let key_id3 = ExtKeychain::derive_key_id(1, 3, 0, 0, 0);
let builder = ProofBuilder::new(&keychain);
let mut tx = build::transaction(
KernelFeatures::Plain {
fee: FeeFields::zero(),
},
&[
build::coinbase_input(consensus::REWARD, key_id1.clone()),
build::coinbase_input(consensus::REWARD, key_id2.clone()),
build::output(60_000_000_000, key_id1.clone()),
build::output(50_000_000_000, key_id2.clone()),
build::output(10_000_000_000, key_id3.clone()),
],
&keychain,
&builder,
)
.expect("valid tx");
// Transaction should fail validation due to cut-through.
assert_eq!(
tx.validate(Weighting::AsTransaction),
Err(Error::CutThrough),
);
// Transaction should fail lightweight "read" validation due to cut-through.
assert_eq!(tx.validate_read(), Err(Error::CutThrough));
// Apply cut-through to eliminate the offending input and output.
let mut inputs: Vec<_> = tx.inputs().into();
let mut outputs = tx.outputs().to_vec();
let (inputs, outputs, _, _) = transaction::cut_through(&mut inputs[..], &mut outputs[..])?;
tx.body = tx
.body
.replace_inputs(inputs.into())
.replace_outputs(outputs);
// Transaction validates successfully after applying cut-through.
tx.validate(Weighting::AsTransaction)?;
// Transaction validates via lightweight "read" validation as well.
tx.validate_read()?;
Ok(())
}
// Test coverage for FeeFields
#[test]
fn test_fee_fields() -> Result<(), Error> {
global::set_local_chain_type(global::ChainTypes::UserTesting);
global::set_local_accept_fee_base(500_000);
let keychain = ExtKeychain::from_random_seed(false)?;
let key_id1 = ExtKeychain::derive_key_id(1, 1, 0, 0, 0);
let builder = ProofBuilder::new(&keychain);
let mut tx = build::transaction(
KernelFeatures::Plain {
fee: FeeFields::new(1, 42).unwrap(),
},
&[
build::coinbase_input(consensus::REWARD, key_id1.clone()),
build::output(60_000_000_000 - 84 - 42 - 21, key_id1.clone()),
],
&keychain,
&builder,
)
.expect("valid tx");
assert_eq!(tx.accept_fee(), (1 * 1 + 1 * 21 + 1 * 3) * 500_000);
assert_eq!(tx.fee(), 42);
assert_eq!(tx.shifted_fee(), 21);
tx.body.kernels.append(&mut vec![
TxKernel::with_features(KernelFeatures::Plain {
fee: FeeFields::new(2, 84).unwrap(),
}),
TxKernel::with_features(KernelFeatures::Plain { fee: 21.into() }),
]);
assert_eq!(tx.fee(), 147);
assert_eq!(tx.shifted_fee(), 36);
assert_eq!(tx.aggregate_fee_fields(), FeeFields::new(2, 147));
assert_eq!(tx_fee(1, 1, 3), 15_500_000);
Ok(())
}