This week’s short newsletter summarizes a Bitcoin Core PR Review Club meeting and describes an update to Rust Bitcoin.

News

No significant news this week. Topics we’ve previously covered, including OP_CHECKTEMPLATEVERIFY and SIGHASH_ANYPREVOUT, did receive many additional comments—but much of the conversation was either non-technical or about minor details that we don’t consider broadly relevant. Several interesting posts to the developer mailing lists were received while this issue of the newsletter was being edited; we will cover them in detail next week.

Bitcoin Core PR Review Club

In this monthly section, we summarize a recent Bitcoin Core PR Review Club meeting, highlighting some of the important questions and answers. Click on a question below to see a summary of the answer from the meeting.

Improve Indices on pruned nodes via prune blockers is a PR by Fabian Jahr to introduce a new method for deciding when it is safe to prune a block from block storage. This new method enables pruning nodes to maintain a Coinstats index and removes the validation module’s dependency on index-related code.

  • What indexes currently exist in Bitcoin Core, and what do they do?

    A node may maintain up to three optional indexes to help efficiently retrieve data from disk. The transaction index (-txindex) maps transaction hashes to the block in which transaction can be found. The block filter index (-blockfilterindex) indexes BIP157 block filters for each block. The coin stats index (-coinstatsindex) stores statistics on the UTXO set. 

  • What is a circular dependency? Why do we want to avoid them when possible?

    A circular dependency between two code modules exists when both cannot be used without the other. While circular dependencies are not a security issue, they signify poor code organization and encumber development by making it more difficult to build, use, and test specific modules or functionality in isolation. 

  • How do the prune blockers introduced in this commit work?

    The PR introduces a list of ‘prune locks’, the height of the earliest block that must be kept for each index. In CChainState::FlushStateToDisk, when the node decides which blocks to prune, it avoids pruning blocks higher than those heights. Each time an index updates its view of the best block index, the prune locks are also updated. 

  • What are the benefits and costs of this approach to pruning compared to the old one?

    Previously, the logic in CChainState::FlushStateToDisk would query the indexes for their best height in order to learn which block to stop pruning at; the indexes and validation logic depended on one another. Now, the prune locks are calculated proactively, and thus may be calculated more often, but no longer require validation to query the indexes. 

Notable code and documentation changes

Notable changes this week in Bitcoin Core, Core Lightning, Eclair, LDK, LND, libsecp256k1, Hardware Wallet Interface (HWI), Rust Bitcoin, BTCPay Server, BDK, Bitcoin Improvement Proposals (BIPs), and Lightning BOLTs.

  • Rust Bitcoin #716 Added amount::Display, a configurable Display type for denominations or other user-facing amounts. This patch reduces all representations of numbers to the minimum width by default, thereby reducing the use of superfluous zeros that caused BIP21 URIs to be needlessly longer, which often made QR codes larger or harder to scan than necessary.