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996 lines
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996 lines
70 KiB
ReStructuredText
Release notes
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=============
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.. _release_notes_v4_0:
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Release 4.0 (Unreleased)
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------------------------
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Significant Changes in 4.0
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* **Retirement of non-elliptic Diffie-Hellman for TLS**
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The TLS_DHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256 family of ciphers is retired from the list of allowed ciphers for TLS
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as it is a legacy cipher family not supported by all native SSL/TLS implementations.
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* **Reference states**:
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Introduced the concept of "reference input states". A reference input state is a ``ContractState`` which can be referred
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to in a transaction by the contracts of input and output states but whose contract is not executed as part of the
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transaction verification process and is not consumed when the transaction is committed to the ledger but is checked
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for "current-ness". In other words, the contract logic isn't run for the referencing transaction only. It's still a
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normal state when it occurs in an input or output position.
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* **Added auto-acceptance for network parameters updates**
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Added auto-accepting for a subset of network parameters, negating the need for a node operator to manually run an accept
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command on every parameter update. This behaviour can be turned off via the node configuration.
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* **CorDapp JAR Signing and Sealing**:
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CorDapps built by corda-gradle-plugins are now signed and sealed JAR files.
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Signing can be configured or disabled, and it defaults to using the Corda development certificate.
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Signed CorDapps facilitate signature constraints checks.
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Sealed JARs require a unique package to be shipped within a single CorDapp JAR. Sealing can be disabled.
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<< MORE TO COME >>
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.. _release_notes_v3_3:
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Release 3.3
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-----------
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Corda 3.3 brings together many small improvements, fixes, and community contributions to deliver a stable and polished release
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of Corda. Where both the 3.1 and 3.2 releases delivered a smaller number of critical bug fixes addressing immediate and impactful error conditions, 3.3
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addresses a much greater number of issues, both small and large, that have been found and fixed since the release of 3.0 back in March. Rolling up a great
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many improvements and polish to truly make the Corda experience just that much better.
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In addition to work undertaken by the main Corda development team, we've taken the opportunity in 3.3 to bring back many of the contributions made
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by community members from master onto the currently released stable branch. It has been said many times before, but the community and its members
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are the real life-blood of Corda and anyone who takes the time to contribute is a star in our eyes. Bringing that code into the current version we hope
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gives people the opportunity to see their work in action, and to help their fellow community members by having these contributions available in a
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supported release.
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Changes of Note
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* **Serialization fixes**
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Things "in the lab" always work so much better than they do in the wild, where everything you didn't think of is thrown at your code and a mockery
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is made of some dearly held assumptions. A great example of this is the serialization framework which delivers Corda's wire stability guarantee
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that was introduced in 3.0 and has subsequently been put to a rigorous test by our users. Corda 3.3 consolidates a great many fixes in that framework,
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both programmatically in terms of fixing bugs, but also in the documentation, hopefully making things clearer and easier to work with.
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* **Certificate Hierarchy**
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After consultation, collaboration, and discussion with industry experts, we have decided to alter the default Certificate Hierarchy (PKI) utilized by
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Corda and the Corda Network. To facilitate this, the nodes have had their certificate path verification logic made much more flexible. All existing
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certificate hierarchy, certificates, and networks will remain valid. The possibility now exists for nodes to recognize a deeper certificate chain and
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thus Compatibility Zone operators can deploy and adhere to the PKI standards they expect and are comfortable with.
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Practically speaking, the old code assumed a 3-level hierarchy of Root -> Intermediate CA (Doorman) -> Node, and this was hard coded. From 3.3 onward an
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arbitrary depth of certificate chain is supported. For the Corda Network, this means the introduction of an intermediate layer between the root and the
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signing certificates (Network Map and Doorman). This has the effect of allowing the root certificate to *always* be kept offline and never retrieved or
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used. Those new intermediate certificates can be used to generate, if ever needed, new signing certs without risking compromise of the root key.
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Special Thanks
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The Corda community is a vibrant and exciting ecosystem that spreads far outside the virtual walls of the
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R3 organisation. Without that community, and the most welcome contributions of its members, the Corda project
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would be a much poorer place.
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We're therefore happy to extend thanks to the following members of that community for their contributions
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* `Dan Newton <https://github.com/lankydan>`_ for a fix to cleanup node registration in the test framework. The changes can be found `here <https://github.com/corda/corda/commit/599aa709dd025a56e2c295cc9225ba2ee5b0fc9c>`_.
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* `Tushar Singh Bora <https://github.com/kid101>`_ for a number of `documentation tweaks <https://github.com/corda/corda/commit/279b8deaa6e1045fa4890ef179ee9a41c8a6406b>`_. In addition, some updates to the tutorial documentation `here <https://github.com/corda/corda/commit/37656a58f5fd6cad7a2fa1c08e887777b375cedd>`_.
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* `Jiachuan Li <https://github.com/lijiachuan1982>`_ for a number of corrections to our documentation. Those contributions can be found `here <https://github.com/corda/corda/commit/83a09885172f22ad4e03909d942b473bccb4e228>`_ and `here <https://github.com/corda/corda/commit/f23f2ee6966cf46a3f8b598e868393f9f2e610e7>`_.
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* `Yogesh <https://github.com/acetheultimate>`_ for a documentation tweak that can be see `here <https://github.com/corda/corda/commit/07e3ff502f620d5201a29cf12f686b50cd1cb17c>`_.
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* `Roman Plášil <https://github.com/Quiark>`_ for speeding up node shutdown when connecting to an http network map. This fix can be found `here <https://github.com/corda/corda/commit/ec1e40109d85d495b84cf4307fb8a7e34536f1d9>`_.
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* `renlulu <https://github.com/renlulu>`_ for a small `PR <https://github.com/corda/corda/commit/cda7c292437e228bd8df5c800f711d45a3d743e1>`_ to optimize some of the imports.
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* `cxyzhang0 <https://github.com/cxyzhang0>`_ for making the ``IdentitySyncFlow`` more useful. See `here <https://github.com/corda/corda/commit/a86c79e40ca15a8b95380608be81fe338d82b141>`_.
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* `Venelin Stoykov <https://github.com/vstoykov>`_ with updates to the `documentation <https://github.com/corda/corda/commit/4def8395b3bd100b2b0a3d2eecef5e20f0ec7f47>`_ around the progress tracker.
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* `Mohamed Amine Legheraba <https://github.com/MohamedLEGH>`_ for updates to the Azure documentation that can be seen `here <https://github.com/corda/corda/commit/14e9bf100d0b0236f65ee4ffd778f32307b9e519>`_.
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* `Stanly Johnson <https://github.com/stanly-johnson>`_ with a `fix <https://github.com/corda/corda/commit/f9a9bb19a7cc6d202446890e4e11bebd4a118cf3>`_ to the network bootstrapper.
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* `Tittu Varghese <https://github.com/tittuvarghese>`_ for adding a favicon to the docsite. This commit can be found `here <https://github.com/corda/corda/commit/cd8988865599261db45505060735880c3066792e>`_
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Issues Fixed
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~~~~~~~~~~~~
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* Refactoring ``DigitalSignatureWithCertPath`` for more performant storing of the certificate chain. [`CORDA-1995 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1995>`_]
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* The serializers class carpenter fails when superclass has double-size primitive field. [`Corda-1945 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/Corda-1945>`_]
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* If a second identity is mistakenly created the node will not start. [`CORDA-1811 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1811>`_]
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* Demobench profile load fails with stack dump. [`CORDA-1948 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1948>`_]
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* Deletes of NodeInfo can fail to propagate leading to infinite retries. [`CORDA-2029 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-2029>`_]
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* Copy all the certificates from the network-trust-store.jks file to the node's trust store. [`CORDA-2012 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-2012>`_]
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* Add SNI (Server Name Indication) header to TLS connections. [`CORDA-2001 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-2001>`_]
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* Fix duplicate index declaration in the Cash schema. [`CORDA-1952 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1952>`_]
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* Hello World Tutorial Page mismatch between code sample and explanatory text. [`CORDA-1950 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1950>`_]
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* Java Instructions to Invoke Hello World CorDapp are incorrect. [`CORDA-1949 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1949>`_]
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* Add ``VersionInfo`` to the ``NodeInfo`` submission request to the network map element of the Compatibility Zone. [`CORDA-1938 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1938>`_]
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* Rename current INTERMEDIATE_CA certificate role to DOORMAN_CA certificate role. [`CORDA-1934 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1934>`_]
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* Make node-side network map verification agnostic to the certificate hierarchy. [`CORDA-1932 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1932>`_]
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* Corda Shell incorrectly deserializes generic types as raw types. [`CORDA-1907 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1907>`_]
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* The Corda web server does not support asynchronous servlets. [`CORDA-1906 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1906>`_]
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* Amount<T> is deserialized from JSON and YAML as Amount<Currency>, for all values of T. [`CORDA-1905 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1905>`_]
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* ``NodeVaultService.loadStates`` queries without a ``PageSpecification`` property set. This leads to issues with large transactions. [`CORDA-1895 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1895>`_]
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* If a node has two flows, where one's name is a longer version of the other's, they cannot be started [`CORDA-1892 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1892>`_]
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* Vault Queries across ``LinearStates`` and ``FungibleState`` tables return incorrect results. [`CORDA-1888 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1888>`_]
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* Checking the version of the Corda jar file by executing the jar with the ``--version`` flag without specifying a valid node configuration file causes an exception to be thrown. [`CORDA-1884 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1884>`_]
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* RPC deadlocks after a node restart. [`CORDA-1875 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1875>`_]
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* Vault query fails to find a state if it extends some class (``ContractState``) and it is that base class that is used as the predicate (``vaultService.queryBy<I>()``). [`CORDA-1858 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1858>`_]
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* Missing unconsumed states from linear id when querying vault caused by a the previous transaction failing with an SQL exception. [`CORDA-1847 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1847>`_]
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* Inconsistency in how a web path is written. [`CORDA-1841 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1841>`_]
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* Cannot use ``TestIdentities`` with same organization name in ``net.corda.testing.driver.Driver``. [`CORDA-1837 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1837>`_]
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* Docs page typos. [`CORDA-1834 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1834>`_]
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* Adding flexibility to the serialization frameworks unit tests support and utility code. [`CORDA-1808 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1808>`_]
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* Cannot use ``--initial-registration`` with the ``networkServices`` configuration option in place of the older ``compatibilityzone`` option within ``node.conf``. [`CORDA-1789 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1789>`_]
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* Document more clearly the supported version of both IntelliJ and the IntelliJ Kotlin Plugins. [`CORDA-1727 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1727>`_]
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* DemoBench's "Launch Explorer" button is not re-enabled when you close Node Explorer. [`CORDA-1686 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1686>`_]
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* It is not possible to run ``stateMachinesSnapshot`` from the shell. [`CORDA-1681 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1681>`_]
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* Node won't start if CorDapps generate states prior to deletion [`CORDA-1663 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1663>`_]
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* Serializer Evolution breaks with Java classes adding nullable properties. [`CORDA-1662 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1662>`_]
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* Add Java examples for the creation of proxy serializers to complement the existing kotlin ones. [`CORDA-1641 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1641>`_]
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* Proxy serializer documentation isn't clear on how to write a proxy serializer. [`CORDA-1640 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1640>`_]
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* Node crashes in ``--initial-registration`` polling mode if doorman returns a transient HTTP error. [`CORDA-1638 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1638>`_]
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* Nodes started by gradle task are not stopped when the gradle task exits. [`CORDA-1634 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1634>`_]
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* Notarizations time out if notary doesn't have up-to-date network map. [`CORDA-1628 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1628>`_]
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* Node explorer: Improve error handling when connection to nodes cannot be established. [`CORDA-1617 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1617>`_]
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* Validating notary fails to resolve an attachment. [`CORDA-1588 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1588>`_]
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* Out of process nodes started by the driver do not log to file. [`CORDA-1575 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1575>`_]
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* Once ``--initial-registration`` has been passed to a node, further restarts should assume that mode until a cert is collected. [`CORDA-1572 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1572>`_]
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* An array of primitive byte arrays (an array of arrays) won't deserialize in a virgin factory (i.e. one that didn't build the serializer for serialization). [`CORDA-1545 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1545>`_]
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* Ctrl-C in the shell fails to aborts the flow. [`CORDA-1542 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1542>`_]
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* One transaction with two identical cash outputs cannot be save in the vault. [`CORDA-1535 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1535>`_]
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* The unit tests for the enum evolver functionality cannot be regenerated. This is because verification logic added after their initial creation has a bug that incorrectly identifies a cycle in the graph. [`CORDA-1498 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1498>`_]
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* Add in a safety check that catches flow checkpoints from older versions. [`CORDA-1477 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1477>`_]
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* Buggy ``CommodityContract`` issuance logic. [`CORDA-1459 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1459>`_]
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* Error in the process-id deletion process allows multiple instances of the same node to be run. [`CORDA-1455 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1455>`_]
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* Node crashes if network map returns HTTP 50X error. [`CORDA-1414 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1414>`_]
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* Delegate Property doesn't serialize, throws an erroneous type mismatch error. [`CORDA-1403 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1403>`_]
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* If a vault query throws an exception, the stack trace is swallowed. [`CORDA-1397 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1397>`_]
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* Node can fail to fully start when a port conflict occurs, no useful error message is generated when this occurs. [`CORDA-1394 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1394>`_]
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* Running the ``deployNodes`` gradle task back to back without a clean doesn't work. [`CORDA-1389 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1389>`_]
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* Stripping issuer from Amount<Issued<T>> does not preserve ``displayTokenSize``. [`CORDA-1386 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1386>`_]
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* ``CordaServices`` are instantiated multiple times per Party when using ``NodeDriver``. [`CORDA-1385 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1385>`_]
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* Out of memory errors can be seen when using Demobench + Explorer. [`CORDA-1356 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1356>`_]
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* Reduce the amount of classpath scanning during integration tests execution. [`CORDA-1355 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1355>`_]
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* SIMM demo throws "attachment too big" errors. [`CORDA-1346 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1346>`_]
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* Fix vault query paging example in ``ScheduledFlowTests``. [`CORDA-1344 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1344>`_]
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* The shell doesn't print the return value of a started flow. [`CORDA-1342 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1342>`_]
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* Provide access to database transactions for CorDapp developers. [`CORDA-1341 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1341>`_]
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* Error with ``VaultQuery`` for entity inheriting from ``CommonSchemaV1.FungibleState``. [`CORDA-1338 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1338>`_]
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* The ``--network-root-truststore`` command line option not defaulted. [`CORDA-1317 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1317>`_]
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* Java example in "Upgrading CorDapps" documentation is wrong. [`CORDA-1315 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1315>`_]
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* Remove references to ``registerInitiatedFlow`` in testing documentation as it is not needed. [`CORDA-1304 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1304>`_]
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* Regression: Recording a duplicate transaction attempts second insert to vault. [`CORDA-1303 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1303>`_]
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* Columns in the Corda database schema should have correct NULL/NOT NULL constraints. [`CORDA-1297 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1297>`_]
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* MockNetwork/Node API needs a way to register ``@CordaService`` objects. [`CORDA-1292 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1292>`_]
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* Deleting a ``NodeInfo`` from the additional-node-infos directory should remove it from cache. [`CORDA-1093 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1093>`_]
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* ``FailNodeOnNotMigratedAttachmentContractsTableNameTests`` is sometimes failing with database constraint "Notary" is null. [`CORDA-1976 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1976>`_]
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* Revert keys for DEV certificates. [`CORDA-1661 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1661>`_]
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* Node Info file watcher should block and load ``NodeInfo`` when node startup. [`CORDA-1604 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1604>`_]
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* Improved logging of the network parameters update process. [`CORDA-1405 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1405>`_]
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* Ensure all conditions in cash selection query are tested. [`CORDA-1266 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1266>`_]
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* ``NodeVaultService`` bug. Start node, issue cash, stop node, start node, ``getCashBalances()`` will not show any cash
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* A Corda node doesn't re-select cluster from HA Notary.
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* Event Horizon is not wire compatible with older network parameters objects.
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* Notary unable to resolve Party after processing a flow from same Party.
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* Misleading error message shown when a node is restarted after a flag day event.
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.. _release_notes_v3_2:
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Release 3.2
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-----------
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As we see more Corda deployments in production this minor release of the open source platform brings
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several fixes that make it easier for a node to join Corda networks broader than those used when
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operating as part of an internal testing deployment. This will ensure Corda nodes will be free to interact
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with upcoming network offerings from R3 and others who may make broad-access Corda networks available.
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* **The Corda Network Builder**
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To make it easier to create more dynamic, flexible, networks for testing and deployment,
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with the 3.2 release of Corda we are shipping a graphical network bootsrapping tool (see :doc:`network-builder`)
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to facilitate the simple creation of more dynamic ad hoc dev-mode environments.
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Using a graphical interface you can dynamically create and alter Corda test networks, adding
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nodes and CorDapps with the click of a button! Additionally, you can leverage its integration
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with Azure cloud services for remote hosting of Nodes and Docker instances for local testing.
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* **Split Compatibility Zone**
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Prior to this release compatibility zone membership was denoted with a single configuration setting
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.. sourcecode:: shell
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compatibilityZoneURL : "http://<host>(:<port>)"
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That would indicate both the location of the Doorman service the node should use for registration
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of its identity as well as the Network Map service where it would publish its signed Node Info and
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retrieve the Network Map.
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Compatibility Zones can now, however, be configured with the two disparate services, Doorman and
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Network Map, running on different URLs. If the compatibility zone your node is connecting to
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is configured in this manner, the new configuration looks as follows.
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.. sourcecode:: shell
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networkServices {
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doormanURL: "http://<host>(:<port>)"
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networkMapURL: "http://<host>(:<port>)"
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}
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.. note:: The ``compatibilityZoneURL`` setting should be considered deprecated in favour of the new
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``networkServices`` settings group.
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* **The Blob Inspector**
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The blob inspector brings the ability to unpack serialized Corda blobs at the
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command line, giving a human readable interpretation of the encoded date.
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.. note:: This tool has been shipped as a separate Jar previously. We are now including it
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as part of an official release.
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||
Documentation on its use can be found here :doc:`blob-inspector`
|
||
|
||
* **The Event Horizon**
|
||
|
||
One part of joining a node to a Corda network is agreeing to the rules that govern that network as set out
|
||
by the network operator. A node's membership of a network is communicated to other nodes through the network
|
||
map, the service to which the node will have published its Node Info, and through which it receives the
|
||
set of NodeInfos currently present on the network. Membership of that list is a finite thing determined by
|
||
the network operator.
|
||
|
||
Periodically a node will republish its NodeInfo to the Network Map service. The Network Map uses this as a
|
||
heartbeat to determine the status of nodes registered with it. Those that don't "beep" within the
|
||
determined interval are removed from the list of registered nodes. The ``Event Horizon`` network parameter
|
||
sets the upper limit within which a node must respond or be considered inactive.
|
||
|
||
.. important:: This does not mean a node is unregistered from the Doorman, only that its NodeInfo is
|
||
removed from the Network Map. Should the node come back online it will be re-added to the published
|
||
set of NodeInfos
|
||
|
||
Issues Fixed
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
* Update Jolokia to a more secure version [`CORDA-1744 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1744>`_]
|
||
* Add the Blob Inspector [`CORDA-1709 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1709>`_]
|
||
* Add support for the ``Event Horizon`` Network Parameter [`CORDA-866 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-866>`_]
|
||
* Add the Network Bootstrapper [`CORDA-1717 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1717>`_]
|
||
* Fixes for the finance CordApp[`CORDA-1711 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1711>`_]
|
||
* Allow Doorman and NetworkMap to be configured independently [`CORDA-1510 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1510>`_]
|
||
* Serialization fix for generics when evolving a class [`CORDA-1530 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1530>`_]
|
||
* Correct typo in an internal database table name [`CORDA-1499 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1499>`_] and [`CORDA-1804 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1804>`_]
|
||
* Hibernate session not flushed before handing over raw JDBC session to user code [`CORDA-1548 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1548>`_]
|
||
* Fix Postgres db bloat issue [`CORDA-1812 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1812>`_]
|
||
* Roll back flow transaction on exception [`CORDA-1790 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1790>`_]
|
||
|
||
.. _release_notes_v3_1:
|
||
|
||
Release 3.1
|
||
-----------
|
||
|
||
This rapid follow-up to Corda 3.0 corrects an issue discovered by some users of Spring Boot and a number of other
|
||
smaller issues discovered post release. All users are recommended to upgrade.
|
||
|
||
Special Thanks
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
Without passionate and engaged users Corda would be all the poorer. As such, we are extremely grateful to
|
||
`Bret Lichtenwald <https://github.com/bret540>`_ for helping nail down a reproducible test case for the
|
||
Spring Boot issue.
|
||
|
||
Major Bug Fixes
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
* **Corda Serialization fails with "Unknown constant pool tag"**
|
||
|
||
This issue is most often seen when running a CorDapp with a Rest API using / provided by ``Spring Boot``.
|
||
|
||
The fundamental cause was ``Corda 3.0`` shipping with an out of date dependency for the
|
||
`fast-classpath-scanner <https://github.com/lukehutch/fast-classpath-scanner>`_ library, where the manifesting
|
||
bug was already fixed in a released version newer than our dependant one. In response, we've updated our dependent
|
||
version to one including that bug fix.
|
||
|
||
* **Corda Versioning**
|
||
|
||
Those eagle eyed amongst you will have noticed for the 3.0 release we altered the versioning scheme from that used by previous Corda
|
||
releases (1.0.0, 2.0.0, etc) with the addition of an prepended product name, resulting in ``corda-3.0``. The reason for this was so
|
||
that developers could clearly distinguish between the base open source platform and any distributions based on on Corda that may
|
||
be shipped in the future (including from R3), However, we have heard the complaints and feel the pain that's caused by various
|
||
tools not coping well with this change. As such, from now on the versioning scheme will be inverted, with this release being ``3.1-corda``.
|
||
|
||
As to those curious as to why we dropped the patch number from the version string, the reason is very simple: there won't
|
||
be any patches applied to a release of Corda. Either a release will be a collection of bug fixes and non API breaking
|
||
changes, thus eliciting a minor version bump as with this release, or major functional changes or API additions and warrant
|
||
a major version bump. Thus, rather than leave a dangling ``.0`` patch version on every release we've just dropped it. In the
|
||
case where a major security flaw needed addressing, for example, then that would generate a release of a new minor version.
|
||
|
||
Issues Fixed
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
* RPC server leaks if a single client submits a lot of requests over time [`CORDA-1295 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1295>`_]
|
||
* Flaky startup, no db transaction in context, when using postgresql [`CORDA-1276 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1276>`_]
|
||
* Corda's JPA classes should not be final or have final methods [`CORDA-1267 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1267>`_]
|
||
* Backport api-scanner changes [`CORDA-1178 <https://r3-cev.atlassian.net/browse/CORDA-1178>`_]
|
||
* Misleading error message shown when node is restarted after the flag day
|
||
* Hash constraints not working from Corda 3.0 onwards
|
||
* Serialisation Error between Corda 3 RC01 and Corda 3
|
||
* Nodes don't start when network-map/doorman is down
|
||
|
||
.. _release_notes_v3_0:
|
||
|
||
Release 3.0
|
||
-----------
|
||
|
||
Corda 3.0 is here and brings with it a commitment to a wire stable platform, a path for contract and node upgradability,
|
||
and a host of other exciting features. The aim of which is to enhance the developer and user experience whilst providing
|
||
for the long term usability of deployed Corda instances. This release will provide functionality to ensure anyone wishing
|
||
to move to the anticipated release of R3 Corda can do so seamlessly and with the assurance that stateful data persisted to
|
||
the vault will remain understandable between newer and older nodes.
|
||
|
||
Special Thanks
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
As ever, we are grateful to the enthusiastic user and developer community that has grown up to surround Corda.
|
||
As an open project we are always grateful to take code contributions from individual users where they feel they
|
||
can add functionality useful to themselves and the wider community.
|
||
|
||
As such we'd like to extend special thanks to
|
||
|
||
* Ben Wyeth for providing a mechanism for registering a callback on app shutdown
|
||
|
||
Ben's contribution can be found on GitHub
|
||
`here <https://github.com/corda/corda/commit/d17670c747d16b7f6e06e19bbbd25eb06e45cb93>`__
|
||
|
||
* Tomas Tauber for adding support for running Corda atop PostgresSQL in place of the in-memory H2 service
|
||
|
||
Tomas's contribution can be found on GitHub
|
||
`here <https://github.com/corda/corda/commit/342090db62ae40cef2be30b2ec4aa451b099d0b7>`__
|
||
|
||
.. warning:: This is an experimental feature that has not been tested as part of our standard release testing.
|
||
|
||
* Rose Molina Atienza for correcting our careless spelling slip
|
||
|
||
Rose's change can be found on GitHub
|
||
`here <https://github.com/corda/corda/commit/128d5cad0af7fc5595cac3287650663c9c9ac0a3>`__
|
||
|
||
Significant Changes in 3.0
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
* **Wire Stability**:
|
||
|
||
Wire stability brings the same promise to developers for their data that API stability did for their code. From this
|
||
point any state generated by a Corda system will always be retrievable, understandable, and seen as valid by any
|
||
subsequently released version (versions 3.0 and above).
|
||
|
||
Systems can thus be deployed safe in the knowledge that valuable and important information will always be accessible through
|
||
upgrade and change. Practically speaking this means from this point forward upgrading all, or part, of a Corda network
|
||
will not require the replaying of data; "it will just work".
|
||
|
||
This has been facilitated by the switch over from Kryo to Corda's own AMQP based serialization framework, a framework
|
||
designed to interoperate with stateful information and allow the evolution of such contract states over time as developers
|
||
refine and improve their systems written atop the core Corda platform.
|
||
|
||
* **AMQP Serialization**
|
||
|
||
AMQP Serialization is now enabled for both peer to peer communication and the writing of states to the vault. This
|
||
change brings a serialisation format that will allow us to deliver enhanced security and wire stability. This was a key
|
||
prerequisite to enabling different Corda node versions to coexist on the same network and to enable easier upgrades.
|
||
|
||
Details on the AMQP serialization framework can be found :ref:`here <amqp_ref>`. This provides an introduction and
|
||
overview of the framework whilst more specific details on object evolution as it relates to serialization can be
|
||
found in :doc:`serialization-default-evolution` and :doc:`serialization-enum-evolution` respectively.
|
||
|
||
.. note:: This release delivers the bulk of our transition from Kryo serialisation to AMQP serialisation. This means
|
||
that many of the restrictions that were documented in previous versions of Corda are now enforced.
|
||
|
||
In particular, you are advised to review the section titled :ref:`Custom Types <amqp_custom_types_ref>`.
|
||
To aid with the transition, we have included support in this release for default construction and instantiation of
|
||
objects with inaccessible private fields, but it is not guaranteed that this support will continue into future versions;
|
||
the restrictions documented at the link above are the canonical source.
|
||
|
||
Whilst this is an important step for Corda, in no way is this the end of the serialisation story. We have many new
|
||
features and tools planned for future releases, but feel it is more important to deliver the guarantees discussed above
|
||
as early as possible to allow the community to develop with greater confidence.
|
||
|
||
.. important:: Whilst Corda has stabilised its wire protocol and infrastructure for peer to peer communication and persistent storage
|
||
of states, the RPC framework will, for this release, not be covered by this guarantee. The moving of the client and
|
||
server contexts away from Kryo to our stable AMQP implementation is planned for the next release of Corda
|
||
|
||
* **Artemis and Bridges**
|
||
|
||
Corda has now achieved the long stated goal of using the AMQP 1.0 open protocol standard as its communication protocol
|
||
between peers. This forms a strong and flexible framework upon which we can deliver future enhancements that will allow
|
||
for much smoother integrations between Corda and third party brokers, languages, and messaging systems. In addition,
|
||
this is also an important step towards formally defining the official peer to peer messaging protocol of Corda, something
|
||
required for more in-depth security audits of the Corda protocol.
|
||
|
||
* **New Network Map Service**:
|
||
|
||
This release introduces the new network map architecture. The network map service has been completely redesigned and
|
||
implemented to enable future increased network scalability and redundancy, reduced runtime operational overhead,
|
||
support for multiple notaries, and administration of network compatibility zones (CZ).
|
||
|
||
A Corda Compatibility Zone is defined as a grouping of participants and services (notaries, oracles,
|
||
doorman, network map server) configured within an operational Corda network to be interoperable and compatible with
|
||
each other.
|
||
|
||
We introduce the concept of network parameters to specify precisely the set of constants (or ranges of constants) upon
|
||
which the nodes within a network need to agree in order to be assured of seamless inter-operation. Additional security
|
||
controls ensure that all network map data is now signed, thus reducing the power of the network operator to tamper with
|
||
the map.
|
||
|
||
There is also support for a group of nodes to operate locally, which is achieved by copying each
|
||
node's signed info file to the other nodes' directories. We've added a bootstrapping tool to facilitate this use case.
|
||
|
||
.. important:: This replaces the Network Map service that was present in Corda 1.0 and Corda 2.0.
|
||
|
||
Further information can be found in the :doc:`changelog`, :doc:`network-map` and :doc:`network-bootstrapper` documentation.
|
||
|
||
* **Contract Upgrade**
|
||
|
||
Support for the upgrading of contracts has been significantly extended in this release.
|
||
|
||
Contract states express which attached JARs can define and verify them using _constraints_. In older versions the only supported
|
||
constraint was a hash constraint. This provides similar behaviour as public blockchain systems like Bitcoin and Ethereum, in
|
||
which code is entirely fixed once deployed and cannot be changed later. In Corda there is an upgrade path that involves the
|
||
cooperation of all involved parties (as advertised by the states themselves), but this requires explicit transactions to be
|
||
applied to all states and be signed by all parties.
|
||
|
||
.. tip:: This is a fairly heavyweight operation. As such, consideration should be given as to the most opportune time at
|
||
which it should be performed.
|
||
|
||
Hash constraints provide for maximum decentralisation and minimum trust, at the cost of flexibility. In Corda 3.0 we add a
|
||
new constraint, a *network parameters* constraint, that allows the list of acceptable contract JARs to be maintained by the
|
||
operator of the compatibility zone rather than being hard-coded. This allows for simple upgrades at the cost of the introduction
|
||
of an element of centralisation.
|
||
|
||
Zone constraints provide a less restrictive but more centralised control mechanism. This can be useful when you want
|
||
the ability to upgrade an app and you don’t mind the upgrade taking effect “just in time” when a transaction happens
|
||
to be required for other business reasons. These allow you to specify that the network parameters of a compatibility zone
|
||
(see :doc:`network-map`) is expected to contain a map of class name to hashes of JARs that are allowed to provide that
|
||
class. The process for upgrading an app then involves asking the zone operator to add the hash of your new JAR to the
|
||
parameters file, and trigger the network parameters upgrade process. This involves each node operator running a shell
|
||
command to accept the new parameters file and then restarting the node. Node owners who do not restart their node in
|
||
time effectively stop being a part of the network.
|
||
|
||
.. note:: In prior versions of Corda, states included the hash of their defining application JAR (in the Hash Constraint).
|
||
In this release, transactions have the JAR containing the contract and states attached to them, so the code will be copied
|
||
over the network to the recipient if that peer lacks a copy of the app.
|
||
|
||
Prior to running the verification code of a contract the JAR within which the verification code of the contract resides
|
||
is tested for compliance to the contract constraints:
|
||
|
||
- For the ``HashConstraint``: the hash of the deployed CorDapp jar must be the same as the hash found in the Transaction.
|
||
- For the ``ZoneConstraint``: the Transaction must come with a whitelisted attachment for each Contract State.
|
||
|
||
If this step fails the normal transaction verification failure path is followed.
|
||
|
||
Corda 3.0 lays the groundwork for future releases, when contract verification will be done against the attached contract JARs
|
||
rather than requiring a locally deployed CorDapp of the exact version specified by the transaction. The future vision for this
|
||
feature will entail the dynamic downloading of the appropriate version of the smart contract and its execution within a
|
||
sandboxed environment.
|
||
|
||
.. warning:: This change means that your app JAR must now fit inside the 10mb attachment size limit. To avoid redundantly copying
|
||
unneeded code over the network and to simplify upgrades, consider splitting your application into two or more JARs - one that
|
||
contains states and contracts (which we call the app "kernel"), and another that contains flows, services, web apps etc. For
|
||
example, our `Cordapp template <https://github.com/corda/cordapp-template-kotlin/tree/release-V3>`_ is structured like that.
|
||
Only the first will be attached. Also be aware that any dependencies your app kernel has must be bundled into a fat JAR,
|
||
as JAR dependencies are not supported in Corda 3.0.
|
||
|
||
Future versions of Corda will add support for signature based constraints, in which any JAR signed by a given identity
|
||
can be attached to the transaction. This final constraint type provides a balance of all requirements: smooth rolling upgrades
|
||
can be performed without any additional steps or transactions being signed, at the cost of trusting the app developer more and
|
||
some additional complexity around managing app signing.
|
||
|
||
Please see the :doc:`upgrading-cordapps` for more information on upgrading contracts.
|
||
|
||
* **Test API Stability**
|
||
|
||
A great deal of work has been carried out to refine the APIs provided to test CorDapps, making them simpler, more intuitive,
|
||
and generally easier to use. In addition, these APIs have been added to the *locked* list of the APIs we guarantee to be stable
|
||
over time. This should greatly increase productivity when upgrading between versions, as your testing environments will work
|
||
without alteration.
|
||
|
||
Please see the :doc:`upgrade-notes` for more information on transitioning older tests to the new framework.
|
||
|
||
Other Functional Improvements
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
* **Clean Node Shutdown**
|
||
|
||
We, alongside user feedback, concluded there was a strong need for the ability to have a clean inflection point where a node
|
||
could be shutdown without any in-flight transactions pending to allow for a clean system for upgrade purposes. As such, a flows
|
||
draining mode has been added. When activated, this places the node into a state of quiescence that guarantees no new work will
|
||
be started and all outstanding work completed prior to shutdown.
|
||
|
||
A clean shutdown can thus be achieved by:
|
||
|
||
1. Subscribing to state machine updates
|
||
2. Trigger flows draining mode by ``rpc.setFlowsDrainingModeEnabled(true)``
|
||
3. Wait until the subscription setup as phase 1 lets you know that no more checkpoints are around
|
||
4. Shut the node down however you want
|
||
|
||
.. note:: Once set, this mode is a persistent property that will be preserved across node restarts. It must be explicitly disabled
|
||
before a node will accept new RPC flow connections.
|
||
|
||
* **X.509 certificates**
|
||
|
||
These now have an extension that specifies the Corda role the certificate is used for, and the role
|
||
hierarchy is now enforced in the validation code. This only has impact on those developing integrations with external
|
||
PKI solutions; in most cases it is managed transparently by Corda. A formal specification of the extension can be
|
||
found at see :doc:`permissioning-certificate-specification`.
|
||
|
||
* **Configurable authorization and authentication data sources**
|
||
|
||
Corda can now be configured to load RPC user credentials and permissions from an external database and supports password
|
||
encryption based on the `Apache Shiro framework <https://shiro.apache.org>`_. See :ref:`RPC security management
|
||
<rpc_security_mgmt_ref>` for documentation.
|
||
|
||
* **SSH Server**
|
||
|
||
Remote administration of Corda nodes through the CRaSH shell is now available via SSH, please see :doc:`shell` for more details.
|
||
|
||
* **RPC over SSL**
|
||
|
||
Corda now allows for the configuration of its RPC calls to be made over SSL. See :doc:`corda-configuration-file` for details
|
||
how to configure this.
|
||
|
||
* **Improved Notary configuration**
|
||
|
||
The configuration of notaries has been simplified into a single ``notary`` configuration object. See
|
||
:doc:`corda-configuration-file` for more details.
|
||
|
||
.. note:: ``extraAdvertisedServiceIds``, ``notaryNodeAddress``, ``notaryClusterAddresses`` and ``bftSMaRt`` configs have been
|
||
removed.
|
||
|
||
* **Database Tables Naming Scheme**
|
||
|
||
To align with common conventions across all supported Corda and R3 Corda databases some table names have been changed.
|
||
|
||
In addition, for existing contract ORM schemas that extend from CommonSchemaV1.LinearState or CommonSchemaV1.FungibleState,
|
||
you will need to explicitly map the participants collection to a database table. Previously this mapping was done in the
|
||
superclass, but that makes it impossible to properly configure the table name. The required change is to add the override var
|
||
``participants: MutableSet<AbstractParty>? = null`` field to your class, and add JPA mappings.
|
||
|
||
* **Pluggable Custom Serializers**
|
||
|
||
With the introduction of AMQP we have introduced the requirement that to be seamlessly serializable classes, specifically
|
||
Java classes (as opposed to Kotlin), must be compiled with the ``-parameter`` flag. However, we recognise that this
|
||
isn't always possible, especially dealing with third party libraries in tightly controlled business environments.
|
||
|
||
To work around this problem as simply as possible CorDapps now support the creation of pluggable proxy serializers for
|
||
such classes. These should be written such that they create an intermediary representation that Corda can serialise that
|
||
is mappable directly to and from the unserializable class.
|
||
|
||
A number of examples are provided by the SIMM Valuation Demo in
|
||
|
||
``samples/simm-valuation-demo/src/main/kotlin/net/corda/vega/plugin/customserializers``
|
||
|
||
Documentation can be found in :doc:`cordapp-custom-serializers`
|
||
|
||
|
||
Security Auditing
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
This version of Corda is the first to have had select components subjected to the newly established security review process
|
||
by R3's internal security team. Security review will be an on-going process that seeks to provide assurance that the
|
||
security model of Corda has been implemented to the highest standard, and is in line with industry best practice.
|
||
|
||
As part of this security review process, an independent external security audit of the HTTP based components of the code
|
||
was undertaken and its recommendations were acted upon. The security assurance process will develop in parallel to the
|
||
Corda platform and will combine code review, automated security testing and secure development practices to ensure Corda
|
||
fulfils its security guarantees.
|
||
|
||
Security fixes
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
* Due to a potential privacy leak, there has been a breaking change in the error object returned by the
|
||
notary service when trying to consume the same state twice: `NotaryError.Conflict` no longer contains the identity
|
||
of the party that initiated the first spend of the state, and specifies the hash of the consuming transaction id for
|
||
a state instead of the id itself.
|
||
|
||
Without this change, knowing the reference of a particular state, an attacker could construct an invalid
|
||
double-spend transaction, and obtain the information on the transaction and the party that consumed it. It could
|
||
repeat this process with the newly obtained transaction id by guessing its output indexes to obtain the forward
|
||
transaction graph with associated identities. When anonymous identities are used, this could also reveal the identity
|
||
of the owner of an asset.
|
||
|
||
Minor Changes
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
* Upgraded gradle to 4.4.1.
|
||
|
||
.. note:: To avoid potential incompatibility issues we recommend you also upgrade your CorDapp's gradle
|
||
plugin to match. Details on how to do this can be found on the official
|
||
`gradle website <https://docs.gradle.org/current/userguide/gradle_wrapper.html#sec:upgrading_wrapper>`_
|
||
|
||
* Cash Spending now allows for sending multiple amounts to multiple parties with a single API call
|
||
|
||
- documentation can be found within the JavaDocs on ``TwoPartyTradeFlow``.
|
||
* Overall improvements to error handling (RPC, Flows, Network Client).
|
||
* TLS authentication now supports mixed RSA and ECDSA keys.
|
||
* PrivacySalt computation is faster as it does not depend on the OS's entropy pool directly.
|
||
* Numerous bug fixes and documentation tweaks.
|
||
* Removed dependency on Jolokia WAR file.
|
||
|
||
.. _release_notes_v2_0:
|
||
|
||
Release 2.0
|
||
-----------
|
||
Following quickly on the heels of the release of Corda 1.0, Corda version 2.0 consolidates
|
||
a number of security updates for our dependent libraries alongside the reintroduction of the Observer node functionality.
|
||
This was absent from version 1 but based on user feedback its re-introduction removes the need for complicated "isRelevant()" checks.
|
||
|
||
In addition the fix for a small bug present in the coin selection code of V1.0 is integrated from master.
|
||
|
||
* **Version Bump**
|
||
|
||
Due to the introduction of new APIs, Corda 2.0 has a platform version of 2. This will be advertised in the network map structures
|
||
and via the versioning APIs.
|
||
|
||
* **Observer Nodes**
|
||
|
||
Adds the facility for transparent forwarding of transactions to some third party observer, such as a regulator. By having
|
||
that entity simply run an Observer node they can simply receive a stream of digitally signed, de-duplicated reports that
|
||
can be used for reporting.
|
||
|
||
.. _release_notes_v1_0:
|
||
|
||
Release 1.0
|
||
-----------
|
||
Corda 1.0 is finally here!
|
||
|
||
This critical step in the Corda journey enables the developer community, clients, and partners to build on Corda with confidence.
|
||
Corda 1.0 is the first released version to provide API stability for Corda application (CorDapp) developers.
|
||
Corda applications will continue to work against this API with each subsequent release of Corda. The public API for Corda
|
||
will only evolve to include new features.
|
||
|
||
As of Corda 1.0, the following modules export public APIs for which we guarantee to maintain backwards compatibility,
|
||
unless an incompatible change is required for security reasons:
|
||
|
||
* **core**:
|
||
Contains the bulk of the APIs to be used for building CorDapps: contracts, transactions, flows, identity, node services,
|
||
cryptographic libraries, and general utility functions.
|
||
|
||
* **client-rpc**:
|
||
An RPC client interface to Corda, for use by both UI facing clients and integration with external systems.
|
||
|
||
* **client-jackson**:
|
||
Utilities and serialisers for working with JSON representations of basic types.
|
||
|
||
Our extensive testing frameworks will continue to evolve alongside future Corda APIs. As part of our commitment to ease of use and modularity
|
||
we have introduced a new test node driver module to encapsulate all test functionality in support of building standalone node integration
|
||
tests using our DSL driver.
|
||
|
||
Please read :doc:`corda-api` for complete details.
|
||
|
||
.. note:: it may be necessary to recompile applications against future versions of the API until we begin offering
|
||
`ABI (Application Binary Interface) <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Application_binary_interface>`_ stability as well.
|
||
We plan to do this soon after this release of Corda.
|
||
|
||
Significant changes implemented in reaching Corda API stability include:
|
||
|
||
* **Flow framework**:
|
||
The Flow framework communications API has been redesigned around session based communication with the introduction of a new
|
||
``FlowSession`` to encapsulate the counterparty information associated with a flow.
|
||
All shipped Corda flows have been upgraded to use the new `FlowSession`. Please read :doc:`api-flows` for complete details.
|
||
|
||
* **Complete API cleanup**:
|
||
Across the board, all our public interfaces have been thoroughly revised and updated to ensure a productive and intuitive developer experience.
|
||
Methods and flow naming conventions have been aligned with their semantic use to ease the understanding of CorDapps.
|
||
In addition, we provide ever more powerful re-usable flows (such as `CollectSignaturesFlow`) to minimize the boiler-plate code developers need to write.
|
||
|
||
* **Simplified annotation driven scanning**:
|
||
CorDapp configuration has been made simpler through the removal of explicit configuration items in favour of annotations
|
||
and classpath scanning. As an example, we have now completely removed the `CordaPluginRegistry` configuration.
|
||
Contract definitions are no longer required to explicitly define a legal contract reference hash. In their place an
|
||
optional `LegalProseReference` annotation to specify a URI is used.
|
||
|
||
* **Java usability**:
|
||
All code has been updated to enable simple access to static API parameters. Developers no longer need to
|
||
call getter methods, and can reference static API variables directly.
|
||
|
||
In addition to API stability this release encompasses a number of major functional improvements, including:
|
||
|
||
* **Contract constraints**:
|
||
Provides a means with which to enforce a specific implementation of a State's verify method during transaction verification.
|
||
When loading an attachment via the attachment classloader, constraints of a transaction state are checked against the
|
||
list of attachment hashes provided, and the attachment is rejected if the constraints are not matched.
|
||
|
||
* **Signature Metadata support**:
|
||
Signers now have the ability to add metadata to their digital signatures. Whereas previously a user could only sign the Merkle root of a
|
||
transaction, it is now possible for extra information to be attached to a signature, such as a platform version
|
||
and the signature-scheme used.
|
||
|
||
.. image:: resources/signatureMetadata.png
|
||
|
||
* **Backwards compatibility and improvements to core transaction data structures**:
|
||
A new Merkle tree model has been introduced that utilises sub-Merkle trees per component type. Components of the
|
||
same type, such as inputs or commands, are grouped together and form their own Merkle tree. Then, the roots of
|
||
each group are used as leaves in the top-level Merkle tree. This model enables backwards compatibility, in the
|
||
sense that if new component types are added in the future, old clients will still be able to compute the Merkle root
|
||
and relay transactions even if they cannot read (deserialise) the new component types. Due to the above,
|
||
`FilterTransaction` has been made simpler with a structure closer to `WireTransaction`. This has the effect of making the API
|
||
more user friendly and intuitive for both filtered and unfiltered transactions.
|
||
|
||
* **Enhanced component privacy**:
|
||
Corda 1.0 is equipped with a scalable component visibility design based on the above sophisticated
|
||
sub-tree model and the introduction of nonces per component. Roughly, an initial base-nonce, the "privacy-salt",
|
||
is used to deterministically generate nonces based on the path of each component in the tree. Because each component
|
||
is accompanied by a nonce, we protect against brute force attacks, even against low-entropy components. In addition,
|
||
a new privacy feature is provided that allows non-validating notaries to ensure they see all inputs and if there was a
|
||
`TimeWindow` in the original transaction. Due to the above, a malicious user cannot selectively hide one or more
|
||
input states from the notary that would enable her to bypass the double-spending check. The aforementioned
|
||
functionality could also be applied to Oracles so as to ensure all of the commands are visible to them.
|
||
|
||
.. image:: resources/subTreesPrivacy.png
|
||
|
||
* **Full support for confidential identities**:
|
||
This includes rework and improvements to the identity service to handle both `well known` and `confidential` identities.
|
||
This work ships in an experimental module in Corda 1.0, called `confidential-identities`. API stabilisation of confidential
|
||
identities will occur as we make the integration of this privacy feature into applications even easier for developers.
|
||
|
||
* **Re-designed network map service**:
|
||
The foundations for a completely redesigned network map service have been implemented to enable future increased network
|
||
scalability and redundancy, support for multiple notaries, and administration of network compatibility zones and business networks.
|
||
|
||
Finally, please note that the 1.0 release has not yet been security audited.
|
||
|
||
We have provided a comprehensive :doc:`upgrade-notes` to ease the transition of migrating CorDapps to Corda 1.0
|
||
|
||
Upgrading to this release is strongly recommended, and you will be safe in the knowledge that core APIs will no longer break.
|
||
|
||
Thank you to all contributors for this release!
|
||
|
||
Milestone 14
|
||
------------
|
||
|
||
This release continues with the goal to improve API stability and developer friendliness. There have also been more
|
||
bug fixes and other improvements across the board.
|
||
|
||
The CorDapp template repository has been replaced with a specific repository for
|
||
`Java <https://github.com/corda/cordapp-template-java>`_ and `Kotlin <https://github.com/corda/cordapp-template-kotlin>`_
|
||
to improve the experience of starting a new project and to simplify the build system.
|
||
|
||
It is now possible to specify multiple IP addresses and legal identities for a single node, allowing node operators
|
||
more flexibility in setting up nodes.
|
||
|
||
A format has been introduced for CorDapp JARs that standardises the contents of CorDapps across nodes. This new format
|
||
now requires CorDapps to contain their own external dependencies. This paves the way for significantly improved
|
||
dependency management for CorDapps with the release of `Jigsaw (Java Modules) <http://openjdk.java.net/projects/jigsaw/>`_. For those using non-gradle build systems it is important
|
||
to read :doc:`cordapp-build-systems` to learn more. Those using our ``cordformation`` plugin simply need to update
|
||
to the latest version (``0.14.0``) to get the fixes.
|
||
|
||
We've now begun the process of demarcating which classes are part of our public API and which ones are internal.
|
||
Everything found in ``net.corda.core.internal`` and other packages in the ``net.corda`` namespace which has ``.internal`` in it are
|
||
considered internal and not for public use. In a future release any CorDapp using these packages will fail to load, and
|
||
when we migrate to Jigsaw these will not be exported.
|
||
|
||
The transaction finalisation flow (``FinalityFlow``) has had hooks added for alternative implementations, for example in
|
||
scenarios where no single participant in a transaction is aware of the well known identities of all parties.
|
||
|
||
DemoBench has a fix for a rare but inconvenient crash that can occur when sharing your display across multiple devices,
|
||
e.g. a projector while performing demonstrations in front of an audience.
|
||
|
||
Guava types are being removed because Guava does not have backwards compatibility across versions, which has serious
|
||
issues when multiple libraries depend on different versions of the library.
|
||
|
||
The identity service API has been tweaked, primarily so anonymous identity registration now takes in
|
||
AnonymousPartyAndPath rather than the individual components of the identity, as typically the caller will have
|
||
an AnonymousPartyAndPath instance. See change log for further detail.
|
||
|
||
Upgrading to this release is strongly recommended in order to keep up with the API changes, removal and additions.
|
||
|
||
Milestone 13
|
||
------------
|
||
|
||
Following our first public beta in M12, this release continues the work on API stability and user friendliness. Apart
|
||
from bug fixes and code refactoring, there are also significant improvements in the Vault Query and the
|
||
Identity Service (for more detailed information about what has changed, see :doc:`changelog`).
|
||
More specifically:
|
||
|
||
The long awaited new **Vault Query** service makes its debut in this release and provides advanced vault query
|
||
capabilities using criteria specifications (see ``QueryCriteria``), sorting, and pagination. Criteria specifications
|
||
enable selective filtering with and/or composition using multiple operator primitives on standard attributes stored in
|
||
Corda internal vault tables (eg. vault_states, vault_fungible_states, vault_linear_states), and also on custom contract
|
||
state schemas defined by CorDapp developers when modelling new contract types. Custom queries are specifiable using a
|
||
simple but sophisticated builder DSL (see ``QueryCriteriaUtils``). The new Vault Query service is usable by flows and by
|
||
RPC clients alike via two simple API functions: ``queryBy()`` and ``trackBy()``. The former provides point-in-time
|
||
snapshot queries whilst the later supplements the snapshot with dynamic streaming of updates.
|
||
See :doc:`api-vault-query` for full details.
|
||
|
||
We have written a comprehensive Hello, World! tutorial, showing developers how to build a CorDapp from start
|
||
to finish. The tutorial shows how the core elements of a CorDapp - states, contracts and flows - fit together
|
||
to allow your node to handle new business processes. It also explains how you can use our contract and
|
||
flow testing frameworks to massively reduce CorDapp development time.
|
||
|
||
Certificate checks have been enabled for much of the identity service. These are part of the confidential (anonymous)
|
||
identities work, and ensure that parties are actually who they claim to be by checking their certificate path back to
|
||
the network trust root (certificate authority).
|
||
|
||
To deal with anonymized keys, we've also implemented a deterministic key derivation function that combines logic
|
||
from the HMAC-based Extract-and-Expand Key Derivation Function (HKDF) protocol and the BIP32 hardened
|
||
parent-private-key -> child-private-key scheme. This function currently supports the following algorithms:
|
||
ECDSA secp256K1, ECDSA secpR1 (NIST P-256) and EdDSA ed25519. We are now very close to fully supporting anonymous
|
||
identities so as to increase privacy even against validating notaries.
|
||
|
||
We have further tightened the set of objects which Corda will attempt to serialise from the stack during flow
|
||
checkpointing. As flows are arbitrary code in which it is convenient to do many things, we ended up pulling in a lot of
|
||
objects that didn't make sense to put in a checkpoint, such as ``Thread`` and ``Connection``. To minimize serialization
|
||
cost and increase security by not allowing certain classes to be serialized, we now support class blacklisting
|
||
that will return an ``IllegalStateException`` if such a class is encountered during a checkpoint. Blacklisting supports
|
||
superclass and superinterface inheritance and always precedes ``@CordaSerializable`` annotation checking.
|
||
|
||
We've also started working on improving user experience when searching, by adding a new RPC to support fuzzy matching
|
||
of X.500 names.
|
||
|
||
Milestone 12 - First Public Beta
|
||
--------------------------------
|
||
|
||
One of our busiest releases, lots of changes that take us closer to API stability (for more detailed information about
|
||
what has changed, see :doc:`changelog`). In this release we focused mainly on making developers' lives easier. Taking
|
||
into account feedback from numerous training courses and meet-ups, we decided to add ``CollectSignaturesFlow`` which
|
||
factors out a lot of code which CorDapp developers needed to write to get their transactions signed.
|
||
The improvement is up to 150 fewer lines of code in each flow! To have your transaction signed by different parties, you
|
||
need only now call a subflow which collects the parties' signatures for you.
|
||
|
||
Additionally we introduced classpath scanning to wire-up flows automatically. Writing CorDapps has been made simpler by
|
||
removing boiler-plate code that was previously required when registering flows. Writing services such as oracles has also been simplified.
|
||
|
||
We made substantial RPC performance improvements (please note that this is separate to node performance, we are focusing
|
||
on that area in future milestones):
|
||
|
||
- 15-30k requests per second for a single client/server RPC connection.
|
||
* 1Kb requests, 1Kb responses, server and client on same machine, parallelism 8, measured on a Dell XPS 17(i7-6700HQ, 16Gb RAM)
|
||
- The framework is now multithreaded on both client and server side.
|
||
- All remaining bottlenecks are in the messaging layer.
|
||
|
||
Security of the key management service has been improved by removing support for extracting private keys, in order that
|
||
it can support use of a hardware security module (HSM) for key storage. Instead it exposes functionality for signing data
|
||
(typically transactions). The service now also supports multiple signature schemes (not just EdDSA).
|
||
|
||
We've added the beginnings of flow versioning. Nodes now reject flow requests if the initiating side is not using the same
|
||
flow version. In a future milestone release will add the ability to support backwards compatibility.
|
||
|
||
As with the previous few releases we have continued work extending identity support. There are major changes to the ``Party``
|
||
class as part of confidential identities, and how parties and keys are stored in transaction state objects.
|
||
See :doc:`changelog` for full details.
|
||
|
||
Added new Byzantine fault tolerant (BFT) decentralised notary demo, based on the `BFT-SMaRT protocol <https://bft-smart.github.io/library/>`_
|
||
For how to run the demo see: :ref:`notary-demo`
|
||
|
||
We continued to work on tools that enable diagnostics on the node. The newest addition to Corda Shell is ``flow watch`` command which
|
||
lets the administrator see all flows currently running with result or error information as well as who is the flow initiator.
|
||
Here is the view from DemoBench:
|
||
|
||
.. image:: resources/flowWatchCmd.png
|
||
|
||
We also started work on the strategic wire format (not integrated).
|
||
|
||
Milestone 11
|
||
------------
|
||
|
||
Special thank you to `Gary Rowe <https://github.com/gary-rowe>`_ for his contribution to Corda's Contracts DSL in M11.
|
||
|
||
Work has continued on confidential identities, introducing code to enable the Java standard libraries to work with
|
||
composite key signatures. This will form the underlying basis of future work to standardise the public key and signature
|
||
formats to enable interoperability with other systems, as well as enabling the use of composite signatures on X.509
|
||
certificates to prove association between transaction keys and identity keys.
|
||
|
||
The identity work will require changes to existing code and configurations, to replace party names with full X.500
|
||
distinguished names (see RFC 1779 for details on the construction of distinguished names). Currently this is not
|
||
enforced, however it will be in a later milestone.
|
||
|
||
* "myLegalName" in node configurations will need to be replaced, for example "Bank A" is replaced with
|
||
"CN=Bank A,O=Bank A,L=London,C=GB". Obviously organisation, location and country ("O", "L" and "C" respectively)
|
||
must be given values which are appropriate to the node, do not just use these example values.
|
||
* "networkMap" in node configurations must be updated to match any change to the legal name of the network map.
|
||
* If you are using mock parties for testing, try to standardise on the ``DUMMY_NOTARY``, ``DUMMY_BANK_A``, etc. provided
|
||
in order to ensure consistency.
|
||
|
||
We anticipate enforcing the use of distinguished names in node configurations from M12, and across the network from M13.
|
||
|
||
We have increased the maximum message size that we can send to Corda over RPC from 100 KB to 10 MB.
|
||
|
||
The Corda node now disables any use of ObjectInputStream to prevent Java deserialisation within flows. This is a security fix,
|
||
and prevents the node from deserialising arbitrary objects.
|
||
|
||
We've introduced the concept of platform version which is a single integer value which increments by 1 if a release changes
|
||
any of the public APIs of the entire Corda platform. This includes the node's public APIs, the messaging protocol,
|
||
serialisation, etc. The node exposes the platform version it's on and we envision CorDapps will use this to be able to
|
||
run on older versions of the platform to the one they were compiled against. Platform version borrows heavily from Android's
|
||
API Level.
|
||
|
||
We have revamped the DemoBench user interface. DemoBench will now also be installed as "Corda DemoBench" for both Windows
|
||
and MacOSX. The original version was installed as just "DemoBench", and so will not be overwritten automatically by the
|
||
new version.
|
||
|
||
Milestone 10
|
||
------------
|
||
|
||
Special thank you to `Qian Hong <https://github.com/fracting>`_, `Marek Skocovsky <https://github.com/marekdapps>`_,
|
||
`Karel Hajek <https://github.com/polybioz>`_, and `Jonny Chiu <https://github.com/johnnyychiu>`_ for their contributions
|
||
to Corda in M10.
|
||
|
||
A new interactive **Corda Shell** has been added to the node. The shell lets developers and node administrators
|
||
easily command the node by running flows, RPCs and SQL queries. It also provides a variety of commands to monitor
|
||
the node. The Corda Shell is based on the popular `CRaSH project <http://www.crashub.org/>`_ and new commands can
|
||
be easily added to the node by simply dropping Groovy or Java files into the node's ``shell-commands`` directory.
|
||
We have many enhancements planned over time including SSH access, more commands and better tab completion.
|
||
|
||
The new "DemoBench" makes it easy to configure and launch local Corda nodes. It is a standalone desktop app that can be
|
||
bundled with its own JRE and packaged as either EXE (Windows), DMG (MacOS) or RPM (Linux-based). It has the following
|
||
features:
|
||
|
||
#. New nodes can be added at the click of a button. Clicking "Add node" creates a new tab that lets you edit the most
|
||
important configuration properties of the node before launch, such as its legal name and which CorDapps will be loaded.
|
||
#. Each tab contains a terminal emulator, attached to the pseudoterminal of the node. This lets you see console output.
|
||
#. You can launch an Corda Explorer instance for each node at the click of a button. Credentials are handed to the Corda
|
||
Explorer so it starts out logged in already.
|
||
#. Some basic statistics are shown about each node, informed via the RPC connection.
|
||
#. Another button launches a database viewer in the system browser.
|
||
#. The configurations of all running nodes can be saved into a single ``.profile`` file that can be reloaded later.
|
||
|
||
Soft Locking is a new feature implemented in the vault to prevent a node constructing transactions that attempt to use the
|
||
same input(s) simultaneously. Such transactions would result in naturally wasted effort when the notary rejects them as
|
||
double spend attempts. Soft locks are automatically applied to coin selection (eg. cash spending) to ensure that no two
|
||
transactions attempt to spend the same fungible states.
|
||
|
||
The basic Amount API has been upgraded to have support for advanced financial use cases and to better integrate with
|
||
currency reference data.
|
||
|
||
We have added optional out-of-process transaction verification. Any number of external verifier processes may be attached
|
||
to the node which can handle loadbalanced verification requests.
|
||
|
||
We have also delivered the long waited Kotlin 1.1 upgrade in M10! The new features in Kotlin allow us to write even more
|
||
clean and easy to manage code, which greatly increases our productivity.
|
||
|
||
This release contains a large number of improvements, new features, library upgrades and bug fixes. For a full list of
|
||
changes please see :doc:`changelog`.
|
||
|
||
Milestone 9
|
||
-----------
|
||
|
||
This release focuses on improvements to resiliency of the core infrastructure, with highlights including a Byzantine
|
||
fault tolerant (BFT) decentralised notary, based on the BFT-SMaRT protocol and isolating the web server from the
|
||
Corda node.
|
||
|
||
With thanks to open source contributor Thomas Schroeter for providing the BFT notary prototype, Corda can now resist
|
||
malicious attacks by members of a distributed notary service. If your notary service cluster has seven members, two can
|
||
become hacked or malicious simultaneously and the system continues unaffected! This work is still in development stage,
|
||
and more features are coming in the next snapshot!
|
||
|
||
The web server has been split out of the Corda node as part of our ongoing hardening of the node. We now provide a Jetty
|
||
servlet container pre-configured to contact a Corda node as a backend service out of the box, which means individual
|
||
webapps can have their REST APIs configured for the specific security environment of that app without affecting the
|
||
others, and without exposing the sensitive core of the node to malicious Javascript.
|
||
|
||
We have launched a global training programme, with two days of classes from the R3 team being hosted in London, New York
|
||
and Singapore. R3 members get 5 free places and seats are going fast, so sign up today.
|
||
|
||
We've started on support for confidential identities, based on the key randomisation techniques pioneered by the Bitcoin
|
||
and Ethereum communities. Identities may be either anonymous when a transaction is a part of a chain of custody, or fully
|
||
legally verified when a transaction is with a counterparty. Type safety is used to ensure the verification level of a
|
||
party is always clear and avoid mistakes. Future work will add support for generating new identity keys and providing a
|
||
certificate path to show ownership by the well known identity.
|
||
|
||
There are even more privacy improvements when a non-validating notary is used; the Merkle tree algorithm is used to hide
|
||
parts of the transaction that a non-validating notary doesn't need to see, whilst still allowing the decentralised
|
||
notary service to sign the entire transaction.
|
||
|
||
The serialisation API has been simplified and improved. Developers now only need to tag types that will be placed in
|
||
smart contracts or sent between parties with a single annotation... and sometimes even that isn't necessary!
|
||
|
||
Better permissioning in the cash CorDapp, to allow node users to be granted different permissions depending on whether
|
||
they manage the issuance, movement or ledger exit of cash tokens.
|
||
|
||
We've continued to improve error handling in flows, with information about errors being fed through to observing RPC
|
||
clients.
|
||
|
||
There have also been dozens of bug fixes, performance improvements and usability tweaks. Upgrading is definitely
|
||
worthwhile and will only take a few minutes for most apps.
|
||
|
||
For a full list of changes please see :doc:`changelog`.
|