This moves to Rust 1.86 as were prior on Rust 1.81, and the new alloy
dependencies require 1.82.
The revm API changes were notable for us. Instead of relying on a modified call
instruction (with deep introspection into the EVM design), we now use the more
recent and now more prominent Inspector API. This:
1) Lets us perform far less introspection
2) Forces us to rewrite the gas estimation code we just had audited
Thankfully, it itself should be much easier to read/review, and our existing
test suite has extensively validated it.
This resolves 001 which was a concern for if/when this upgrade occurs. By doing
it now, with a dedicated test case ensuring the issue we would have had with
alloy-core 0.8 and `validate=false` isn't actively an issue, we resolve it.
It had sequential async calls with complexity O(n), with a variety of redundant
calls. There was also a constant of... 4? 5? for each item. Now, the total
sequence depth is just 3-4.
Completes the `Executed` enum in the router. Adds an `Escape` struct. Both are
needed for testing purposes.
Documents the gas constants in intent and reasoning.
Adds modernized tests around key rotation and the escape hatch.
Also updates the rest of the codebase which had accumulated errors.
This technically has a TOCTOU where we sync an Epoch's metadata (signifying we
did sync to that point), then check if the Router was deployed, yet at that
very moment the node resets to genesis. By ensuring the Router is deployed, we
avoid this (and don't need to track the deployment block in-contract).
Also uses a JoinSet to sync the 32 blocks in parallel.
contracts was smashed out of ethereum-serai. Both have now been smashed into
individual crates.
Creates a TODO directory with left-over test code yet to be moved.