e4c916a0ea Bugfix: GUI: Use a different shortcut for "1 d&ay" banning, due to conflict with "&Disconnect" (Luke Dashjr)
94e7cdd7e0 GUI: Add keyboard shortcuts for other context menus (Luke Dashjr)
02b5263cd4 GUI: Restore keyboard shortcuts for context menu entries (Luke Dashjr)
Pull request description:
Various keyboard shortcuts were lost in #263; this restores them, and also adds new ones for other context menus.
Note that with a context menu open, simply the shortcut by itself (no Alt) is used.
ACKs for top commit:
jarolrod:
Code Review ACK e4c916a
hebasto:
ACK e4c916a0ea, tested on Linux Mint 20.1 (Qt 5.12.8).
Tree-SHA512: 949461acf7aac592bc48a1c5abad41b167365830e0cedb3aa11b6a87bd347e16126830ea87936f9c9efc4b7df5b09d3833fae784964d6d119ed45703cfba2ffd
The unit test is single threaded, so there's no need to hold the mutex
between Good() and Attempt().
This change avoids recursive locking in the CAddrMan::Attempt function.
Co-authored-by: John Newbery <john@johnnewbery.com>
1b1088d52f test: add combined I2P/onion/localhost eviction protection tests (Jon Atack)
7c2284eda2 test: add tests for inbound eviction protection of I2P peers (Jon Atack)
ce02dd1ef1 p2p: extend inbound eviction protection by network to I2P peers (Jon Atack)
70bbc62711 test: add combined onion/localhost eviction protection coverage (Jon Atack)
045cb40192 p2p: remove unused m_is_onion member from NodeEvictionCandidate struct (Jon Atack)
310fab4928 p2p: remove unused CompareLocalHostTimeConnected() (Jon Atack)
9e889e8a5c p2p: remove unused CompareOnionTimeConnected() (Jon Atack)
787d46bb2a p2p: update ProtectEvictionCandidatesByRatio() doxygen docs (Jon Atack)
1e15acf478 p2p: make ProtectEvictionCandidatesByRatio() fully ratio-based (Jon Atack)
3f8105c4d2 test: remove combined onion/localhost eviction protection tests (Jon Atack)
38a81a8e20 p2p: add CompareNodeNetworkTime() comparator struct (Jon Atack)
4ee7aec47e p2p: add m_network to NodeEvictionCandidate struct (Jon Atack)
7321e6f2fe p2p, refactor: rename vEvictionCandidates to eviction_candidates (Jon Atack)
ec590f1d91 p2p, refactor: improve constness in ProtectEvictionCandidatesByRatio() (Jon Atack)
4a19f501ab test: add ALL_NETWORKS to test utilities (Jon Atack)
519e76bb64 test: speed up and simplify peer_eviction_test (Jon Atack)
1cde800523 p2p, refactor: rm redundant erase_size calculation in SelectNodeToEvict() (Jon Atack)
Pull request description:
Continuing the work in #20197 and #20685, this pull updates and abstracts our inbound eviction protection to make it fully ratio-based and easily extensible to peers connected via high-latency privacy networks that we newly support, like I2P and perhaps others soon, as these peers are disadvantaged by the latency criteria of our eviction logic.
It then adds eviction protection for peers connected over I2P. As described in https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/20685#issuecomment-767486499, we've observed over the past few months that I2P peers have a min ping latency similar to or greater than that of onion peers.
The algorithm is a basically a multi-pass knapsack:
- Count the number of eviction candidates in each of the disadvantaged
privacy networks.
- Sort the networks from lower to higher candidate counts, so that
a network with fewer candidates will have the first opportunity
for any unused slots remaining from the previous iteration. In
the case of a tie in candidate counts, priority is given by array
member order from first to last, guesstimated to favor more unusual
networks.
- Iterate through the networks in this order. On each iteration,
allocate each network an equal number of protected slots targeting
a total number of candidates to protect, provided any slots remain
in the knapsack.
- Protect the candidates in that network having the longest uptime,
if any in that network are present.
- Continue iterating as long as we have non-allocated slots
remaining and candidates available to protect.
The goal of this logic is to favorise the diversity of our peer connections.
The individual commit messages describe each change in more detail.
Special thank you to Vasil Dimov for the excellent review feedback and the algorithm improvement that made this change much better than it would have been otherwise. Thanks also to Antoine Riard, whose review feedback nudged this change to protect disadvantaged networks having fewer, rather than more, eviction candidates.
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review re-ACK 1b1088d52f
vasild:
ACK 1b1088d52f
Tree-SHA512: 722f790ff11f2969c79e45a5e0e938d94df78df8687e77002f32e3ef5c72a9ac10ebf8c7a9eb7f71882c97ab0e67b2778191effdb747d9ca54d7c23c2ed19a90
This commit extends our inbound eviction protection to I2P peers to
favorise the diversity of peer connections, as peers connected
through the I2P network are otherwise disadvantaged by our eviction
criteria for their higher latency (higher min ping times) relative
to IPv4 and IPv6 peers, as well as relative to Tor onion peers.
The `networks` array is order-dependent in the case of a tie in
candidate counts between networks (earlier array members receive
priority in the case of a tie).
Therefore, we place I2P candidates before localhost and onion ones
in terms of opportunity to recover unused remaining protected slots
from the previous iteration, guesstimating that most nodes allowing
both onion and I2P inbounds will have more onion peers, followed by
localhost, then I2P, as I2P support is only being added in the
upcoming v22.0 release.
with a more abstract framework to allow easily extending inbound
eviction protection to peers connected through new higher-latency
networks that are disadvantaged by our inbound eviction criteria,
such as I2P and perhaps other BIP155 networks in the future like
CJDNS. This is a change in behavior.
The algorithm is a basically a multi-pass knapsack:
- Count the number of eviction candidates in each of the disadvantaged
privacy networks.
- Sort the networks from lower to higher candidate counts, so that
a network with fewer candidates will have the first opportunity
for any unused slots remaining from the previous iteration. In
the case of a tie in candidate counts, priority is given by array
member order from first to last, guesstimated to favor more unusual
networks.
- Iterate through the networks in this order. On each iteration,
allocate each network an equal number of protected slots targeting
a total number of candidates to protect, provided any slots remain
in the knapsack.
- Protect the candidates in that network having the longest uptime,
if any in that network are present.
- Continue iterating as long as we have non-allocated slots
remaining and candidates available to protect.
Localhost peers are treated as a network like Tor or I2P by aliasing
them to an unused Network enumerator: Network::NET_MAX.
The goal is to favorise diversity of our inbound connections.
Credit to Vasil Dimov for improving the algorithm from single-pass
to multi-pass to better allocate unused protection slots.
Co-authored-by: Vasil Dimov <vd@FreeBSD.org>
as we are about the change the behavior sufficiently that when we
have multiple disadvantaged networks and a small number of peers
under test, the number of protected peers per network can be different.
This speeds up the test significantly, which helps when
running it repeatedly.
Suggest reviewing the diff with:
colorMoved = dimmed-zebra
colorMovedWs = allow-indentation-change
At verification time, the to be precomputed data can be inferred from
the transaction itself. For signing, the necessary witnesses don't
exist yet, so just permit precomputing everything in that case.
This provides a means to pass in a PrecomputedTransactionData object to
the MutableTransactionSignatureCreator, allowing the prevout data to be
passed into the signature hashers. It is also more efficient.
This data structures stores all information necessary for spending a taproot
output (the internal key, the Merkle root, and the control blocks for every
script leaf).
It is added to signing providers, and populated by the tr() descriptor.
fbf485c9b2 Allow tr() import only when Taproot is active (Andrew Chow)
Pull request description:
To avoid issues around fund loss, only allow descriptor wallets to import `tr()` descriptors after taproot has activated.
ACKs for top commit:
sipa:
utACK fbf485c9b2
fjahr:
Code review ACK fbf485c9b2
laanwj:
Code review ACK fbf485c9b2
prayank23:
utACK fbf485c9b2
Tree-SHA512: 83c43376515eea523dbc89bc5a0fde53e54aec492e49a40c2a33d80fc94aac459e232ae07b024b4bd75b58078c8d090bc7a2d69541c5d3d4834d2f4cfc9c8208
f507681baa qt: Connect WalletView signal to BitcoinGUI slot directly (Hennadii Stepanov)
bd50ff9290 qt: Drop redundant OverviewPage::handleOutOfSyncWarningClicks slot (Hennadii Stepanov)
793f19599b qt: Drop redundant WalletView::requestedSyncWarningInfo slot (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
This PR:
- removes slots whose only job is to emit a signal, since we can use the signal as a slot
- connects the`WalletView::outOfSyncWarningClicked` signal to the `BitcoinGUI::showModalOverlay` slot directly, and removes intermediate `WalletFrame` slot and signal
- split from #29
This PR does not change behavior.
ACKs for top commit:
Talkless:
tACK f507681baa, tested on Debian Sid with Qt 5.15.2, no any behavioral changes noticed.
promag:
Code review ACK f507681baa.
Tree-SHA512: cd636a7e61881b2cbee84d5425d2107a8e39683b8eb32d79dc9ea942db55d5c1979be2f70da1660eaee5de622d10ed5a92f11fc2351de21b84324b10b23d0c96
fa334b4054 refactor: Pass block reference instead of pointer to PeerManagerImpl::BlockRequested (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
This allows to remove an assert and at the same time make it more obvious that the block is never nullptr.
Also, add missing `{}` while touching the function.
ACKs for top commit:
jnewbery:
Code review ACK fa334b4054
mjdietzx:
crACK fa334b4054
theStack:
Code review ACK fa334b4054
Tree-SHA512: 9733d3e20e048fcb2ac7510eae3539ce8aaa7397bd944a265123f1ffd90e15637cdaad19dba16f76d83f3f0d1888f1b7014c191bb430e410a106c49ca61a725c
a92485b2c2 addrman: use unordered_map instead of map (Vasil Dimov)
Pull request description:
`CAddrMan` uses `std::map` internally even though it does not require
that the map's elements are sorted. `std::map`'s access time is
`O(log(map size))`. `std::unordered_map` is more suitable as it has a
`O(1)` access time.
This patch lowers the execution times of `CAddrMan`'s methods as follows
(as per `src/bench/addrman.cpp`):
```
AddrMan::Add(): -3.5%
AddrMan::GetAddr(): -76%
AddrMan::Good(): -0.38%
AddrMan::Select(): -45%
```
ACKs for top commit:
jonatack:
ACK a92485b2c2
achow101:
ACK a92485b2c2
hebasto:
re-ACK a92485b2c2, only suggested changes and rebased since my [previous](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/18722#pullrequestreview-666663681) review.
Tree-SHA512: d82959a00e6bd68a6c4c5a265dd08849e6602ac3231293b7a3a3b7bf82ab1d3ba77f8ca682919c15c5d601b13e468b8836fcf19595248116635f7a50d02ed603
f47e802839 Rearrange fillPSBT arguments (Russell Yanofsky)
Pull request description:
Move fillPSBT inout argument before output-only arguments. This is a nice thing to do to keep the interface style [consistent](https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html#Inputs_and_Outputs). But motivation is to work around a current limitation of the libmultiprocess code generator (which figures out order of inout parameters by looking at input list, but more ideally would use the output list).
---
This PR is part of the [process separation project](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/projects/10). The commit was first part of larger PR #10102.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK f47e802839
theStack:
Code-review ACK f47e802839
Tree-SHA512: 1787af3031ff7ed6b519f3b93054d8b257af96a3380a476a6dab0f759329039ecc5d624b785c5c2d14d594fc852dd81c626880c775c691ec9c79b7b3dbcfb257
6f994882de validation: Farewell, global Chainstate! (Carl Dong)
972c5166ee qt/test: Reset chainman in ~ChainstateManager instead (Carl Dong)
6c3b5dc0c1 scripted-diff: tree-wide: Remove all review-only assertions (Carl Dong)
3e82abb8dd tree-wide: Remove stray review-only assertion (Carl Dong)
f323248aba qt/test: Use existing chainman in ::TestGUI (can be scripted-diff) (Carl Dong)
6c15de129c scripted-diff: wallet/test: Use existing chainman (Carl Dong)
ee0ab1e959 fuzz: Initialize a TestingSetup for test_one_input (Carl Dong)
0d61634c06 scripted-diff: test: Use existing chainman in unit tests (Carl Dong)
e197076219 test: Pass in CoinsTip to ValidateCheckInputsForAllFlags (Carl Dong)
4d99b61014 test/miner_tests: Pass in chain tip to CreateBlockIndex (Carl Dong)
f0dd5e6bb4 test/util: Use existing chainman in ::PrepareBlock (Carl Dong)
464c313e30 init: Use existing chainman (Carl Dong)
Pull request description:
Based on: #21767
à la Mr. Sandman
```
Mr. Chainman, bring me a tip (bung, bung, bung, bung)
Make it the most work that I've ever seen (bung, bung, bung, bung)
Rewind old tip till we're at the fork point (bung, bung, bung, bung)
Then tell it that it's time to call Con-nectTip
Chainman, I'm so alone (bung, bung, bung, bung)
No local objects to call my own (bung, bung, bung, bung)
Please make sure I have a ref
Mr. Chainman, bring me a tip!
```
This is the last bundle in the #20158 series. Thanks everyone for their diligent review.
I would like to call attention to https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/21766, where a few leftover improvements were collated.
- Remove globals:
- `ChainstateManager g_chainman`
- `CChainState& ChainstateActive()`
- `CChain& ChainActive()`
- Remove all review-only assertions.
ACKs for top commit:
jamesob:
reACK 6f994882de based on the contents of
ariard:
Code Review ACK 6f99488.
jnewbery:
utACK 6f994882de
achow101:
Code Review ACK 6f994882de
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK 6f994882de.
Tree-SHA512: 4052ea79360cf0efd81ad0ee3f982e1d93aab1837dcec75f875a56ceda085de078bb3099a2137935d7cc2222004ad88da94b605ef5efef35cb6bc733725debe6
as EraseLastKElements() called in the next line performs the same operation.
Thanks to Martin Zumsande (lightlike) for seeing this while reviewing.
Co-authored-by: Martin Zumsande <mzumsande@gmail.com>
493fb47c57 Make SetupServerArgs callable without NodeContext (Russell Yanofsky)
Pull request description:
`bitcoin-gui` code needs to call `SetupServerArgs` but will not have a `NodeContext` object if it is communicating with an external `bitcoin-node` process, so this just passes `ArgsManager` directly.
---
This PR is part of the [process separation project](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/projects/10). The commit was first part of larger PR #10102.
ACKs for top commit:
MarcoFalke:
review ACK 493fb47c57
Tree-SHA512: 94cda4350113237976e32f1935e3602d1e6ea90c29c4434db2094be70dddf4b63702c3094385258bdf1c3e5b52c7d23bbc1f0282bdd4965557eedd5aef9a0fd4
fa72fce7c9 test: Use ConnmanTestMsg from test lib in denialofservice_tests (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
This allows to remove code.
Also, required for https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/18470
ACKs for top commit:
mjdietzx:
crACK fa72fce7c9👍👍
fanquake:
ACK fa72fce7c9
Tree-SHA512: 12aa68cde697c0f7c25d60bb0c02783e5462eb3ba39947b0d94a7798bc278e7d5f092f3ab2a3d0547947c3502cde7c4a599419055a57f78ef1f70f9f637e14c7
There are some mutable, global state variables that are currently reset
by UnloadBlockIndex such as pindexBestHeader which should be cleaned up
whenever the ChainstateManager is unloaded/reset/destructed/etc.
Not cleaning them up leads to bugs like a use-after-free that happens
like so:
1. At the end of a test, ChainstateManager is destructed, which also
destructs BlockManager, which calls BlockManager::Unload to free all
CBlockIndexes in its BlockMap
2. Since pindexBestHeader is not cleaned up, it now points to an invalid
location
3. Another test starts to init, and calls LoadGenesisBlock, which calls
AddToBlockIndex, which compares the genesis block with an invalid
location
4. Cute puppies perish by the hundreds
Previously, for normal codepaths (e.g. bitcoind), we relied on the fact
that our program will be unloaded by the operating system which
effectively resets these variables. The one exception is in QT tests,
where these variables had to be manually reset.
Since now ChainstateManager is no longer a global, we can just put this
logic in its destructor to make sure that callers are always correct.
Over time, we should probably move these mutable global state variables
into ChainstateManager or CChainState so it's easier to reason about
their lifecycles.
Move fillPSBT input-output argument before output-only arguments. This is a
temporary workaround which can go away with improvements to libmultiprocess
code generator. Currently code generator figures out order of input-output
parameters by looking at input list, but it would make more sense for it to
take order from output list, so input-only parameters still have to be first
but there is more flexibility for the other parameters.
2f4ad6b7ef scripted-diff: rename MarkBlockAs functions (John Newbery)
2c45f832e8 [net processing] Tidy up MarkBlockAsReceived() (John Newbery)
6299350733 [net processing] Add IsBlockRequested() function (John Newbery)
4e90d2dd0e [net processing] Remove QueuedBlock.hash (John Newbery)
156a19ee6a scripted-diff: rename nPeersWithValidatedDownloads (John Newbery)
b03de9c753 [net processing] Remove CNodeState.nBlocksInFlightValidHeaders (John Newbery)
b4e29f2436 [net processing] Remove QueuedBlock.fValidatedHeaders (John Newbery)
85e058b191 [net processing] Remove unnecessary hash arg from MarkBlockAsInFlight() (John Newbery)
Pull request description:
The QueuedBlock struct contains a `fValidatedHeaders` field that indicates whether we have already validated a header for the requested block. Since headers-first syncing, we only request blocks where the header is already validated, so `fValidatedHeaders` is always true. Remove it and clean up the logic that uses that field.
Likewise, QueuedBlock contains a `hash` field that is set to the block hash. Since headers-first syncing, we always have a CBlockIndex, which contains the block hash, so remove the redundant `hash` field.
Tidy up the logic and rename functions to better indicate what they're doing.
ACKs for top commit:
mjdietzx:
crACK 2f4ad6b7ef
sipa:
utACK 2f4ad6b7ef
MarcoFalke:
review ACK 2f4ad6b7ef📊
Tree-SHA512: 3d31d2bcb4d35d0fdb7c1da624c2878203218026445e8f76c4a2df68cc7183ce0e7d0c47c7c0a3242e55efaca7c9f5532b683cf6ec7c03d23fa83764fdb82fd2
3f05a9e681 zmq: use msg: prefix over errno= in zmqError (fanquake)
9a7cb57bbc zmq: use std::string in zmqError() (fanquake)
Pull request description:
This is two minor changes. The first is to change `zmqError` to take a `const std::string&` instead of a `const char*`. The second is to change the second portion of `zmqError` to print `msg: message` rather than `errno=message`, given that `zmq_strerror` returns a message. To me, this seems more readable / useful than output like: `Error: Unable to initialize context errno=No such file or directory`.
ACKs for top commit:
practicalswift:
cr ACK 3f05a9e681
instagibbs:
utACK 3f05a9e681
theStack:
Code-Review ACK 3f05a9e681
Tree-SHA512: 197cf381e8b3ced271d0e575e0c6d8e5e9ed93c4b284338b17873c5232eaabe64d6c4b66e1aeb5e76befc89e316abae2b28b7fd760f178481d7b9f4e3f85da67
zmq_strerror() converts the passed errno into a description, meaning
currently you have output like: "errno=No such file or directory".
Using msg: would seem to make more sense here.
e60cd26ad4 Do not load external signers wallets when unsupported (Andrew Chow)
Pull request description:
When external signer support is not compiled, do not load external signer wallets.
Alternative to #22168.
ACKs for top commit:
promag:
Tested ACK e60cd26ad4.
meshcollider:
Code review ACK e60cd26ad4
Tree-SHA512: aed2d0038f448c2f89c6b48f412b106e63c9ed20e748e69aae21fb58c33fc7e4fa73375a52372c73788669eb2b968a8da6b022c65658fa4484f5bbcf205b1b15
d44a261acf Fix issues when `walletdir` is root directory (unknown)
Pull request description:
+ Remove one character less from wallet path
+ After testing lot of random strings with special chars in `wallet_name`, I found that the issue was not related to special characters in the name. Reviewing PR https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/21907 helped me resolve the issue.
**Real issue**: If the path mentioned in `walletdir` is a root directory, first character of the wallet name or path is removed
**Solution**: `if` statement to check `walletdir` is a root directory
Fixes: https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/21510https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/21501
Related PR: https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/20080
Consider the wallet directories `w1` and `w2` saved in `D:\`. Run `bitcoind.exe -walletdir=D:\`, Results for `bitcoin-cli.exe listwalletdir`:
Before this PR:
```
{
"wallets": [
{
"name": "1"
},
{
"name": "2"
}
]
}
```
After this PR:
```
"wallets": [
{
"name": "w1"
},
{
"name": "w2"
}
]
}
```
ACKs for top commit:
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK d44a261acf
meshcollider:
utACK d44a261acf
Tree-SHA512: b09b00f727407e3771c8694861dae1bfd29d97a0d51ddcb5d9c0111dc618b3fff2f75829cbb4361c54457ee564e94fcefd9e2928262a1c918a2b6bbad724eb55
96c2c9520e scripted-diff: Rename SelectCoinsMinConf to AttemptSelection (Andrew Chow)
b583f73354 Move vin filling to before final fee setting (Andrew Chow)
d39cac0547 Set m_subtract_fee_outputs during recipients vector loop (Andrew Chow)
364e0698a5 Move variable initializations to where they are used (Andrew Chow)
32ab430651 Move recipients vector checks to beginning of CreateTransaction (Andrew Chow)
cd1d6d3324 Rename nSubtractFeeFromAmount in CreateTransaction (Andrew Chow)
dac21c793f Rename nValue and nValueToSelect (Andrew Chow)
d2aee3bbc7 Remove extraneous scope in CreateTransactionInternal (Andrew Chow)
b2995963b5 Move cs_wallet lock in CreateTransactionInternal to top of function (Andrew Chow)
Pull request description:
#17331 did some refactors and cleanup of `CreateTransactionInternal` to make it easier to understand, however it is still a bit convoluted even though it doesn't have to be. This PR does additional cleanup and refactoring to `CreateTransactionInternal` so that it is easier to understand. Some unnecessary code was removed, some variables moved around to where they matter, and several indents removed.
ACKs for top commit:
glozow:
reACK 96c2c95
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK 96c2c9520e also acked previously (was reverted).
meshcollider:
re-utACK 96c2c9520e
Tree-SHA512: 3dba67ed436968a07bfd82d435d566ad74e116c6e50ac9baed7144a46ad5c0f630b1ba59d91e8e8972ac2af559d7c0576f0560f09684d2ab20fad6689902866f
1c4b456e1a gui: send using external signer (Sjors Provoost)
24815c6309 gui: wallet creation detects external signer (Sjors Provoost)
3f845ea299 node: add externalSigners to interface (Sjors Provoost)
62ac119f91 gui: display address on external signer (Sjors Provoost)
450cb40a34 wallet: add displayAddress to interface (Sjors Provoost)
eef8d64529 gui: create wallet with external signer (Sjors Provoost)
6cdbc83e93 gui: add external signer path to options dialog (Sjors Provoost)
Pull request description:
Big picture overview in [this gist](https://gist.github.com/Sjors/29d06728c685e6182828c1ce9b74483d).
This PR adds GUI support for external signers, based on the since merged bitcoin/bitcoin#16546 (RPC).
The UX isn't amazing - especially the blocking calls - but it works.
First we adds a GUI setting for the signer script (e.g. path to HWI):
<img width="625" alt="Schermafbeelding 2019-08-05 om 19 32 59" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10217/62483415-e1ff1680-b7b7-11e9-97ca-8d2ce54ca1cb.png">
Then we add an external signer checkbox to the wallet creation dialog:
<img width="374" alt="Schermafbeelding 2019-11-07 om 19 17 23" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10217/68416387-b57ee000-0194-11ea-9730-127d60273008.png">
It's checked by default if HWI detects a device. It also grabs the name. It then creates a fresh wallet and imports the keys.
You can verify an address on the device (blocking...):
<img width="673" alt="Schermafbeelding 2019-08-05 om 19 29 22" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/10217/62483560-43bf8080-b7b8-11e9-9902-8a036116dc4b.png">
Sending, including coin selection, Just Works(tm) as long the device is present.
~External signer support is enabled by default when the GUI is configured and Boost::Process is present.~
External signer support remains disabled by default, see https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/21935.
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
Code Review ACK 1c4b456e1a
hebasto:
ACK 1c4b456e1a, tested on Linux Mint 20.1 (Qt 5.12.8) with HWW `2.0.2-rc.1`.
promag:
Tested ACK 1c4b456e1a but rebased with e033ca1379, with HWI 2.0.2, with Nano S and Nano X.
meshcollider:
re-code-review ACK 1c4b456e1a
Tree-SHA512: 3503113c5c69d40adb6ce364d8e7cae23ce82d032a00474ba9aeb6202eb70f496ef4a6bf2e623e5171e524ad31ade7941a4e0e89539c64518aaec74f4562d86b
2eb0eeda39 validation: document lack of inherited signaling in RBF policy (Antoine Riard)
906b6d9da6 test: Extend feature_rbf.py with no inherited signaling (Antoine Riard)
Pull request description:
Contrary to BIP125 or other full-node implementation (e.g btcd), Bitcoin Core's mempool policy doesn't implement inherited signaling.
This PR documents our mempool behavior on this and add a test demonstrating the case.
ACKs for top commit:
jonatack:
ACK 2eb0eeda39
benthecarman:
ACK 2eb0eeda39
Tree-SHA512: d41453d3b49bae3c1eb532a968f43bc047084913bd285929d4d9cba142777ff2be38163d912e28dfc635f4ecf446de68effad799c6e71be52f81e83410c712fb
fa13f34bf3 fuzz: Increase branch coverage of the float fuzz target (MarcoFalke)
fad0c58c3e fuzz: Remove confusing return keyword from CallOneOf (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
Currently the branch coverage for the float fuzz target is only 50% : https://marcofalke.github.io/btc_cov/fuzz.coverage/src/test/fuzz/float.cpp.gcov.html
This is caused by the Fuzzed Data Provider only picking "nice" floats.
ACKs for top commit:
practicalswift:
cr ACK fa13f34bf3: patch looks correct
Tree-SHA512: 326822515e9a1c77647d41eab9a96185a3b320914d9264730fa72ffb76c2bf3dc5bf72cf6cd9beef14f4f032358d76a976860bf3e2418ae61943cf926c0ea086
5c7ee1b2da libsecp256k1 no longer has --with-bignum= configure option (Pieter Wuille)
bdca9bcb6c Squashed 'src/secp256k1/' changes from 3967d96bf1..efad3506a8 (Pieter Wuille)
cabb566123 Disable certain false positive warnings for libsecp256k1 msvc build (Pieter Wuille)
Pull request description:
This updates our src/secp256k1 subtree to the latest upstream master. The changes include:
* The introduction of safegcd-based modular inverses, reducing ECDSA signing time by 25%-30% and ECDSA verification time by 15%-17%.
* [Original paper](https://gcd.cr.yp.to/papers.html) by Daniel J. Bernstein and Bo-Yin Yang
* [Implementation](https://github.com/bitcoin-core/secp256k1/pull/767) by Peter Dettman; [final](https://github.com/bitcoin-core/secp256k1/pull/831) version
* [Explanation](https://github.com/bitcoin-core/secp256k1/blob/master/doc/safegcd_implementation.md) of the algorithm using Python snippets
* [Analysis](https://github.com/sipa/safegcd-bounds) of the maximum number of iterations the algorithm needs
* [Formal proof in Coq](https://medium.com/blockstream/a-formal-proof-of-safegcd-bounds-695e1735a348) by Russell O'Connor, for a high-level equivalent algorithm
* Removal of libgmp as an (optional) dependency (which wasn't used in the Bitcoin Core build)
* CI changes (Travis -> Cirrus)
* Build system improvements
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Tested ACK 5c7ee1b2da
Tree-SHA512: ad8ac3746264d279556a4aa7efdde3733e114fdba8856dd53218588521f04d83950366f5c1ea8fd56329b4c7fe08eedf8e206f8f26dbe3f0f81852e138655431
The return type is already enforced to be void by the
ternary operator:
./test/fuzz/util.h:47:25: error: right operand to ? is void, but left operand is of type *OTHER_TYPE*
((i++ == call_index ? callables() : void()), ...);
^ ~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~
3737d35fee fuzz: Terminate immediately if a fuzzing harness ever tries to perform a DNS lookup (belts and suspenders) (practicalswift)
Pull request description:
Terminate immediately if a fuzzing harness tries to perform a DNS lookup (belt and suspenders).
Obviously this _should_ never happen, but if it _does_ happen we want immediate termination instead of a DNS lookup :)
ACKs for top commit:
MarcoFalke:
review ACK 3737d35fee
Tree-SHA512: 51cd2d32def7f9f052e02f99c354656af1f807cc9fdf592ab765e620bfe660f1ed26e0484763f94aba650424b44959eafaf352bfd0f81aa273e350510e97356e
62cb8d98d2 qt: Drop BitcoinGUI* WalletFrame data member (Hennadii Stepanov)
f73e5c972a qt: Move CreateWalletActivity connection from WalletFrame to BitcoinGUI (Hennadii Stepanov)
20e2e24e90 qt: Move WalletView connections from WalletFrame to BitcoinGUI (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
This PR:
- implements an idea from https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/17937#issuecomment-575991765
- simplifies `WalletFrame` class interface
- as a side effect, removes `bitcoingui` -> `walletframe` -> `bitcoingui` circular dependency
- is an alternative to https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/17500
ACKs for top commit:
promag:
Tested ACK 62cb8d98d2 on macos 11.2.3 with depends build.
jarolrod:
ACK 62cb8d98d2
Tree-SHA512: 633b526a8499ba9ab4b16928daf4de4f6d610284bb9fa51891cad35300a03bde740df3466a71b46e87a62121330fcc9e606eac7666ea5e45fa6d5785b60dcbbd
fb1b1e0f3e qt: Save/restore column sizes of the tables in the Peers tab (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
ACKs for top commit:
jonatack:
ACK fb1b1e0f3e code review, debug-built and tested
jarolrod:
ACK fb1b1e0f3e
Tree-SHA512: f93495ecd13e4202aba61b407fffbeec855f5b0c1cc027197c78edddd7d11c87ebdb0fcb1daac242f0407323b31f4e7e0313bd76113a5241e4c868a8829af20a
8b419b5163 qt: make console buttons look clickable (Jarol Rodriguez)
Pull request description:
On master, for macOS, the console buttons' hitboxes are quite small. This makes clicking on the button with your mouse a little more tedious than it should be. The Issue is related to recent versions of Qt (>5.9.8) not playing so nice on macOS when there are "incorrect" `width` and `height` values set for a `QPushButton` (here is another example: https://github.com/bitcoin-core/gui/pull/319#pullrequestreview-652907740).
This fixes this small hitbox issue by converting the buttons from `QPushButton` to `QToolButton`, which in turn makes the buttons look explicitly clickable. This approach was chosen as it helps us avoid having to play around with `width` and `height` values until we find values that play nice with macOS and look good on Linux & Windows. Also, `QToolButton` is an appropriate class for these buttons.
Per [Qt Docs](https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qtoolbutton.html#details):
> A tool button is a special button that provides quick-access to specific commands or options. As opposed to a normal command button, a tool button usually doesn't show a text label, but shows an icon instead.
Since we are changing the type of the buttons, we need to change the respective actions connection logic in `rpcconsole`. Instead of plugging in `QToolButton`, we abstract it to the base class: `QAbstractButton`.
per [Qt Dev Notes](https://github.com/bitcoin-core/bitcoin-devwiki/wiki/Developer-Notes-for-Qt-Code#inherited-signals-and-slot)
> Use base class functions as this makes the code more general, e.g., use QAbstractButton::clicked instead of QPushButton::clicked.
While here, we also update the size of the icons to `22x22` to be consistent with other tool buttons.
**macOS: Master vs PR:**
| Master | PR |
| ----------- | ----------- |
| ![master-ss-macos](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/23396902/118339460-e9079c80-b4e6-11eb-864b-d394aca5df61.png) | ![pr-ss-macos](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/23396902/118339468-ec9b2380-b4e6-11eb-9a9e-30620216750e.png) |
**Linux: Master vs PR:**
| Master | PR |
| ----------- | ----------- |
| ![master-ss-linux](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/23396902/118339520-13595a00-b4e7-11eb-86d0-96dd1264c198.png) | ![pr-ss-linux](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/23396902/118339533-1c4a2b80-b4e7-11eb-8d7f-f733d999c8fd.png) |
ACKs for top commit:
hebasto:
ACK 8b419b5163, tested on Linux Mint 20.1 (Qt 5.12.8).
promag:
Tested ACK 8b419b5163 on macOS Big Sur M1, this drops only relevant usages to `flat` buttons.
Tree-SHA512: 3f3cdcbe83398136a1d1ee8fc2835be8681f2ed39e79db1e939cab6a00a779f528343d54992807a845cc84d9ef13591affb7a6dbca9e5753a2b8665b0af4d611