54b39cfb34 Add release notes (stickies-v)
f959fc0397 Update /<count>/ endpoints to use a '?count=' query parameter instead (stickies-v)
a09497614e Add GetQueryParameter helper function (stickies-v)
fff771ee86 Handle query string when parsing data format (stickies-v)
c1aad1b3b9 scripted-diff: rename RetFormat to RESTResponseFormat (stickies-v)
9f1c54787c Refactoring: move declarations to rest.h (stickies-v)
Pull request description:
In RESTful APIs, [typically](https://rapidapi.com/blog/api-glossary/parameters/query/) path parameters (e.g. `/some/unique/resource/`) are used to represent resources, and query parameters (e.g. `?sort=asc`) are used to control how these resources are being loaded through e.g. sorting, pagination, filtering, ...
As first [discussed in #17631](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/17631#discussion_r733031180), the [current REST api](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/master/doc/REST-interface.md) contains two endpoints `/headers/` and `/blockfilterheaders/` that rather unexpectedly use path parameters to control how many (filter) headers are returned in the response. While this is no critical issue, it is unintuitive and we are still early enough to easily phase this behaviour out and ensure new endpoints (if any) do not have to stick to non-standard behaviour just for internal consistency.
In this PR, a new `HTTPRequest::GetQueryParameter` method is introduced to easily parse query parameters, as well as two new `/headers/` and `/blockfilterheaders/` endpoints that use a count query parameter are introduced. The old path parameter-based endpoints are kept without too much overhead, but the documentation now points to the new query parameter-based endpoints as the default interface to encourage standardness.
## Behaviour change
### New endpoints and default values
`/headers/` and `/blockfilterheaders/` now have 2 new endpoints that contain query parameters (`?count=<count>`) instead of path parameters (`/<count>/`), as described in REST-interface.md. Since query parameters can easily have default values, I have set this at 5 for both endpoints.
**headers**
`GET /rest/headers/<BLOCK-HASH>.<bin|hex|json>?count=<COUNT=5>`
should now be used instead of
`GET /rest/headers/<COUNT>/<BLOCK-HASH>.<bin|hex|json>`
**blockfilterheaders**
`GET /rest/blockfilterheaders/<FILTERTYPE>/<BLOCK-HASH>.<bin|hex|json>?count=<COUNT=5>`
should now be used instead of
`GET /rest/blockfilterheaders/<FILTERTYPE>/<COUNT>/<BLOCK-HASH>.<bin|hex|json>`
### Some previously invalid API calls are now valid
API calls that contained query strings in the URI could not be parsed prior to this PR. This PR changes behaviour in that previously invalid calls (e.g. `GET /rest/headers/5/somehash.json?someunusedparam=foo`) would now become valid, as the query parameters are properly parsed, and discarded if unused.
For example, prior to this PR, adding an irrelevant `someparam` parameter would be illegal:
```
GET /rest/headers/5/0000004c6aad0c89c1c060e8e116dcd849e0554935cd78ff9c6a398abeac6eda.json?someparam=true
->
Invalid hash: 0000004c6aad0c89c1c060e8e116dcd849e0554935cd78ff9c6a398abeac6eda.json?someparam=true
```
**This behaviour change affects all rest endpoints, not just the 2 new ones introduced here.**
*(Note: I'd be open to implementing additional logic to refuse requests containing unrecognized query parameters to minimize behaviour change, but for the endpoints that we currently have I don't really see the point for that added complexity. E.g. I don't see any scenarios where misspelling a parameter could lead to harmful outcomes)*
## Using the REST API
To run the API HTTP server, start a bitcoind instance with the `-rest` flag enabled. To use the
`blockfilterheaders` endpoint, you'll also need to set `-blockfilterindex=1`:
```
./bitcoind -signet -rest -blockfilterindex=1
```
As soon as bitcoind is fully up and running, you should be able to query the API, for example by
using curl on the command line: ```curl "127.0.0.1:38332/rest/chaininfo.json"```.
To more easily parse the JSON output, you can also use tools like 'jq' or `json_pp`, e.g.:
```
curl -s "localhost:38332/rest/blockfilterheaders/basic/0000004c6aad0c89c1c060e8e116dcd849e0554935cd78ff9c6a398abeac6eda.json?count=2" | json_pp .
```
## To do
- [x] update `doc/release-notes`
## Feedback
This is my first PR (hooray!). Please don't hold back on any feedback/comments/nits/... you may have, big or small, whether they are code, process, language, ... related. I welcome private messages too if there's anything you don't want to clutter the PR with. I'm here to learn and am grateful for everyone's input.
ACKs for top commit:
stickies-v:
I've had to push a tiny doc update to `REST-interface.md` (`git range-diff 219d728 9aac438 54b39cf`) since this was not merged for v23, but since there are no significant changes beyond theStack and jnewbery's ACKs I think this PR is now ready to be considered for merging? @MarcoFalke
jnewbery:
ACK 54b39cfb34
theStack:
re-ACK 54b39cfb34
Tree-SHA512: 3b393ffde34f25605ca12c0b1300799a19684b816a1d03aed38b0f5439df47bfe6a589ffbcd7b83fd2def6c9d00a1bae5e45b1d18df4ae998c617c709990f83f
2da94a4c6f fuzz: add a fuzz target for Miniscript decoding from Script (Antoine Poinsot)
f8369996e7 Miniscript: ops limit and stack size computation (Pieter Wuille)
2e55e88f86 Miniscript: conversion from script (Pieter Wuille)
1ddaa66eae Miniscript: type system, script creation, text notation, tests (Pieter Wuille)
4fe29368c0 script: expose getter for CScriptNum, add a BuildScript helper (Antoine Poinsot)
f4e289f384 script: move CheckMinimalPush from interpreter to script.h (Antoine Poinsot)
31ec6ae92a script: make IsPushdataOp non-static (Antoine Poinsot)
Pull request description:
Miniscript is a language for writing (a subset of) Bitcoin Scripts in a structured way.
Miniscript permits:
- To safely extend the Output Descriptor language to many more scripting features thanks to the typing system (composition).
- Statical analysis of spending conditions, maximum spending cost of each branch, security properties, third-party malleability.
- General satisfaction of any correctly typed ("valid" [0]) Miniscript. The satisfaction itself is also analyzable.
- To extend the possibilities of external signers, because of all of the above and since it carries enough metadata.
Miniscript guarantees:
- That for any statically-analyzed as "safe" [0] Script, a witness can be constructed in the bounds of the consensus and standardness rules (standardness complete).
- That unless the conditions of the Miniscript are met, no witness can be created for the Script (consensus sound).
- Third-party malleability protection for the satisfaction of a sane Miniscript, which is too complex to summarize here.
For more details around Miniscript (including the specifications), please refer to the [website](https://bitcoin.sipa.be/miniscript/).
Miniscript was designed by Pieter Wuille, Andrew Poelstra and Sanket Kanjalkar.
This PR is an updated and rebased version of #16800. See [the commit history of the Miniscript repository](https://github.com/sipa/miniscript/commits/master) for details about the changes made since September 2019 (TL;DR: bugfixes, introduction of timelock conflicts in the type system, `pk()` and `pkh()` aliases, `thresh_m` renamed to `multi`, all recursive algorithms were made non-recursive).
This PR is also the first in a series of 3:
- The first one (here) integrates the backbone of Miniscript.
- The second one (#24148) introduces support for Miniscript in Output Descriptors, allowing for watch-only support of Miniscript Descriptors in the wallet.
- The third one (#24149) implements signing for these Miniscript Descriptors, using Miniscript's satisfaction algorithm.
Note to reviewers:
- Miniscript is currently defined only for P2WSH. No Taproot yet.
- Miniscript is different from the policy language (a high-level logical representation of a spending policy). A policy->Miniscript compiler is not included here.
- The fuzz target included here is more interestingly extended in the 3rd PR to check a script's satisfaction against `VerifyScript`. I think it could be further improved by having custom mutators as we now have for multisig (see https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/23105). A minified corpus of Miniscript Scripts is available at https://github.com/bitcoin-core/qa-assets/pull/85.
[0] We call "valid" any correctly-typed Miniscript. And "safe" any sane Miniscript, ie one whose satisfaction isn't malleable, which requires a key for any spending path, etc..
ACKs for top commit:
jb55:
ACK 2da94a4c6f
laanwj:
Light code review ACK 2da94a4c6f (mostly reviewed the changes to the existing code and build system)
Tree-SHA512: d3ef558436cfcc699a50ad13caf1e776f7d0addddb433ee28ef38f66ea5c3e581382d8c748ccac9b51768e4b95712ed7a6112b0e3281a6551e0f325331de9167
2ef47ba6c5 util/check: stop using lambda for Assert/Assume (Anthony Towns)
7c9fe25c16 wallet: move Assert() check into constructor (Anthony Towns)
Pull request description:
Using a lambda creates a couple of odd namespacing issues, in particular making clang's thread safety analysis less helpful, and confusing gcc when calling member functions. Fix this by not using a lambda.
Fixes#21596Fixes#24654
ACKs for top commit:
MarcoFalke:
ACK 2ef47ba6c5🚢
jonatack:
Tested re-ACK 2ef47ba6c5
Tree-SHA512: 4bdbf3215f3d14472df0552362c5eebe8b7eea2d0928a8a41109edd4e0c5f95de6f8220eb2fee8506874e352c003907faf5ef344174795939306a618157b1bae
More information about Miniscript can be found at https://bitcoin.sipa.be/miniscript/ (the
website source is hosted at https://github.com/sipa/miniscript/).
This commit defines all fragments, their composition, parsing from
string representation and conversion to Script.
Co-Authored-By: Antoine Poinsot <darosior@protonmail.com>
Co-Authored-By: Sanket Kanjalkar <sanket1729@gmail.com>
Co-Authored-By: Samuel Dobson <dobsonsa68@gmail.com>
2c03cec2ff ci: Build bitcoin-chainstate (Carl Dong)
095aa6ca37 build: Add example bitcoin-chainstate executable (Carl Dong)
Pull request description:
Part of: #24303
This PR introduces an example/demo `bitcoin-chainstate` executable using said library which can print out information about a datadir and take in new blocks on stdin.
Please read the commit messages for more details.
-----
#### You may ask: WTF?! Why is `index/*.cpp`, etc. being linked in?
This PR is meant only to capture the state of dependencies in our consensus engine as of right now. There are many things to decouple from consensus, which will be done in subsequent PRs. Listing the files out right now in `bitcoin_chainstate_SOURCES` is purely to give us a clear picture of the task at hand, it is **not** to say that these dependencies _belongs_ there in any way.
### TODO
1. Clean up `bitcoin-chainstate.cpp`
It is quite ugly, with a lot of comments I've left for myself, I should clean it up to the best of my abilities (the ugliness of our init/shutdown might be the upper bound on cleanliness here...)
ACKs for top commit:
ajtowns:
ACK 2c03cec2ff
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK 2c03cec2ff. Just rebase, comments, formatting change since last review
MarcoFalke:
re-ACK 2c03cec2ff 🏔
Tree-SHA512: 86e7fb5718caa577df8abc8288c754f4a590650d974df9d2f6476c87ed25c70f923c4db651c6963f33498fc7a3a31f6692b9a75cbc996bf4888c5dac2f34a13b
...to make sure that the linker errors that arise from coupling
regressions are caught by CI.
Adding to the "no wallet" ci job as suggested by MarcoFalke.
The bitcoin-chainstate executable serves to surface the dependencies
required by a program wishing to use Bitcoin Core's consensus engine as
it is right now.
More broadly, the _SOURCES list serves as a guiding "North Star" for the
libbitcoinkernel project: as we decouple more and more modules of the
codebase from our consensus engine, this _SOURCES list will grow shorter
and shorter. One day, only what is critical to our consensus engine will
remain. Right now, it's "the minimal list of files to link in to even
use our consensus engine".
[META] In a future commit the libbitcoinkernel library will be extracted
from bitcoin-chainstate, and the libbitcoinkernel library's
_SOURCES list will be the list that we aim to shrink.
172096e9dd scripted-diff: Rename libbitcoin_server.a to libbitcoin_node.a (Russell Yanofsky)
Pull request description:
Goal along with namespacing PR #23497 is to make code organization more obvious and have `src/node/` code in `node::` namespace in `libbitcoin_node.a` library
ACKs for top commit:
MarcoFalke:
cr ACK 172096e9dd
Tree-SHA512: a2e787eeaa3ab769b0f5376473072cae584d237aa8b67b677bea833bb36b0134a0eca17eb01722389639473b8463f4953bc3a5e4801a6b2c8965ac1075cba005
7f15eff2dd style-only: Remove redundant scope in *Chainstate (Carl Dong)
89bec827fd Collapse the 2 cs_main locks in LoadChainstate (Carl Dong)
3b1584b794 Remove all #include // for * comments (Carl Dong)
9a5a5a3d08 test/setup: Use LoadChainstate (Carl Dong)
c541da0d62 node/chainstate: Add options for in-memory DBs (Carl Dong)
ceb9790341 node/caches: Remove intermediate variables (Carl Dong)
ac4bf138b8 node/caches: Extract cache calculation logic (Carl Dong)
15f2e33bb3 validation: VerifyDB only needs Consensus::Params (Carl Dong)
4da9c076d1 node/chainstate: Decouple from ShutdownRequested (Carl Dong)
05441c2dc5 node/chainstate: Decouple from GetTime (Carl Dong)
2414ebc18b init: Delay RPC block notif until warmup finished (Carl Dong)
8d466a8504 Move -checkblocks LogPrintf to AppInitMain (Carl Dong)
aad8d59789 node/chainstate: Reduce coupling of LogPrintf (Carl Dong)
b345979a2b node/chainstate: Decouple from concept of uiInterface (Carl Dong)
ca7c0b934d Split off VerifyLoadedChainstate (Carl Dong)
adf4912d77 node/chainstate: Remove do/while loop (Carl Dong)
975235ca0a Move init logistics message for BAD_GENESIS_BLOCK to init.cpp (Carl Dong)
8715658983 Move mempool nullptr Assert out of LoadChainstate (Carl Dong)
9162a4f93e node/chainstate: Decouple from concept of NodeContext (Carl Dong)
c7a5c46e6f node/chainstate: Decouple from ArgsManager (Carl Dong)
ae9121f958 node/chainstate: Decouple from stringy errors (Carl Dong)
cbac28b72f node/chainstate: Decouple from GetTimeMillis (Carl Dong)
cb64af9635 node: Extract chainstate loading sequence (Carl Dong)
Pull request description:
This PR:
1. Coalesce the Chainstate loading sequence between `AppInitMain` and `*TestingSetup` (which makes it more tested)
2. Makes the Chainstate loading sequence reusable in preparation for future work extracting out our consensus engine.
Code-wise, this PR:
1. Extracts `AppInitMain`'s Chainstate loading sequence into a `::LoadChainstateSequence` function
2. Makes this `::LoadChainstateSequence` function reusable by
1. Decoupling it from various concepts (`ArgsManager`, `uiInterface`, etc)
2. Making it report errors using an `enum` rather than by setting a `bilingual_str`
3. Makes `*TestingSetup` use this new `::LoadChainstateSequence`
Reviewers: Aside from commentary, I've also included `git diff` flags of interest in the commit messages which I hope will aid review!
ACKs for top commit:
ryanofsky:
Code review ACK 7f15eff2dd. Thanks for updates!
MarcoFalke:
review ACK 7f15eff2dd💳
Tree-SHA512: fb9a6cbd1c511a52b477c62a5e68e53a8be5dec2fff0e44a279966afb91efbab44bf1fe7c6b1519f8464ecc25f42dd4bae8e1efbf55ee91fc90fa0b92e3a83e2
dce8c4c381 rpc: getblockfrompeer (Sjors Provoost)
b884ababc2 rpc: move Ensure* helpers to server_util.h (Sjors Provoost)
Pull request description:
This adds an RPC method to fetch a block directly from a peer. This can used to fetch stale blocks with lower proof of work that are normally ignored by the node (`headers-only` in `getchaintips`).
Usage:
```
bitcoin-cli getblockfrompeer HASH peer_n
```
Closes#20155
Limitations:
* you have to specify which peer to fetch the block from
* the node must already have the header
ACKs for top commit:
jnewbery:
ACK dce8c4c381
fjahr:
re-ACK dce8c4c381
Tree-SHA512: 843ba2b7a308f640770d624d0aa3265fdc5c6ea48e8db32269b96a082b7420f7953d1d8d1ef2e6529392c7172dded9d15639fbc9c24e7bfa5cfb79e13a5498c8
I strongly recommend reviewing with the following git-diff flags:
--color-moved=dimmed_zebra --color-moved-ws=allow-indentation-change
[META] In a future commit, this function will be re-used in TestingSetup
so that the behaviour matches across test and non-test init
codepaths.
I strongly recommend reviewing with the following git-diff flags:
--color-moved=dimmed_zebra --color-moved-ws=allow-indentation-change
[META] This commit is intended to be as close to a move-only commit as
possible, and lingering ugliness will be resolved in subsequent
commits.
A few variables that are passed in by value instead of by reference
deserve explanation:
- fReset and fReindexChainstate are both local variables in AppInitMain
and are not modified in the sequence
- fPruneMode, despite being a global, is only modified in
AppInitParameterInteraction, long before LoadChainstate is called
----
[META] This semantic will change in a future commit named
"node/chainstate: Decouple from stringy errors"
fa4e09924b refactor: Replace validation.h include with forward-decl in miner.h (MarcoFalke)
fa0739a7d3 style: Sort file list after rename (MarcoFalke)
fa53e3a58c scripted-diff: Move miner to src/node (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
It is impossible to run the miner without a node (validation, chainstate, mempool, rpc, ...). Also, the module is in the node library. Thus, it should be moved to `src/node`.
Also, replace the `validation.h` include in the header with a forward-declaration.
ACKs for top commit:
theStack:
Code-review ACK fa4e09924b
Tree-SHA512: 791e6caa5839d8dc83b0f58f3f49bc0a7e3c1710822e8a44dede254c87b6f7531a0586fb95e8a067c181457a3895ad6041718aa2a2fac64cfc136bf04bb851d5
d8ee8f3cd3 refactor: Make CWalletTx sync state type-safe (Russell Yanofsky)
Pull request description:
Current `CWalletTx` state representation makes it possible to set inconsistent states that won't be handled correctly by wallet sync code or serialized & deserialized back into the same form.
For example, it is possible to call `setConflicted` without setting a conflicting block hash, or `setConfirmed` with no transaction index. And it's possible update individual `m_confirm` and `fInMempool` data fields without setting an overall consistent state that can be serialized and handled correctly.
Fix this without changing behavior by using `std::variant`, instead of an enum and collection of fields, to represent sync state, so state tracking code is safer and more legible.
This is a first step to fixing state tracking bugs https://github.com/bitcoin-core/bitcoin-devwiki/wiki/Wallet-Transaction-Conflict-Tracking, by adding an extra margin of safety that can prevent new bugs from being introduced as existing bugs are fixed.
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
re-ACK d8ee8f3cd3
jonatack:
Code review ACK d8ee8f3cd3
Tree-SHA512: b9f15e9d99dbdbdd3ef7a76764e11f66949f50e6227e284126f209e4cb106af6d55e9a9e8c7d4aa216ddc92c6d5acc6f4aa4746f209bbd77f03831b51a2841c3
68e5aafde3 build: add `--enable-lto` configuration option (fanquake)
Pull request description:
It's been 5 years since using LTO was first suggested for use when building Bitcoin Core, and it's time to revisit it again. Compilers, and their LTO implementations, have matured, and Bitcoin Core has come a long way in terms of pruning dependencies which may have proved troublesome (i.e Boost previously had issues when using LTO). We'll have even less Boost code after moving to `std::filesystem` (#20744).
Experimenting with LTO came up on IRC last night:
> sipa: jamesob: i'm interested in knowing whether "-flto" and/or "-fdata-sections -ffunction-sections -Wl,--gc-sections" are possible/beneficial with our current compiler suite; what would be a good way to have your test infrastructure benchmark things?
So this PR just adds the bare minimum to make it easier to configure, compile and perform some bench-marking using `-flto`. This PR doesn't do anything depends wise, however if we decide this is what we want to do, I'll expand the changes here.
I had previously had a PR open (#18605) to perform link time garbage collection (`-ffunction-sections -fdata-sections` & `-Wl,--gc-sections`), however moving straight to using LTO would be preferable.
Note that our minimum required set of compilers, GCC 8.1 and Clang 7, all support the `-flto` option.
Related #18579.
Previous discussion: #10616, #14277.
Previous related PRs: #10800 (`-flto`), #16791 (ThinLTO).
Guix build:
```bash
bash-5.1# find guix-build-$(git rev-parse --short=12 HEAD)/output/ -type f -print0 | env LC_ALL=C sort -z | xargs -r0 sha256sum
1f3a7c5be4169aaa444b481d3e65a7bb72da9007fee6e6c416ded2e70f97374b guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/aarch64-linux-gnu/SHA256SUMS.part
fa8f4cf223d9aaf0b2c1ef55ce61256a19cd1ad7f42b99d0b98c9a52fe6ad8ba guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/aarch64-linux-gnu/bitcoin-68e5aafde3e8-aarch64-linux-gnu-debug.tar.gz
9a9967078cd1849b4e85db619e1f55d305c6d44e9e013067c0e8d62c1ba54087 guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/aarch64-linux-gnu/bitcoin-68e5aafde3e8-aarch64-linux-gnu.tar.gz
18c71f30722102baaf3dfda67f7c7aac38723510b142e8df8ee7063c5d499368 guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/arm-linux-gnueabihf/SHA256SUMS.part
0854cc0d17c045a118df2a24e4cf36d727e7e7e2dea37c2492ee21b71cb79b4b guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/arm-linux-gnueabihf/bitcoin-68e5aafde3e8-arm-linux-gnueabihf-debug.tar.gz
215256897dde4e8412ed60473376c694a80c5479fb08039107fb62435f2816ef guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/arm-linux-gnueabihf/bitcoin-68e5aafde3e8-arm-linux-gnueabihf.tar.gz
5fad0d9d12bc514ec46ed5d66fd29b7da1376a4a69c3b692936f1ab2356e2f85 guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/dist-archive/bitcoin-68e5aafde3e8.tar.gz
4f32989d4ab1946048ca7caee9a983fa875be262282562f5a3e040f4bf92158e guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/powerpc64-linux-gnu/SHA256SUMS.part
ae45df309ae8ada52891efac0a369a69fed4ab93847a7bc4150a62230df4c8d7 guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/powerpc64-linux-gnu/bitcoin-68e5aafde3e8-powerpc64-linux-gnu-debug.tar.gz
0ced227de15cb578567131271e2effe80681b4d7a436c92bf1caec735a576fa4 guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/powerpc64-linux-gnu/bitcoin-68e5aafde3e8-powerpc64-linux-gnu.tar.gz
26fc5d2ccc1bc17ee0a146cacada6f4909d90c136ae640c8337332adce414ee0 guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/powerpc64le-linux-gnu/SHA256SUMS.part
9956b544d90a62a8ba9fc9dc6b6b7f0efe193357332ec19e88053a89d4aab37e guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/powerpc64le-linux-gnu/bitcoin-68e5aafde3e8-powerpc64le-linux-gnu-debug.tar.gz
be8e39ceea1d36086ce5fa93bfb138c68d3bdf0dd6950b192dfa27a65cce3836 guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/powerpc64le-linux-gnu/bitcoin-68e5aafde3e8-powerpc64le-linux-gnu.tar.gz
a7755edc394972885c4c77a7798007e5ba4126b177c4ff6224275c4fb8f3b1c4 guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/riscv64-linux-gnu/SHA256SUMS.part
b6d252993d8aae7582ad6385fe53c61c54c284c68ece6cb2b2d1ac9554e06139 guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/riscv64-linux-gnu/bitcoin-68e5aafde3e8-riscv64-linux-gnu-debug.tar.gz
bb4860f3bbd815f800333124ff901d880741792ab47097f49bda3a6931144da0 guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/riscv64-linux-gnu/bitcoin-68e5aafde3e8-riscv64-linux-gnu.tar.gz
3dd17deed5c5935fb28b62dfc7afca5caab0d67862cdcbf3337edae73e1d0c4c guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/x86_64-apple-darwin19/SHA256SUMS.part
fa2d68c54fda0816188c81ce2201a77340b82645da2ffe412526f92c297a82df guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/x86_64-apple-darwin19/bitcoin-68e5aafde3e8-osx-unsigned.dmg
f6e5accdcd201f522b6426e4d8cc9b3643d4d43a57d268fa0e79ea9a34cfac01 guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/x86_64-apple-darwin19/bitcoin-68e5aafde3e8-osx-unsigned.tar.gz
4e5a127df957d1c73b65925d685f6620e7bc5667efcb6dcd98be76effc22fc12 guix-build-68e5aafde3e8/output/x86_64-apple-darwin19/bitcoin-68e5aafde3e8-osx64.tar.gz
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```
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review ACK 68e5aafde3
Tree-SHA512: 5c25249cc178b9d54159e268390c974b739df9458d773e23c14b14d808f87f7afe314058b3c068601a9132042321973b0c9b6f81becb925665eca2738ae9a613
faba1abe46 Sort file list after rename (MarcoFalke)
fa8f60e311 scripted-diff: Move minisketchwrapper to src/node (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
The newly added wrapper is currently in the node library, but not placed in the node directory. While it is possible to use the wrapper outside of a node context (for example in a utility), it seems unlikely. Either way, I think the wrapper should either be moved to the util lib+dir or the node lib+dir, not something in-between.
Also, fix incorrect comment `BITCOIN_DBWRAPPER_H`.
ACKs for top commit:
fanquake:
ACK faba1abe46. I saw the comment in #21515, however given there hasn't been any new activity there, I'm going to merge this now.
Tree-SHA512: fccc0cfd1fee661152a1378587b96795ffb7a7eceb6d2c27ea5401993fd8b9c0a92579fdba61203917ae6565269cb28d0973464fb6201dabf72a5143495d3e77
Current CWalletTx state representation makes it possible to set
inconsistent states that won't be handled correctly by wallet sync code
or serialized & deserialized back into the same form.
For example, it is possible to call setConflicted without setting a
conflicting block hash, or setConfirmed with no transaction index. And
it's possible update individual m_confirm and fInMempool data fields
without setting an overall consistent state that can be serialized and
handled correctly.
Fix this without changing behavior by using std::variant, instead of an
enum and collection of fields, to represent sync state, so state
tracking code is safer and more legible.
This is a first step to fixing state tracking bugs
https://github.com/bitcoin-core/bitcoin-devwiki/wiki/Wallet-Transaction-Conflict-Tracking,
by adding an extra margin of safety that can prevent new bugs from being
introduced as existing bugs are fixed.
29173d6c6c ubsan: add minisketch exceptions (Cory Fields)
54b5e1aeab Add thin Minisketch wrapper to pick best implementation (Pieter Wuille)
ee9dc71c1b Add basic minisketch tests (Pieter Wuille)
0659f12b13 Add minisketch dependency (Gleb Naumenko)
0eb7928ab8 Add MSVC build configuration for libminisketch (Pieter Wuille)
8bc166d5b1 build: add minisketch build file and include it (Cory Fields)
b2904ceb85 build: add configure checks for minisketch (Cory Fields)
b6487dc4ef Squashed 'src/minisketch/' content from commit 89629eb2c7 (fanquake)
Pull request description:
This takes over #21859, which has [recently switched](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/21859#issuecomment-921899200) to my integration branch. A few more build issues came up (and have been fixed) since, and after discussing with sipa it was decided I would open a PR to shepherd any final changes through.
> This adds a `src/minisketch` subtree, taken from the master branch of https://github.com/sipa/minisketch, to prepare for Erlay implementation (see #21515). It gets configured for just supporting 32-bit fields (the only ones we're interested in in the context of Erlay), and some code on top is added:
> * A very basic unit test (just to make sure compilation & running works; actual correctness checking is done through minisketch's own tests).
> * A wrapper in `minisketchwrapper.{cpp,h}` that runs a benchmark to determine which field implementation to use.
Only changes since my last update to the branch in the previous PR have been rebasing on master and fixing an issue with a header in an introduced file.
ACKs for top commit:
naumenkogs:
ACK 29173d6c6c
Tree-SHA512: 1217d3228db1dd0de12c2919314e1c3626c18a416cf6291fec99d37e34fb6eec8e28d9e9fb935f8590273b8836cbadac313a15f05b4fd9f9d3024c8ce2c80d02