If the peer (whether pruned or not itself) supports sending pruned blocks
to syncing nodes, the pruned version will be sent along with the hash
of the pruned data and the block weight. The original tx hashes can be
reconstructed from the pruned txes and theur prunable data hash. Those
hashes and the block weights are hashes and checked against the set of
precompiled hashes, ensuring the data we received is the original data.
It is currently not possible to use this system when not using the set
of precompiled hashes, since block weights can not otherwise be checked
for validity.
This is off by default for now, and is enabled by --sync-pruned-blocks
One considers the blockchain, while the other considers the
blockchain and some recent actions, such as a recently created
transaction which spend some outputs, but isn't yet mined.
Typically, the "balance" command wants the latter, to reflect
the recent action, but things like proving ownership wants
the former.
This fixes a crash in get_reserve_proof, where a preliminary
check and the main code used two concepts of "balance".
bdfc63a Add ref-counted buffer byte_slice. Currently used for sending TCP data. (vtnerd)
3b24b1d Added support for 'noise' over I1P/Tor to mask Tx transmission. (vtnerd)
914b106 wallet_rpc_server: use original addresses in destinations in get_transfers (moneromooo-monero)
da694d4 functional_tests: add tests for pending/out transfer addresses (moneromooo-monero)
c8709fe wallet: do not print log settings when unset (moneromooo-monero)
7b18e83 unit_tests: check return values on test data parsing (moneromooo-monero)
eeca5ca epee: support unicode in parsed strings (moneromooo-monero)
3e11bb5 functional_tests: test creating wallets with local language names (moneromooo-monero)
According to [1], std::random_shuffle is deprecated in C++14 and removed
in C++17. Since std::shuffle is available since C++11 as a replacement
and monero already requires C++11, this is a good replacement.
A cryptographically secure random number generator is used in all cases
to prevent people from perhaps copying an insecure std::shuffle call
over to a place where a secure one would be warranted. A form of
defense-in-depth.
[1]: https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/algorithm/random_shuffle
When the wallet auto refreshes after mining the last two blocks
but before popping them, it will then try to use outputs which
are not unlocked yet. This is really a wallet problem, which
will be fixed later.