46b025e00d test: add new python linter to check file names and permissions (windsok)
6f6bb3ebc7 test: fix file permissions on various scripts (windsok)
Pull request description:
Adds a new python linter test which tests for correct filenames and file permissions in the repository.
Replaces the existing tests in the `test/lint/lint-filenames.sh` and `test/lint/lint-shebang.sh` linter tests, as well as adding some new and increased testing. This increased coverage is intended to catch issues such as in #21728 and https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/16807/files#r345547050
Summary of tests:
* Checks every file in the repository against an allowed regexp to make sure only lowercase or uppercase alphanumerics (a-zA-Z0-9), underscores (_), hyphens (-), at (@) and dots (.) are used in repository filenames.
* Checks only source files (*.cpp, *.h, *.py, *.sh) against a stricter allowed regexp to make sure only lowercase alphanumerics (a-z0-9), underscores (_), hyphens (-) and dots (.) are used in source code filenames. Additionally there is an exception regexp for directories or files which are excepted from matching this regexp (This should replicate the existing `test/lint/lint-filenames.sh` test)
* Checks all files in the repository match an allowed executable or non-executable file permission octal. Additionally checks that for executable files, the file contains a shebang line.
* Checks that for executable `.py` and `.sh` files, the shebang line used matches an allowable list of shebangs (This should replicate the existing `test/lint/lint-shebang.sh` test)
* Checks every file that contains a shebang line to ensure it has an executable permission
Additionally updates the permissions on various files to comply with the new tests.
Fixes#21729
ACKs for top commit:
practicalswift:
cr re-ACK 46b025e00df40724175735eb5606ac73067cb3b8: patch still looks correct
kiminuo:
code review ACK 46b025e00d if `contrib/gitian-descriptors/assign_DISTNAME` permission change is deemed OK.
laanwj:
Code review ACK 46b025e00d
Tree-SHA512: 1c8201a2cee0d9cbce15652b68cec9a6458a8b493fcd5392f98560aca0b1a12e668baab65a47100f116f626dadc3f591deb47f7368468c6a46c6c712c2533455
7fc5e865b9 test: install lief in CI (fanquake)
955140b326 contrib: consolidate PIE and NX security checks (fanquake)
2aa1631822 contrib: use LIEF in PE symbol checks (fanquake)
e93ac26b85 contrib: use LIEF in macOS symbol checks (fanquake)
a632cbcee5 contrib: use f strings in symbol-check.py (fanquake)
0f5d77c8e4 contrib: add PE PIE check to security checks (fanquake)
8e1f40dd9a contrib: use LIEF for PE security checks (fanquake)
a25b2e965c contrib: use LIEF for macOS security checks (fanquake)
7e7eae7aa8 contrib: use f strings in security-check.py (fanquake)
2e7a9f7ade guix: install LIEF in Guix container (fanquake)
465967b5ef gitian: install LIEF in gitian container (fanquake)
Pull request description:
This PR is a proof of concept for using [LIEF](https://github.com/lief-project/LIEF) for the PE and MACHO symbol and security checks. It replaces our current approach of manually parsing the output of `objdump` & `otool`. If the consensus is that using LIEF is ok, then I also plan on replacing [pixie.py](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/master/contrib/devtools/pixie.py), and using LIEF for all checks. LIEF for Linux is also currently blocked (on the next release, unless we want to build master) on one change for RISC-V that I [sent upstream](https://github.com/lief-project/LIEF/pull/562).
LIEF is seemingly well maintained, and is the basis for a number of other tools. It also has some very nice documentation; i.e the [Python API for ELF](https://lief.quarkslab.com/doc/latest/api/python/elf.html). It also has many builtins we can take advantage of. i.e [`is_pie`](https://lief.quarkslab.com/doc/latest/api/python/macho.html#lief.MachO.Binary.is_pie), [`has_nx`](https://lief.quarkslab.com/doc/latest/api/python/macho.html#lief.MachO.Binary.has_nx) etc. This means we can [consolidate some of our checks](9c5eeb5484). If/when end up using LIEF for lightning then we can consolidate further, and cleanup these scripts. i.e to not parse the binary inside the checks, but once at the start of the script.
Guix builds:
```bash
# find guix-build-$(git rev-parse --short=12 HEAD)/output/ -type f -print0 | env LC_ALL=C sort -z | xargs -r0 sha256sum
963a08638c46f9a3d75cd4b0c155d1ca091bbeba27167291adcd3dca03fd4c3d guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/aarch64-linux-gnu/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-aarch64-linux-gnu-debug.tar.gz
a3ce927c46b103789a010c41a6ebfafe4548d90ee7d88f2a735c9183b775da5c guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/aarch64-linux-gnu/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-aarch64-linux-gnu.tar.gz
2503ac8901068805d5e7251fd5cfeb7c1f8ba3528bdfcf3aa1e0c40bfd5c1cbc guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/arm-linux-gnueabihf/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-arm-linux-gnueabihf-debug.tar.gz
5798697e58e1788df85aa9e2e4d33fef0456169fcbd2521f13b3b5806ac0d84d guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/arm-linux-gnueabihf/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-arm-linux-gnueabihf.tar.gz
4185adebc6a0abe7241a3cd409a6ab7be031c26f1c4245e30bb5f87eef0925d2 guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/dist-archive/bitcoin-f51237d94d98.tar.gz
9b4b8756c5c84295eb6b61b6b32a07a8d07723fb38aaa8f519b6133935061bda guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/powerpc64-linux-gnu/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-powerpc64-linux-gnu-debug.tar.gz
cbd821aa464a9c16f7979dbec1a5e66939e777a567f55f7081499a8d528d42c5 guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/powerpc64-linux-gnu/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-powerpc64-linux-gnu.tar.gz
abed530a82e97e3cf621c90a13c0881b0e39ccce2a6f42a3ff80de76e2abc5f7 guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/powerpc64le-linux-gnu/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-powerpc64le-linux-gnu-debug.tar.gz
8b6d2bdd8b58ff1f6072bf8693abe3ce773ff3a7d8d2b7218207e69945b9d31b guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/powerpc64le-linux-gnu/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-powerpc64le-linux-gnu.tar.gz
d99cc705032d22ae819975992216899ed960ba25871a05c8789d00b80418511f guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/riscv64-linux-gnu/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-riscv64-linux-gnu-debug.tar.gz
5240ca4f4ef7c62088185224ac319ad9a4a9b40075df10af18d8a6355bca32fb guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/riscv64-linux-gnu/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-riscv64-linux-gnu.tar.gz
adc16eaee4b51e8615ce8b3be9f6c018698237df4ad6e0886cf0d4ab6bc9e5c4 guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/x86_64-apple-darwin18/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-osx-unsigned.dmg
b188af0572ee682d74cc82c7e6e464115205fc130a457cfe19d42ac9ddd267f8 guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/x86_64-apple-darwin18/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-osx-unsigned.tar.gz
e764062fde144e6fb5d6dd776c10fc2daa8d775831f7e43247d17a6c6e060c97 guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/x86_64-apple-darwin18/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-osx64.tar.gz
dab3d26ac94c669140f7329d14e57ef02b0fe92b8a8f9d96c32a416adea0da0f guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/x86_64-linux-gnu/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-x86_64-linux-gnu-debug.tar.gz
ca59d4379fbe2b9a52deebeaf88508e0eda4215f28d319aff0781289dd159712 guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/x86_64-linux-gnu/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-x86_64-linux-gnu.tar.gz
52b7c35321a85c4f6c95bf0e687574454b71ede9bec1c9cf17f37c578c888a94 guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/x86_64-w64-mingw32/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-win-unsigned.tar.gz
a543895a00f8ffb3ba50ca68396d52ad5a18dd8efe38730e0049dd70d283a092 guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/x86_64-w64-mingw32/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-win64-debug.zip
aec050d03c65268a986148500f7341cceb8c5f85287e0e3cde8933ce4b4dee32 guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/x86_64-w64-mingw32/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-win64-setup-unsigned.exe
57ba33ed6ee8d3a885e342471359301473e83037d5442895beb686921a4c50e9 guix-build-f51237d94d98/output/x86_64-w64-mingw32/bitcoin-f51237d94d98-win64.zip
```
Gitian builds:
```bash
# macOS:
2f066e852bdd30ac46e5ecdf7619d19d408035c318a3edf0f1893ec2e25efb69 bitcoin-41a1b3d1b130-osx-unsigned.dmg
8cf8ac4d21740f490262453c330b5f4a5c5b8139dfc1b322efefce3f3b93d1b2 bitcoin-41a1b3d1b130-osx-unsigned.tar.gz
cf1b84efdd9d2588a1ce9513580fb56b38bfafe60e18f8adbeedf03521c6c2b2 bitcoin-41a1b3d1b130-osx64.tar.gz
14995244b0bb3e80e7b79975c9c70fdfb3ee3c04fda3efd5358ce1c4efa3a312 src/bitcoin-41a1b3d1b130.tar.gz
93881069d5e1dc385c08895a7b035a94eb010325afc2776c99b6aafa21096eb8 bitcoin-core-osx-22-res.yml
# Windows:
4d56dd7713121684b7eaa448679c65df2fd0aa5319bf8d12fb6cfa9f0b005cf7 bitcoin-f51237d94d98-win-unsigned.tar.gz
4558f4173152b084bcba25aa1a53c605208a70fe20392141b63cefb476528c85 bitcoin-f51237d94d98-win64-debug.zip
b63feaca010e86d514cfe38d716e3c8a8b8058e4f969b868aaaeb8a8a3d3dc81 bitcoin-f51237d94d98-win64-setup-unsigned.exe
de7d8586cc91ba391fe911853a99d9fd15fc6f9a60f9b91a0447940173aac67a bitcoin-f51237d94d98-win64.zip
4185adebc6a0abe7241a3cd409a6ab7be031c26f1c4245e30bb5f87eef0925d2 src/bitcoin-f51237d94d98.tar.gz
45efaca35b5fad0a04dfd06e44f7c00b990aa91c7bf2faea57e020d3491a6cf0 bitcoin-core-win-22-res.yml
# Linux:
055d646c5f8cf4708008374546176012ff758566a2645a3a01e1a33eab1002fe bitcoin-f51237d94d98-aarch64-linux-gnu-debug.tar.gz
bfc8b0efc36b0474c88546b12d2723c04b4dc629ae311082025c7e0b8f0d1aa9 bitcoin-f51237d94d98-aarch64-linux-gnu.tar.gz
9dfaa5acfffadad8942b32996458013a155d12ed07be76601f232233627b5cb9 bitcoin-f51237d94d98-arm-linux-gnueabihf-debug.tar.gz
54eb57905ff8513b9f628707b61aa4659c362fb2f6d17e0ee240b4da3674907d bitcoin-f51237d94d98-arm-linux-gnueabihf.tar.gz
ad98d876616eff578ad8cfd17dfbabe48ed14200823579687d66694bae3d2fe3 bitcoin-f51237d94d98-powerpc64-linux-gnu-debug.tar.gz
fe1b421dd1cb6e04d5dc5d341459dc15fa6e15b80906e5d8e0405cf43495e0f7 bitcoin-f51237d94d98-powerpc64-linux-gnu.tar.gz
9001d95cc7d2722d9d7dd83d9da8e5adf575fddf91b615b76b9bcfece30ecf6f bitcoin-f51237d94d98-powerpc64le-linux-gnu-debug.tar.gz
9e0650ad2aba70c0fd1608a077e95f335dc1bb4a79eab9b0b56ac87427a4fd4f bitcoin-f51237d94d98-powerpc64le-linux-gnu.tar.gz
fbfde0134944d3dbd32991455b0a8abdd334853ab8a4c1a1a4c060d9de071c50 bitcoin-f51237d94d98-riscv64-linux-gnu-debug.tar.gz
2fa2cfddce98c44c65305326fc623a7f065129208337503d813a08d51580cb8a bitcoin-f51237d94d98-riscv64-linux-gnu.tar.gz
b2d6caeee0e3c350a43165c39876ebed8e588958007af0d06996e341c7060683 bitcoin-f51237d94d98-x86_64-linux-gnu-debug.tar.gz
bfdb827e75d43d61462513c9a843620b93c9160d9d246cad13278baaa07f64ea bitcoin-f51237d94d98-x86_64-linux-gnu.tar.gz
4185adebc6a0abe7241a3cd409a6ab7be031c26f1c4245e30bb5f87eef0925d2 src/bitcoin-f51237d94d98.tar.gz
34820a093916fa35b0fd98806a50092f46b20271af7422f43e2a4223ef6f9bb7 bitcoin-core-linux-22-res.yml
```
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
re-ACK 7fc5e865b9
Tree-SHA512: 0c30838413448ecfcf55e6273f607fdb01cb1acafa1d2762afad59360fca7d8efa78ec55064f50cba56cb2c9e98741e13665cba8e9b4b8e5b62b8a53f9bf8990
c90f6e5109 guix: Consistently use gcc-8 for $HOST (Carl Dong)
Pull request description:
Only non-base commit is the last commit: b5abb07d0d
Right now, here's what we use in Gitian:
- Linux: Focal's [`g++-8-<arch>-linux-gnu`](https://packages.ubuntu.com/focal/g++-8-aarch64-linux-gnu) (`8.4.0-3ubuntu1cross1`)
- MinGW-w64: Focal's [`g++-mingw-w64`](https://packages.ubuntu.com/focal/g++-mingw-w64) (`9.3.0-7ubuntu1+22~exp1ubuntu4`)
In Guix right now we use `gcc-9` across the board.
I think it makes more sense to use `gcc-8` across the board, as it doesn't suffer from the `memcmp` bug, and is what debian buster (stable) does, meaning it will be well tested ([`g++-mingw-w64`](https://packages.debian.org/buster/g++-mingw-w64), [`g++-aarch64-linux-gnu`](https://packages.debian.org/buster/g++-aarch64-linux-gnu)).
We can accomplish this somewhat easily using Guix as we have tighter control over the toolchain (see: b5abb07d0d).
Let me know your thoughts!
ACKs for top commit:
MarcoFalke:
Approach ACK c90f6e5109, haven't reviewed
laanwj:
Code review ACK c90f6e5109
hebasto:
ACK c90f6e5109, I have reviewed the code and it looks OK, I agree it can be merged.
Tree-SHA512: 3e5b9297305232273323aa745ec417ed1be2418ead0e432db7742f5d5f45efe6e4a2ed44328731512cff4bfde80e5f2dc350a131b8b8fb9207a2ef66bce27ed2
142e2da440 net: add I2P seeds to chainparamsseeds (Jon Atack)
e01f173fb9 contrib: add a few I2P seed nodes (Jon Atack)
ea269c7ef1 contrib: parse I2P addresses in generate-seeds.py (Jon Atack)
Pull request description:
Follow-up to #21560 that updated the fixed seeds infra for BIP155 addresses and then added Tor v3 ones:
- Update contrib/generate-seeds.py to parse I2P addresses
- Add a few I2P nodes to contrib/seeds/nodes_main.txt
- Run generate-seeds.py and add the I2P seeds to chainparamsseeds.h
Reviewers, see contrib/seeds/README.md for more info and feel free to use the following CLI one-liner to check for and propose additional seeds for contrib/seeds/nodes_main.txt. You can also see how many I2P peers your node knows with cli -addrinfo.
```rake
bitcoin-cli getnodeaddresses 0 | jq '.[] | (select(.address | contains(".b32.i2p"))) | .address' | sort
```
I verified the I2P addresses are correctly BIP155-serialized/deserialized by building with all seeds removed from chainparamsseeds.h except those added here, restarting with `-datadir=newdir -dnsseed=0` and running rpc ` getnodeaddresses 0` that initially returns only the new I2P addresses.
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
ACK 142e2da440
vasild:
ACK 142e2da440
Tree-SHA512: 040576012d5f1f034e2bd566ad654a6fdfd8ff7f6b12fa40c9fda1e948ebf8417fcea64cfc14938a41439370aa4669bab3e97274f9d4f9a6906fa9520afa9cf8
c799a19b4b build, qt: No longer need to set QT_RCC_TEST=1 for determinism (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
The Qt Resource Compiler (rcc) output order relies on [`QHash`](https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qhash.html):
> This randomization of `QHash` is enabled by default. Even though programs should never depend on a particular `QHash` ordering, there may be situations where you temporarily need deterministic behavior, for example for debugging or regression testing. To disable the randomization, define the environment variable `QT_HASH_SEED` to have the value 0.
Since #3620 we use `QT_RCC_TEST=1` to achieve a deterministic output.
Since Qt 5.3.1 hash seeding is disabled for all of the bootstrapped tools, including rcc. Therefore, `QT_RCC_TEST=1` is no longer needed.
See commit [5283a6c87beac5a43f612786fefd6e43f2c70bf6](5283a6c87b).
ACKs for top commit:
fanquake:
ACK c799a19b4b
Tree-SHA512: 9d116ac1e8c605ee3e8ed7f618586f0de85d8b06bbbb70fe8c298939ce203d2a7e97264a9afac037179993ab54c5f69a65ebb9ab27ca7f45acb963011bd45743
55d85834cc script: Add trusted key for hebasto (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
It is assumed that my responsibility will be limited to the [GUI repo](https://github.com/bitcoin-core/gui).
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
ACK 55d85834cc
MarcoFalke:
matches the key I have locally ACK 55d85834cc🍪
jarolrod:
ACK 55d85834cc🥃
Tree-SHA512: 256d03e108c9a14e251340ac6e91234d076778cb6bd551439182176207051f4efc55d396754867e5a7191c8c698610f92016668e163037c67dde56f4136026b8
Passing ADDITIONAL_GUIX_COMMON_FLAGS="--no-substitutes --bootstrap" as
suggested doesn't work:
```bash
...outputting in: '/bitcoin/guix-build-a1f0b8b62eb8/output/x86_64-linux-gnu'
...bind-mounted in container to: '/outdir-base/x86_64-linux-gnu'
guix time-machine: error: bootstrap: unrecognized option
```
and I think bootstrapping is more than covered in the preceding "Choose
your security model" section.
867a5e172a guix: Register garbage collector root for containers (Carl Dong)
8f8b96fb54 guix: Update hint messages to mention guix-clean (Carl Dong)
44f6d4f56b guix: Record precious directories and add guix-clean (Carl Dong)
84912d4b24 build: Remove spaces from variable-printing rules (Carl Dong)
Pull request description:
```
guix: Record precious directories and add guix-clean
Many users have reported problems that stem from having an unclean
working tree. To that end, I've written a guix-clean script which should
help reset the working tree while respecting user-specified precious
directories.
Precious directories, such as:
- SOURCES_PATH
- BASE_CACHE
- SDK_PATH
- OUTDIR
Should be preserved when cleaning the working tree, and are thus
recorded in ./contrib/guix/var/precious_dirs.
The ./contrib/guix/guix-clean script is able to parse that file and make
sure to avoid them when cleaning out the working tree.
```
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
ACK 867a5e172a
Tree-SHA512: c498fad781ff5e6406639df2b91b687fc528273fdf266bcdba8f6eec3b3b37ecce544b6da0252f0b9c6717f9d88e844e4c7b72d1877bdbabfc6871ddd0172af5
By registering the container profiles as garbage collector roots, it
will prevent `guix gc` from garbage collecting derivations which our
container needs and inconvieniencing the user with a rebuild.
b2ee8b207d net: Deserialize hardcoded seeds from BIP155 blob (W. J. van der Laan)
9b29d5df7f contrib: Add explicit port numbers for testnet seeds (W. J. van der Laan)
2a257de113 contrib: Add a few TorV3 seed nodes (W. J. van der Laan)
06030f7a42 contrib: generate-seeds.py generates output in BIP155 format (W. J. van der Laan)
Pull request description:
Closes#20239 and mitigates my node's problem in #21351.
- Add a few hardcoded seeds for TorV3
- As the [bitcoin-seeder](https://github.com/sipa/bitcoin-seeder) doesn't collect TorV3 addresses yet, I have extracted these from my own node using [a script](https://gist.github.com/laanwj/b3d7b01ef61ce07c2eff0a72a6b90183) and added them manually. This is intended to be a temporary stop gap until 22.0's seeds update.
- Change hardcoded seeds to variable length BIP155 binary format.
- It is stored as a single serialized blob in a byte array, instead of pseudo-IPv6 address slots. This is more flexible and, assuming most of the list is IPv4, more compact.
- Only the (networkID, addr, port) subset (CService). Services and time are construed on the fly as before.
- Change input format for `nodes_*.txt`.
- Drop legacy `0xAABBCCDD` format for IPv4. It is never generated by `makeseeds.py`.
- Stop interpreting lack of port as default port, interpret it as 'no port', to accomodate I2P and other port-less protocols (not handled in this PR). An explicit port is always generated by `makeseeds.py` so in practice this makes no difference right now.
A follow-up to this PR could do the same for I2P.
ACKs for top commit:
jonatack:
ACK b2ee8b207d
Tree-SHA512: 11a6b54f9fb0192560f2bd7b218f798f86c1abe01d1bf37f734cb88b91848124beb2de801ca4e6f856e9946aea5dc3ee16b0dbb9863799e42eec1b239d40d59d
Many users have reported problems that stem from having an unclean
working tree. To that end, I've written a guix-clean script which should
help reset the working tree while respecting user-specified precious
directories.
Precious directories, such as:
- SOURCES_PATH
- BASE_CACHE
- SDK_PATH
- OUTDIR
Should be preserved when cleaning the working tree, and are thus
recorded in ./contrib/guix/var/precious_dirs.
The ./contrib/guix/guix-clean script is able to parse that file and make
sure to avoid them when cleaning out the working tree.
7476b46f18 guix: Build dmg as a static binary (Carl Dong)
06d6cf6784 depends: libdmg-hfsplus: Skip CMake RPATH patching (Carl Dong)
65176ab573 guix: Remove codesign_allocate+pagestuff from unsigned tarball (Carl Dong)
ca85679eb4 guix: Use clang-toolchain instead of clang (Carl Dong)
1aec0eda8f guix: Fallback to local build for substitute-enabled Guix users (Carl Dong)
1742f8e12d guix: Add early health check for guix-daemon (Carl Dong)
c1ae726a13 guix: More thoroughly control native toolchain (Carl Dong)
39741128d3 guix: Supply --link-profile (Carl Dong)
d55a1056ee guix: Add troubleshooting documentation entries (Carl Dong)
7f401c953f guix: Adapt guix-build to prelude, restructure hier (Carl Dong)
4eccf063b2 guix: Remove guix-build.sh filename extension (Carl Dong)
7753357a7b guix: Add source-able bash prelude and utils (Carl Dong)
e5b49a01f5 guix: Create windeploy inside distsrc-* (Carl Dong)
3e9982ab38 contrib: Silence git-describe when looking for tag (Carl Dong)
d5a71e9785 guix: Use --cores instead of --max-jobs (Carl Dong)
Pull request description:
This PR addresses a few hiccups encountered by the brave souls who've been experimenting with the Guix scripts:
- Resolves confusion between `--cores=` and `--max-jobs=`
- `guix`'s `--cores=` actually corresponds to make's `--jobs=`, so let's just control `--cores=` with our overridable env var
- `git-describe` will scream `fatal: no tag exactly matches '<hash>'` when looking for a tag, but we don't care, so silence that
- `windeploy/unsigned` should be inside `distsrc-*` and created idempotently (sorry I know this one annoyed people)
- Add troubleshooting documentation to `README.md`
- Add early health check for `guix-daemon` in case user forgot to start a `guix-daemon`
- Depending on configuration, a `--fallback` flag may be needed to tell Guix to not fail if substitutes fail but fallback to building locally
- `codesign_allocate` and `pagestuff` are now unnecessary for codesigning as we're now using `signapple`
A few robustness changes are also included:
- We supply the `--link-profile` flag, as some Guix packages may expect the profile to be available under `$HOME/.guix-profile`
- We now clear and manually set all toolchain-related env vars (e.g. `C*_INCLUDE_PATH`) ourselves, after patching a Qt::moc bug
- We use the native `clang-toolchain` package for darwin builds instead of `clang`, lining up with all our other toolchain packages.
Finally, we restructure the guix building hierarchy such that it looks something like:
```
guix-build-<short-hash-or-version-tag>
├── distsrc-<short-hash-or-version-tag>-${HOST}
│ ├── contrib
│ ├── depends
│ ├── src
│ └── ...
├── distsrc-<short-hash-or-version-tag>-...
└── output
├── dist-archive
│ └── bitcoin-<short-hash-or-version-tag>.tar.gz
├── *-linux-*
│ ├── bitcoin-<short-hash-or-version-tag>-*-linux-*-debug.tar.gz
│ └── bitcoin-<short-hash-or-version-tag>-*-linux-*.tar.gz
├── x86_64-apple-darwin18
│ ├── bitcoin-<short-hash-or-version-tag>-osx64.tar.gz
│ ├── bitcoin-<short-hash-or-version-tag>-osx-unsigned.dmg
│ └── bitcoin-<short-hash-or-version-tag>-osx-unsigned.tar.gz
└── x86_64-w64-mingw32
├── bitcoin-<short-hash-or-version-tag>-win64-debug.zip
├── bitcoin-<short-hash-or-version-tag>-win64-setup-unsigned.exe
├── bitcoin-<short-hash-or-version-tag>-win64.zip
└── bitcoin-<short-hash-or-version-tag>-win-unsigned.tar.gz
```
Separating guix builds by their version identifier (basically namespacing them) allows us to change the layout in the future without worry about potential naming conflicts.
ACKs for top commit:
sipa:
ACK 7476b46f18
laanwj:
ACK 7476b46f18
Tree-SHA512: 0e899aa941aafdf552b2a7e8a08131ee9283180bbef7334439e2461a02aa7235ab7b9ca9c149b80fc5d0a9f4bbd35bc80fcee26197c0836ba8eaf2d86ffa0386
This relatively easy change eliminates all runtime dependencies (except
for the kernel) for dmg, which is the only native build tool that gets
put in our output tarballs.
This allows much more flexibility when constructing the codesigning
environment, and is much more robust.