4899fa3abd doc: Update build instructions for Fedora (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
This PR updates build instructions for Fedora, as Fedora 33 has no `libdb4-devel` and `libdb4-cxx-devel` packages in its default repos.
ACKs for top commit:
practicalswift:
ACK 4899fa3abd
Tree-SHA512: 0c23e2ce0ea690ed5eeaa56514d4246e0057a77b7c71f28af4ee1e480521d465122f81cea37cc773ce2db4fc189d5ab3c8f8ffdd65f150cc006390aa1e2a4ac8
Brew has updated such that qt now refers to Qt 6.0.1. If builders
install this, configure will not work pick up qt. For now, install
qt@5 (5.15.2), until required build system and likely source changes
are made.
Introduce two new options to reach the I2P network:
* `-i2psam=<ip:port>` point to the I2P SAM proxy. If this is set then
the I2P network is considered reachable and we can make outgoing
connections to I2P peers via that proxy. We listen for and accept
incoming connections from I2P peers if the below is set in addition to
`-i2psam=<ip:port>`
* `-i2pacceptincoming` if this is set together with `-i2psam=<ip:port>`
then we accept incoming I2P connections via the I2P SAM proxy.
faa06ecc9c build: Bump minimum Qt version to 5.9.5 (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
Close#20104.
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review ACK faa06ecc9c
jarolrod:
ACK faa06ecc9c
fanquake:
ACK faa06ecc9c - this should be ok to do now.
Tree-SHA512: 7295472b5fd37ffb30f044e88c39d375a5a5187d3f2d44d4e73d0eb0c7fd923cf9949c2ddab6cddd8c5da7e375fff38112b6ea9779da4fecce6f024d05ba9c08
f75e0c1edd doc: add external-signer.md (Sjors Provoost)
d4b0107d68 rpc: send: support external signer (Sjors Provoost)
245b4457cf rpc: signerdisplayaddress (Sjors Provoost)
7ebc7c0215 wallet: ExternalSigner: add GetDescriptors method (Sjors Provoost)
fc5da520f5 wallet: add GetExternalSigner() (Sjors Provoost)
259f52cc33 test: external_signer wallet flag is immutable (Sjors Provoost)
2655197e1c rpc: add external_signer option to createwallet (Sjors Provoost)
2700f09c41 rpc: signer: add enumeratesigners to list external signers (Sjors Provoost)
07b7c940a7 rpc: add external signer RPC files (Sjors Provoost)
8ce7767071 wallet: add ExternalSignerScriptPubKeyMan (Sjors Provoost)
157ea7c614 wallet: add external_signer flag (Sjors Provoost)
f3e6ce78fb test: add external signer test (Sjors Provoost)
8cf543f96d wallet: add -signer argument for external signer command (Sjors Provoost)
f7eb7ecc67 test: framework: add skip_if_no_external_signer (Sjors Provoost)
87a97941f6 configure: add --enable-external-signer (Sjors Provoost)
Pull request description:
Big picture overview in [this gist](https://gist.github.com/Sjors/29d06728c685e6182828c1ce9b74483d).
This PR lets `bitcoind` call an arbitrary command `-signer=<cmd>`, e.g. a hardware wallet driver, where it can fetch public keys, ask to display an address, and sign a transaction (using PSBT under the hood).
It's design to work with https://github.com/bitcoin-core/HWI, which supports multiple hardware wallets. Any command with the same arguments and return values will work. It simplifies the manual procedure described [here](https://github.com/bitcoin-core/HWI/blob/master/docs/bitcoin-core-usage.md).
Usage is documented in [doc/external-signer.md](
https://github.com/Sjors/bitcoin/blob/2019/08/hww-box2/doc/external-signer.md), which also describes what protocol a different signer binary should conform to.
Use `--enable-external-signer` to opt in, requires Boost::Process:
```
Options used to compile and link:
with wallet = yes
with gui / qt = no
external signer = yes
```
It adds the following RPC methods:
* `enumeratesigners`: asks <cmd> for a list of signers (e.g. devices) and their master key fingerprint
* `signerdisplayaddress <address>`: asks <cmd> to display an address
It enhances the following RPC methods:
* `createwallet`: takes an additional `external_signer` argument and fetches keys from device
* `send`: automatically sends transaction to device and waits
Usage TL&DR:
* clone HWI repo somewhere and launch `bitcoind -signer=../HWI/hwi.py`
* check if you can see your hardware device: `bitcoin-cli enumeratesigners`
* create wallet and auto import keys `bitcoin-cli createwallet "hww" true true "" true true true`
* display address on device: `bitcoin-cli signerdisplayaddress ...`
* to spend, use `send` RPC and approve transaction on device
Prerequisites:
- [x] #21127 load wallet flags before everything else
- [x] #21182 remove mostly pointless BOOST_PROCESS macro
Potentially useful followups:
- GUI support: bitcoin-core/gui#4
- bumpfee support
- (automatically) verify (a subset of) keys on the device after import, through message signing
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
re-ACK f75e0c1edd
Tree-SHA512: 7db8afd54762295c1424c3f01d8c587ec256a72f34bd5256e04b21832dabd5dc212be8ab975ae3b67de75259fd569a561491945750492f417111dc7b6641e77f
25c57d6409 [doc] Add a note about where lock annotations should go. (Amiti Uttarwar)
ad5f01b960 [validation] Move the lock annotation from function definition to declaration (Amiti Uttarwar)
Pull request description:
Based on reviewing #21188
the first commit switches the lock annotations on `CheckInputScripts` to be on the function declaration instead of on the function definition. this ensures that all call sites are checked, not just ones that come after the definition.
the second commit adds a note to the developer-notes section to clarify where the annotations should be applied.
ACKs for top commit:
MarcoFalke:
ACK 25c57d6409🥘
promag:
Code review ACK 25c57d6409.
Tree-SHA512: 61b6ef856bf6c6016d535fbdd19daf57b9e59fe54a1f30d47282a071b9b9d60b2466b044ee57929e0320cb1bdef52e7a1687cacaa27031bbc43d058ffffe22ba
This option replaces --with-boost-process
This prepares external signer support to be disabled by default.
It adds a configure option to enable this feature and to check
if Boost::Process is present.
This also exposes ENABLE_EXTERNAL_SIGNER to the test suite via test/config.ini
c5da2749e2 build: actually stop configure if Boost isn't available (fanquake)
cad8b527ea build: explicitly install libboost-dev package (fanquake)
Pull request description:
If Boost is not found via AX_BOOST_BASE, we don't actually stop
configuring, only a warning is emitted:
```bash
checking for boostlib >= 1.58.0 (105800)... configure: We could not detect the boost libraries (version MINIMUM_REQUIRED_BOOST or higher). If you have a staged boost library (still not installed) please specify $BOOST_ROOT in your environment and do not give a PATH to --with-boost option. If you are sure you have boost installed, then check your version number looking in <boost/version.hpp>. See http://randspringer.de/boost for more documentation.
```
Instead we usually fail when one of the other AX_BOOST_* macros fails to find a library. These macros are slowly being
removed, and in any case, it makes more sense to fail earlier if Boost is missing.
If Boost is unavailable, the failure now looks like:
```bash
checking for boostlib >= 1.58.0 (105800)... configure: We could not detect the boost libraries (version 1.58.0 or higher). If you have a staged boost library (still not installed) please specify $BOOST_ROOT in your environment and do not give a PATH to --with-boost option. If you are sure you have boost installed, then check your version number looking in <boost/version.hpp>. See http://randspringer.de/boost for more documentation.
configure: error: Boost is not available!
```
Note that we now just pass the version into AX_BOOST_BASE, which fixes it's display in the output (rather than showing `MINIMUM_REQUIRED_BOOST`).
This PR also has a commit that adds `libboost-dev` to our install instructions and CI. This package is currently installed as a side-effect of installing our other libboost-*-dev packages. However as those continue to disappear, it makes sense to install boost-dev explicitly.
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review ACK c5da2749e2
MarcoFalke:
Concept ACK c5da2749e2
Tree-SHA512: f866062f9d7d3a2316b6c887f17c664b9cfff41fdc0cb99ca79d641240fb01a5ae0d34140e515bc465219e1b43d5ca84f7c55f48b9c5b45a80ff2795dafd072b
fd0be92cff doc: Add instructions on how to fuzz the P2P layer using Honggfuzz NetDriver (practicalswift)
Pull request description:
Add instructions on how to fuzz the P2P layer using [Honggfuzz NetDriver](http://blog.swiecki.net/2018/01/fuzzing-tcp-servers.html).
Honggfuzz NetDriver allows for very easy fuzzing of TCP servers such as Bitcoin Core without having to write any custom fuzzing harness. The `bitcoind` server process is largely fuzzed without modification.
This makes the fuzzing highly realistic: a bug reachable by the fuzzer is likely also remotely triggerable by an untrusted peer.
Top commit has no ACKs.
Tree-SHA512: 9e98cb30f00664c00c8ff9fd224ff9822bff3fd849652172df48dbaeade1dd1a5fc67ae53203f1966a1d4210671b35656009a2d8b84affccf3ddf1fd86124f6e
This package is currently installed as a side-effect of installing our
other libboost-*-dev packages. However as those continue to dissapear,
it makes sense to install boost dev explicitly.
aa929abf8d [docs] Update developer notes to discourage very long lines (John Newbery)
Pull request description:
Mandatory rules on line lengths are bad - there will always be cases where a longer line is more readable than the alternative.
However, very long lines for no good reason _do_ hurt readability. For example, this declaration in validation.h is 274 chars:
```c++
bool ConnectTip(BlockValidationState& state, const CChainParams& chainparams, CBlockIndex* pindexNew, const std::shared_ptr<const CBlock>& pblock, ConnectTrace& connectTrace, DisconnectedBlockTransactions& disconnectpool) EXCLUSIVE_LOCKS_REQUIRED(cs_main, m_mempool.cs);
```
That won't fit on one line without wrapping on my 27" monitor with a comfortable font size. Much easier to read is something like:
```c++
bool ConnectTip(BlockValidationState& state, const CChainParams& chainparams,
CBlockIndex* pindexNew, const std::shared_ptr<const CBlock>& pblock,
ConnectTrace& connectTrace, DisconnectedBlockTransactions& disconnectpool)
EXCLUSIVE_LOCKS_REQUIRED(cs_main, m_mempool.cs);
```
Therefore, _discourage_ (don't forbid) line lengths greater than 100 characters in our developer style guide.
100 chars is somewhat arbitrary. The old standard was 80, but that seems very limiting with modern displays.
ACKs for top commit:
fanquake:
ACK aa929abf8d - this is basically just something to point too when a PR has unreasonably long lines for no particularly reason.
practicalswift:
ACK aa929abf8d
amitiuttarwar:
ACK aa929abf8d
theStack:
ACK aa929abf8d
glozow:
ACK aa929abf8d
Tree-SHA512: 17f1b11f811137497ede8851ede93fa612dc622922b5ad7ac8f065ea026d9a718db5b92325754b74d24012b4d45c4e2cd5cd439a6a8d34bbabf5da927d783970
c943326d3c doc/bips: Add BIPs 43, 44, 49, and 84 (Luke Dashjr)
Pull request description:
If you don't like what they say, please suggest alternatives ;)
ACKs for top commit:
prusnak:
ACK c943326
Tree-SHA512: 7db93f8491289657ec45df30e557eb8572b35201eb29aed1b11bf3949924fce56b4e2d71e1f0acf5d24a01278c0dec99790d632f04c15117010c4ac564368d6b
060a2a64d4 ci: remove boost thread installation (fanquake)
06e1d7d81d build: don't build or use Boost Thread (fanquake)
7097add83c refactor: replace Boost shared_mutex with std shared_mutex in sigcache (fanquake)
8e55981ef8 refactor: replace Boost shared_mutex with std shared_mutex in cuckoocache tests (fanquake)
Pull request description:
This replaces `boost::shared_mutex` and `boost::unique_lock` with [`std::shared_mutex`](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/thread/shared_mutex) & [`std::unique_lock`](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/thread/unique_lock).
Even though [some concerns were raised](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/16684#issuecomment-726214696) in #16684 with regard to `std::shared_mutex` being unsafe to use across some glibc versions, I still think this change is an improvement. As I mentioned in #21022, I also think trying to restrict standard library feature usage based on bugs in glibc is not only hard to do, but it's not currently clear exactly how we do that in practice (does it also extend to patching out use in our dependencies, should we be implementing more runtime checks for features we are using, when do we consider an affected glibc "old enough" not to worry about? etc). If you take a look through the [glibc bug tracker](https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/describecomponents.cgi?product=glibc) you'll no doubt find plenty of (active) bug reports for standard library code we already using. Obviously not to say we shouldn't try and avoid buggy code where possible.
Two other points:
[Cory mentioned in #21022](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/21022#issuecomment-769274179):
> It also seems reasonable to me to worry that boost hits the same underlying glibc bug, and we've just not happened to trigger the right conditions yet.
Moving away from Boost to the standard library also removes the potential for differences related to Boosts configuration. Boost has multiple versions of `shared_mutex`, and what you end up using, and what it's backed by depends on:
* The version of Boost.
* The platform you're building for.
* Which version of `BOOST_THREAD_VERSION` is defined: (2,3,4 or 5) default=2. (see [here](https://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_70_0/doc/html/thread/build.html#thread.build.configuration) for some of the differences).
* Is `BOOST_THREAD_V2_SHARED_MUTEX` defined? (not by default). If so, you might get the ["less performant, but more robust"](https://github.com/boostorg/thread/issues/230#issuecomment-475937761) version of `shared_mutex`.
A lot of these factors are eliminated by our use of depends, but users will have varying configurations. It's also not inconceivable to think that a distro, or some package manager might start defining something like `BOOST_THREAD_VERSION=3`. Boost tried to change the default from 2 to 3 at one point.
With this change, we no longer use Boost Thread, so this PR also removes it from depends, the build system, CI etc.
Previous similar PRs were #19183 & #20922. The authors are included in the commits here.
Also related to #21022 - pthread sanity checking.
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review ACK 060a2a64d4
vasild:
ACK 060a2a64d4
Tree-SHA512: 572d14d8c9de20bc434511f20d3f431836393ff915b2fe9de5a47a02dca76805ad5c3fc4cceecb4cd43f3ba939a0508178c4e60e62abdbaaa6b3e8db20b75b03
e1604b3d50 doc: Replace tabs for spaces (Gunar C. Gessner)
98db48d349 doc: Fix markdown formatting (Gunar Gessner)
Pull request description:
Lines were being joined making it hard to read.
ACKs for top commit:
RandyMcMillan:
ACK e1604b3d50
Tree-SHA512: fd5a7c5e9a1cbbf0fbb13b5c30b87853c84751da7f0fad08151bda07f1933872ab51cad29a0c0a70ced48e60df6d83bff3f84c2f77d00d22723fae9a8c3534fc
fa362064e3 rpc: Return total fee in mempool (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
This avoids having to loop over the whole mempool to query each entry's fee
ACKs for top commit:
achow101:
ACK fa362064e3
glozow:
ACK fa362064e3🧸
jnewbery:
ACK fa362064e3
Tree-SHA512: e2fa1664df39c9e187f9229fc35764ccf436f6f75889c5a206d34fff473fc21efbf2bb143f4ca7895c27659218c22884d0ec4195e7a536a5a96973fc9dd82d08
To make release tags the `make-tag.py` script from the maintainer tools
should be used. This ensures that all the various occurences of the
version in different files match the tagged version before proceeding.
Also replace other "ping wumpus" references.
fc726e0138 doc, rpc: add missing signet mentions in network name lists (Sebastian Falbesoner)
Pull request description:
This small PR adds a few missing mentions of signet w.r.t. chain enumerations:
- RPC `getblockchaininfo`: result description for `"chain"`
- RPC `getmininginfo`: result description for `"chain"`
- REST interface documentation:
- default ports listing for each chain
- `"chain"` description for `chaininfo` endpoint result
The instances were identified via `git grep -i "main.*test.*reg"`.
ACKs for top commit:
ajtowns:
ACK fc726e0138 -- quick code review only
benthecarman:
ACK fc726e0138
Tree-SHA512: 62cdc6ef74fa10db75cc04b9eaf7367183f726b3fee3d21fdf741b3816669dd21508735e89da389ddac980f49773ab229263748d1399553375fefe4526361846
570e43fe72 guix: Print build params inside/outside of container (Carl Dong)
2f9d1fdde6 guix: Move DISTSRC determination to guix-build.sh (Carl Dong)
0b7cd07bb5 guix: Move OUTDIR determination+creation to guix-build.sh (Carl Dong)
d27ff8b86a guix: Add more sanity checks to guix-build.sh (Carl Dong)
57f9533146 guix: Add section headings to guix-build.sh (Carl Dong)
38b7b2ed72 genbuild: Specify rev-parse length (Carl Dong)
036dc740da docs: Point to contrib/guix/README.md in doc/guix.md (Carl Dong)
34f0fda2d3 guix: Small updates to README wording (Carl Dong)
402e3a5b1e guix: Update HOSTS README entry for new architectures (Carl Dong)
cfa7ceb21b guix: Remove README development environment section (Carl Dong)
93b6a8544a guix: Add ADDITIONAL_GUIX_{COMMON,TIMEMACHINE}_FLAGS options (Carl Dong)
0f31e24703 guix: Add SUBSTITUTE_URLS option (Carl Dong)
444fcfca90 guix: Make guix honor MAX_JOBS setting (Carl Dong)
Pull request description:
After live-demo-ing a Guix build (which completed successfully!) on achow101's stream, I realized there were a few quality of life improvements which can be made to improve the user experience of our Guix build process. Here are a few of them.
Notable changes:
1. When `MAX_JOBS` is specified, both `guix time-machine` and `guix environment` will now build up to `MAX_JOBS` packages at a time when creating the build environment
2. The instructions for using substitutes were incorrect, and has now been replaced with a `SUBSTITUTE_URLS` environment variable, which works well with shell's IFS splitting rules
3. New `ADDITIONAL_GUIX_{COMMON,TIMEMACHINE}_FLAGS` options, for more granular customization of the build process.
4. README cleanup
ACKs for top commit:
fanquake:
ACK 570e43fe72 - lets move this forward.
Tree-SHA512: 4e8ab560522ade5efb5e8736aec0fb1a3f19ae9deb586c1ab87020816876f3f466a950b3f8c04d9fa1d072ae5ee780038c5c9063577049bdd9db17978e11c328
3e61b8c800 doc: Add explicit macdeployqtplus dependencies install step (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
This PR adds to macOS docs an explicit step to install `macdeployqtplus` script dependencies that are not part of the [Python Standard Library](https://docs.python.org/3/library/index.html):
- https://pypi.org/project/ds-store/
- https://pypi.org/project/mac-alias/
This change is required on macOS 11 Big Sur:
- #20371
- #20878Close#20878.
ACKs for top commit:
fanquake:
ACK 3e61b8c800
Tree-SHA512: d177139ee142d47cb27ad878d721cafcd03403ef861965ff532d712da461416380ec5878f70accf223a552a1f1e65eedb1e0ad72cb7a96791f8a55536ce28645