======================================================================
ERROR: test_revocation_mode_soft (tests.test_validate.ValidateTests)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/tmp/guix-build-python-certvalidator-0.1-1.e5bdb4b.drv-0/source/tests/test_validate.py", line 85, in test_revocation_mode_soft
validate_path(context, path)
File "/tmp/guix-build-python-certvalidator-0.1-1.e5bdb4b.drv-0/source/tests/../certvalidator/validate.py", line 50, in validate_path
return _validate_path(validation_context, path)
File "/tmp/guix-build-python-certvalidator-0.1-1.e5bdb4b.drv-0/source/tests/../certvalidator/validate.py", line 358, in _validate_path
raise PathValidationError(pretty_message(
certvalidator.errors.PathValidationError: The path could not be validated because the end-entity certificate expired 2022-01-14 12:00:00Z
e09773d20a build: use a static .tiff for macOS .dmg over generating (fanquake)
Pull request description:
For demonstration, after [discussion in #23778](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/23778#issuecomment-1003005503), and the question as to why we can't just have a `background.tiff` that we copy into the macOS DMG, and do away with the somewhat convoluted image generation steps.
From my understanding, the only reason we have this image generation as part of our build system is so that forks of Core can adapt the imagery for their own branding via `PACKAGE_NAME`. It don't think it provides much value to us, and could just have a static .tiff that we copy into the dmg (replacing the .svg that currently lives in macdeploy/).
Doing this would eliminate the following build dependencies:
For native macOS:
* `sed` (usage in Makefile.am)
* `librsvg` (rsvg-convert)
* `tiffutil`
Linux macOS cross-compile:
* `sed` (usage in Makefille.am)
* `librsvg`
* `tiffcp`
* `convert` (imagemagick)
* `font-tuffy`
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
c98d67796863f4b1bab0ad600d46bd74e744d94072cbd4bc856a6aeaba3bb329 guix-build-e09773d20a92/output/dist-archive/bitcoin-e09773d20a92.tar.gz
3336f90bab312798cb7665e2b4ae24d1a270fb240647d5fed8dbfcd83e3ed37e guix-build-e09773d20a92/output/x86_64-apple-darwin/SHA256SUMS.part
8fd680c7ee158c64bad212385df7b0b302c6c2143d4e672b4b0eb5da41f9256d guix-build-e09773d20a92/output/x86_64-apple-darwin/bitcoin-e09773d20a92-osx-unsigned.dmg
34f54177c2f0700e8cfaf5d85d91e404807cd9d411e22006cdff82653e5f4af2 guix-build-e09773d20a92/output/x86_64-apple-darwin/bitcoin-e09773d20a92-osx-unsigned.tar.gz
da6b8f54ef755d40330c8eac4f5bd0329637e827be9ee61318600d5d0bdcc3dc guix-build-e09773d20a92/output/x86_64-apple-darwin/bitcoin-e09773d20a92-osx64.tar.gz
```
![dmg](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/863730/147847717-8121c2d2-cdd4-4781-8397-3bf2893d52cc.png)
ACKs for top commit:
hebasto:
ACK e09773d20a
jarolrod:
ACK e09773d20a
Zero-1729:
ACK e09773d20a
Tree-SHA512: 0ad06699a5451daa8cfaaa46759eb7bd85254a72e23f857f70d433a2ffb1a4bf6dd464d9c4ac9f8c20aab045f4e2b61c6dcdcbcceef96ce515b1a0c501665b1f
b062da0090 contrib: add check for wget command in install_db4.sh (Florian Baumgartl)
Pull request description:
This PR is motivated by 7bb8eb0bc3 commit (see also https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/23579) and ensures that `install_db4.sh` will check for `curl` and `wget` utilities. Currently, the conditional statement in the `http_get()` function assumes that `wget` is always available but we actually do not know it since there is no check or validation for the `wget` command. So let's make sure that we check for both commands and print an error message if they are missing.
ACKs for top commit:
jamesob:
ACK b062da0090
laanwj:
Tested ACK b062da0090
shaavan:
ACK b062da0090
Tree-SHA512: bfc1ccad9a5b99764b759e02dde1976616c2af4747b7d5af8e71d33624c2cb21d93a09a60d244756e86bbd5fd7541331c62d7eb84d3458b6a059f1d9cb2a5f42
2f356a0ca8 scripted-diff: Drop Darwin version for better maintainability (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
After this PR, any macOS tools version bumping in the future will touch fewer files in the repo.
Pointing a Darwin version for the `--host` system does not matter for the following reasons:
- in terms of the resulted binaries, we should only care about the minimum supported macOS version which is a separated parameter in our build system.
- in terms of the build system itself, the usage of the `$(host)` variable is self-consistent enough. Btw `$(host_os)` value already has the version dropped:
```
$ make -C depends --no-print-directory print-host_os HOST=x86_64-apple-darwin19
host_os=darwin
```
ACKs for top commit:
gruve-p:
ACK 2f356a0ca8
promag:
ACK 2f356a0ca8.
fanquake:
ACK 2f356a0ca8
Tree-SHA512: 374896ab0ba02b0d8b4b21431fe963bd213b0d09586e0898c13a4c5fa294c1b693f1b2c92880c245c4157c14217b4825b36522f461930477f4d2a727086ebb2a
a3f61676e8 test: Make more shell scripts verifiable by the `shellcheck` tool (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
Some shell scripts from `contrib/guix` and `contrib/shell` are not verifiable by the `shellcheck` tool for the following reasons:
- they have no extension (see 4eccf063b2 from bitcoin/bitcoin#21375)
- they have the `.bash` extension while `.sh` is expected
This PR adds these scripts to the input for the `shellcheck` tool, and it fixes discovered `shellcheck` warnings.
ACKs for top commit:
dongcarl:
Code Review ACK a3f61676e8, this is a good robustness improvement for our shell scripts.
jamesob:
crACK a3f61676e8
Tree-SHA512: 6703f5369d9c04c1a174491f381afa5ec2cc4d37321c1b93615abcdde4dfd3caae82868b699c25b72132d8c8c6f2e9cf24d38eb180ed4d0f0584d8c282e58935
Fix the warning:
```
./contrib/macdeploy/gen-sdk:84: FutureWarning: GzipFile was opened for writing, but this will change in future Python releases. Specify the mode argument for opening it for writing.
```
From what I can see the only platform this drops support for is CentOS
7. CentOS 7 reached the end of it's "full update" support at the end of
2020. It does receive maintenance updates until 2024, however I don't
think supporting glibc 2.17 until 2024 is realistic. Note that anyone
wanting to self-compile and target a glibc 2.17 runtime could build with
--disable-threadlocal.
glibc 2.18 was released in August 2013.
https://sourceware.org/legacy-ml/libc-alpha/2013-08/msg00160.html
365f35481d script: Add commits signed with sipas expired key to allow-revsig-commits (nthumann)
Pull request description:
Fixes https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/22737.
While investigating the issue above, I noticed that there are 141 commits that are signed with sipas expired key.
To allow `./contrib/verify-commits/verify-commits.py` to succeed, this PR adds them to `allow-revsig-commits`.
Feel free to confirm that they're indeed signed with an expired key using e.g. `git show --show-signature d8cd7b137fb075616f31d2b43b85fa2e27ea7477` :)
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review ACK 365f35481d
Tree-SHA512: 860e372c5314714c6c205cd234ebec89756c9ade43a2ed65ed25575ae0a0d4d8dd7cf43692a5b267abe742f87e5cba0a3f1fb76a5fed7b1615ea2859902dfcdf
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
An IPv6 address from fc00::/8 could be either from the CJDNS network or
from a private-unroutable-reserved segment of IPv6. A seed node with
such an address must be from the CJDNS network, otherwise other peers
will not be able to connect to it.
0f95247246 Integrate univalue into our buildsystem (Cory Fields)
9b49ed656f Squashed 'src/univalue/' changes from 98fadc0909..a44caf65fe (fanquake)
Pull request description:
This PR more tightly integrates building Univalue into our build system. This follows the same approach we use for [LevelDB](https://github.com/bitcoin-core/leveldb/), ([`Makefile.leveldb.include`](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/master/src/Makefile.leveldb.include)), and [CRC32C](https://github.com/bitcoin-core/crc32c) ([`Makefile.crc32c.include`](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/master/src/Makefile.crc32c.include)), and will be the same approach we use for [minisketch](https://github.com/sipa/minisketch); see #23114.
This approach yields a number of benefits, including:
* Faster configuration due to one less subconfigure being run during `./configure` i.e 22s with this PR vs 26s
* Faster autoconf i.e 13s with this PR vs 17s
* Improved caching
* No more issues with compiler flags i.e https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/12467
* More direct control means we can build exactly the objects we want
There might be one argument against making this change, which is that builders should have the option to use "proper shared/system libraries". However, I think that falls down for a few reasons. The first being that we already don't support building with a number of system libraries (secp256k1, leveldb, crc32c); some for good reason. Univalue is really the odd one out at the moment.
Note that the only fork of Core I'm aware of, that actively patches in support for using system libs, also explicitly marks them as ["DANGEROUS"](a886811721/configure.ac (L1430)) and ["NOT SUPPORTED"](a886811721/configure.ac (L1312)). So it would seem they exist more to satisfy a distro requirement, as opposed to something that anyone should, or would actually use in practice.
PRs like #22412 highlight the "issue" with us operating with our own Univalue fork, where we actively fix bugs, and make improvements, when upstream (https://github.com/jgarzik/univalue) may not be taking those improvements, and by all accounts, is not currently actively maintained. Bitcoin Core should not be hamstrung into not being able to fix bugs in a library, and/or have to litter our source with "workarounds", i.e #22412, for bugs we've already fixed, based on the fact that an upstream project is not actively being maintained. Allowing builders to use system libs is really only exacerbating this problem, with little benefit to our project. Bitcoin Core is not quite like your average piece of distro packaged software.
There is the potential for us to give the same treatment to libsecp256k1, however it seems doing that is currently less straightforward.
ACKs for top commit:
dongcarl:
ACK 0f95247246 less my comment above, always nice to have an include-able `sources.mk` which makes integration easier.
theuni:
ACK 0f95247246. Thanks fanquake for keeping this going.
Tree-SHA512: a7f2e41ee7cba06ae72388638e86b264eca1b9a8b81c15d1d7b45df960c88c3b91578b4ade020f8cc61d75cf8d16914575f9a78fa4cef9c12be63504ed804b99
The tracepoint `validation:block_connected` was introduced in #22006.
The first argument was the hash of the connected block as a pointer
to a C-like String. The last argument passed the hash of the
connected block as a pointer to 32 bytes. The hash was only passed as
string to allow `bpftrace` scripts to print the hash. It was
(incorrectly) assumed that `bpftrace` cannot hex-format and print the
block hash given only the hash as bytes.
The block hash can be printed in `bpftrace` by calling
`printf("%02x")` for each byte of the hash in an `unroll () {...}`.
By starting from the last byte of the hash, it can be printed in
big-endian (the block-explorer format).
```C
$p = $hash + 31;
unroll(32) {
$b = *(uint8*)$p;
printf("%02x", $b);
$p -= 1;
}
```
See also: https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/22902#discussion_r705176691
This is a breaking change to the block_connected tracepoint API, however
this tracepoint has not yet been included in a release.
It is important that binaries request a standard interpreter location
where most distros would place the linker-loader. Otherwise, the user
would be met with a very confusing message:
bash: <path>/<to>/bitcoind: No such file or directory
When really it's the interpreter that's not found.
I used Guix's values for the powerpc64(le) dynamic linkers, and the
/lib-prefix seems to be a Guix-ism rather than standard. The standard
path for the linker-loaders start with /lib64.
I've taken the new loader values from SYSDEP_KNOWN_INTERPRETER_NAMES in
glibc's sysdeps/unix/sysv/linux/powerpc/ldconfig.h file.
For future reference, loader path values can also be found on glibc's
website: https://sourceware.org/glibc/wiki/ABIList?action=recall&rev=16