This commit changes a couple of sections which deal with large lists of
inventory vectors to use the new size hint functions recently added to
btcwire. This allows a bit more efficiency since the size of the list is
known up front and we can therefore avoid dynamically growing the backing
array several times. This also helps avoid a Go bug that leaks memory on
appends and GC churn.
This commit adds two new functions named NewMsgGetDataSizeHint and
NewMsgInvSizeHint. These are intended to allow callers which know in
advance how large the inventory lists will grow the ability to provides
that information when creating the message. This in turn provides a
mechanism to avoid the need to perform several grow operations of the
backing array when adding large number of inventory vectors.
This commit changes all code which deals with extracting addresses from
scripts to use the btcscript API ExtractPkScriptAddrs which in turn makes
use of the new btcutil.Address interface.
This provides much cleaner code for dealing with arbitrary script
destinations which is extensible without having to churn the APIs if new
destination types are added.
This commit significantly changes the address extraction code. The
original code was written before some of the other newer code was written
and as a result essentially duplicated some of the logic for handling
standard scripts which is used elsewhere in the package.
The following is a summary of what has changed:
- CalcPkScriptAddrHashes, ScriptToAddrHash, and ScriptToAddrHashes have
been replaced by ExtractPkScriptAddresses
- The ScriptType type has been removed in favor of the existing
ScriptClass type
- The new function returns a slice of btcutil.Addresses instead of raw
hashes that the caller then needs to figure out what to do with to
convert them to proper addressses
- The new function makes use of the existing ScriptClass instead of an
nearly duplicate ScriptType
- The new function hooks into the existing infrastructure for parsing
scripts and identifying scripts of standard forms
- The new function only works with pkscripts to match the behavior of the
reference implementation - do note that the redeeming script from a p2sh
script is still considered a pkscript
- The logic combines extraction for all script types instead of using a
separate function for multi-signature transactions
- The new function ignores addresses which are invalid for some reason
such as invalid public keys
This implements --onion (and --onionuser/--onionpass) that enable a
different proxy to be used to connect to .onion addresses. If no main
proxy is supplied then no proxy will be used for non-onion addresses.
Additionally we add --noonion that blocks connection attempts to .onion
addresses entirely (and avoids using tor for proxy dns lookups).
the --tor option has been supersceded and thus removed.
Closes#47
This commit modifies the names of opcdoes shown in the oneline script
disassembly to match the reference implementation. In particular
OP_1NEGATE, and OP_0 through OP_16 are changed to the raw numbers
they represent when doing oneline disassembly. When doing full
disassembly, the full opcode names are still shown.
ok @owainga.
This commit modifies the new valid peer message to display the useragent.
Previously this information was only available by setting the PEER
subsystem debuglevel to debug or lower.
This was prompted by #64.
Rather than returning an empty string from DisasmString if a script fails
to parse, return the disassembly up to the point of the failure along with
[error] appended. The error is still returned in case the caller wants
more information about the script parse failure.