Adds the following util units and adds them to libbitcoin_util:
- `util/url.cpp` takes `urlDecode` from `httpserver.cpp`
- `util/error.cpp` takes `TransactionErrorString` from
`node/transaction.cpp` and `AmountHighWarn` and `AmountErrMsg` from
`ui_interface.cpp`
- `util/fees.cpp` takes `StringForFeeReason` and `FeeModeFromString` from `policy/fees.cpp`
- `util/rbf.cpp` takes `SignalsOptInRBF` from `policy/rbf.cpp`
- 'util/validation.cpp` takes `FormatStateMessage` and `strMessageMagic` from 'validation.cpp`
This moves the following policy settings functions and globals to a new
src/policy/settings unit in lib_server:
- `incrementalRelayFee`
- `dustRelayFee`
- `nBytesPerSigOp`
- `fIsBareMultisigStd`
These settings are only required by the node and should not be accessed
by other libraries.
21be609b49 In lint-format-strings, open files sequentially (Glenn Willen)
Pull request description:
In lint-format-strings, we use python argparse to read our file arguments. In
this mode, argparse opens all the files simultaneously. On OS X, where the
default filehandle limit is 128, this causes the lint to fail. Instead, ask
argparse for our filename arguments as strings, and open them one at a time
using 'with open'.
Tree-SHA512: 4c7dabf98818a7c5d83ab10c61b89a26957fe399e39e933e30c561cb45c5e8ba6f6aedcde8343da0c32ee340289a8897db6a33708e35ee381334ee27e3f4d356
In lint-format-strings, we use python argparse to read our file arguments. In
this mode, argparse opens all the files simultaneously. On OS X, where the
default filehandle limit is 128, this causes the lint to fail. Instead, ask
argparse for our filename arguments as strings, and open them one at a time
using 'with open'.
3782075a5f Move all PID file stuff to init.cpp (Hennadii Stepanov)
561e375c73 Make PID file creating errors fatal (Hennadii Stepanov)
745a2ace18 Improve PID file removing errors logging (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
Digging into #15240 the lack of the proper logging has been discovered.
Fixed by this PR.
UPDATE (inspired by @laanwj's [comment](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/15278#discussion_r252641810)):
Not being able to create the PID file is fatal now.
Output of `bitcoind`:
```
$ src/bitcoind -pid=/run/bitcoind/bitcoind.pid
2019-02-01T23:20:10Z Bitcoin Core version v0.17.99.0-561e375c7 (release build)
2019-02-01T23:20:10Z Assuming ancestors of block 0000000000000037a8cd3e06cd5edbfe9dd1dbcc5dacab279376ef7cfc2b4c75 have valid signatures.
2019-02-01T23:20:10Z Setting nMinimumChainWork=00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000007dbe94253893cbd463
2019-02-01T23:20:10Z Using the 'sse4(1way),sse41(4way),avx2(8way)' SHA256 implementation
2019-02-01T23:20:10Z Using RdRand as an additional entropy source
2019-02-01T23:20:11Z Error: Unable to create the PID file '/run/bitcoind/bitcoind.pid': No such file or directory
Error: Unable to create the PID file '/run/bitcoind/bitcoind.pid': No such file or directory
2019-02-01T23:20:11Z Shutdown: In progress...
2019-02-01T23:20:11Z Shutdown: Unable to remove PID file: File does not exist
2019-02-01T23:20:11Z Shutdown: done
```
Output of `bitcoin-qt`:
![screenshot from 2019-02-02 01-19-05](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/32963518/52154886-9349b600-2688-11e9-8128-470f16790305.png)
**Notes for reviewers**
1. `CreatePidFile()` has been moved from `util/system.cpp` to `init.cpp` for the following reasons:
- to get the ability to use `InitError()`
- now `init.cpp` contains code of both creating PID file and removing it
2. Regarding 0.18 release process: this PR modifies 1 string and introduces 2 new ones.
Tree-SHA512: ac07d0f800e61ec759e427d0afc0ca43d67f232e977662253963afdd0a220d34b871050f58149fc9fabd427bfc8e0d3f6a6032f2a38f30ad366fc0d074b0f2b3
13782b8ba8 docs: add perf section to developer docs (James O'Beirne)
58180b5fd4 tests: add utility to easily profile node performance with perf (James O'Beirne)
Pull request description:
Adds a context manager to easily (and selectively) profile node performance during functional test execution using `perf`.
While writing some tests, I encountered some odd bitcoind slowness. I wrote up a utility (`TestNode.profile_with_perf`) that generates performance diagnostics for a node by running `perf` during the execution of a particular region of test code.
`perf` usage is detailed in the excellent (and sadly unmerged) https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/12649; all due props to @eklitzke.
### Example
```python
with node.profile_with_perf("large-msgs"):
for i in range(200):
node.p2p.send_message(some_large_msg)
node.p2p.sync_with_ping()
```
This generates a perf data file in the test node's datadir (`/tmp/testtxmpod0y/node0/node-0-TestName-large-msgs.perf.data`).
Running `perf report` generates nice output about where the node spent most of its time while running that part of the test:
```bash
$ perf report -i /tmp/testtxmpod0y/node0/node-0-TestName-large-msgs.perf.data --stdio \
| c++filt \
| less
# To display the perf.data header info, please use --header/--header-only options.
#
#
# Total Lost Samples: 0
#
# Samples: 135 of event 'cycles:pp'
# Event count (approx.): 1458205679493582
#
# Children Self Command Shared Object Symbol
# ........ ........ ............... ................... ........................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
#
70.14% 0.00% bitcoin-net bitcoind [.] CNode::ReceiveMsgBytes(char const*, unsigned int, bool&)
|
---CNode::ReceiveMsgBytes(char const*, unsigned int, bool&)
70.14% 0.00% bitcoin-net bitcoind [.] CNetMessage::readData(char const*, unsigned int)
|
---CNetMessage::readData(char const*, unsigned int)
CNode::ReceiveMsgBytes(char const*, unsigned int, bool&)
35.52% 0.00% bitcoin-net bitcoind [.] std::vector<char, zero_after_free_allocator<char> >::_M_fill_insert(__gnu_cxx::__normal_iterator<char*, std::vector<char, zero_after_free_allocator<char> > >, unsigned long, char const&)
|
---std::vector<char, zero_after_free_allocator<char> >::_M_fill_insert(__gnu_cxx::__normal_iterator<char*, std::vector<char, zero_after_free_allocator<char> > >, unsigned long, char const&)
CNetMessage::readData(char const*, unsigned int)
CNode::ReceiveMsgBytes(char const*, unsigned int, bool&)
...
```
Tree-SHA512: 9ac4ceaa88818d5eca00994e8e3c8ad42ae019550d6583972a0a4f7b0c4f61032e3d0c476b4ae58756bc5eb8f8015a19a7fc26c095bd588f31d49a37ed0c6b3e
fdf82ba18 Update all subprocess.check_output functions in CI scripts to be Python 3.4 compatible (Graham Krizek)
Pull request description:
CI is failing the `lint` stage on every Cron run (regular PR/Push runs still pass). The failure was introduced in 74ce326 and has been broken since. The Python version running in CI was downgraded to 3.4 from 3.6. There were a couple files that were using the `encoding` argument in the `subprocess.check_output` function. This was introduced in Python 3.6 and therefore broke the scripts that were using it. The `universal_newlines` argument was used as well, but in order to use it we must be able to set encoding because of issues on some BSD systems.
To get CI to pass, I removed all `universal_newline` and `encoding` args to the `check_ouput` function. Then I decoded all `check_output` return values. This should keep the same behavior but be Python 3.4 compatible.
Tree-SHA512: f5e5885e98cf4777be9cc254446a873eedb03bdccbd8e06772a964db95e9fcf46736aa9cdcab1d8f123ea9f4947ed6020679898d8b2f47ffb1d94c21a4b08209
Introduces `TestNode.profile_with_perf()` context manager which
samples node execution to produce profiling data.
Also introduces a test framework flag, `--perf`, which will run
perf on all nodes for the duration of a given test.
Removing the 'universal_newlines' and 'encoding' args from the subprocess.check_outputs fuction. 'universal_newlines' is supported in 3.4, but 'encoding' is not. Without specifying 'encoding' it will make a guess at encoding, which can break things on BSD systems. We must handle encoding/decoding ourselves until we can use Python 3.6
8931a95bec Include util/strencodings.h which is required for IsSpace(...) (practicalswift)
7c9f790761 Update KNOWN_VIOLATIONS: Remove fixed violations (practicalswift)
587924f000 Use IsSpace(...) instead of boost::is_space (practicalswift)
c5fd143edb Use ToLower(...) instead of std::tolower (practicalswift)
e70cc8983c Use IsDigit(...) instead of std::isdigit (practicalswift)
Pull request description:
* Use `ToLower(...)` instead of `std::tolower`. `std::tolower` is locale dependent.
* Use `IsDigit(...)` instead of `std::isdigit`. Some implementations (e.g. Microsoft in 1252 codepage) may classify single-byte characters other than `[0-9]` as digits.
* Update `KNOWN_VIOLATIONS`: Remove fixed violations.
* ~~Replace use of locale dependent Boost trim (`boost::trim`) with locale independent `TrimString`.~~
* Use` IsSpace(...)` instead of `boost::is_space`
Tree-SHA512: defed016136b530b723fa185afdbd00410925a748856ba3afa4cee60f61a67617e30f304f2b9991a67b5fe075d9624f051e14342aee176f45fbc024d59e1aa82
59e387705c test: add invalid tx templates for use in functional tests (James O'Beirne)
Pull request description:
This change adds a list of `CTransaction`-generating templates which each correspond to a specific type of invalid transaction. We then use this list to test for a wider variety of invalid tx types in `p2p_invalid_tx.py` and `feature_block.py`.
Consolidating all invalid tx types will allow us to more easily cover all tx reject cases from a variety of tests without repeating ourselves. Validation logic doesn't differ much between mempool and block acceptance, but there *is* a difference and we should be sure we're testing both comprehensively.
Right now, I've only added templates covering the tx reject types listed below but if this approach seems worthwhile I will expand the list to be fully comprehensive.
```
bad-txns-in-belowout
bad-txns-inputs-duplicate
bad-txns-too-many-sigops
bad-txns-vin-empty
bad-txns-vout-empty
bad-txns-vout-negative
```
Tree-SHA512: 05407f4a953fbd7c44c08bb49bb989cefd39a2b05ea00f5b3c92197a3f05e1b302f789e33832445734220e1c333d133aba385740b77b84139b170c583471ce20
cb53b825c2 scripted-diff: Replace boost::bind with std::bind (Chun Kuan Lee)
2196c51821 refactor: Use boost::scoped_connection in signal/slot, also prefer range-based loop instead of std::transform (Chun Kuan Lee)
Pull request description:
Replace boost::bind with std::bind
- In `src/rpc/server.cpp`, replace `std::transform` with simple loop.
- In `src/validation.cpp`, store the `boost::signals2::connection` object and use it to disconnect.
- In `src/validationinterface.cpp`, use 2 map to store the `boost::signals2::scoped_connection` object.
Tree-SHA512: 6653cbe00036fecfc495340618efcba6d7be0227c752b37b81a27184433330f817e8de9257774e9b35828026cb55f11ee7f17d6c388aebe22c4a3df13b5092f0
31926ee8cf [test] functional framework: add CScript hex() for Python 3.4 (Sjors Provoost)
74ce326831 [test] Travis: enforce Python 3.4 support in functional tests (Sjors Provoost)
Pull request description:
The minimum supported version of Python is 3.4 according to [dependencies.md](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/master/doc/dependencies.md). This PR makes the Travis linter use this version in order to catch accidental use of modern syntax.
Tree-SHA512: 71b2c102be72b135a8ba049378d66875760f20a04a657102a399240c5c2b2ddbdfa7d5ab4c0c0242ecc3259e0ee8eb2273f331bc5eb824f4ae4c3cc58aea37ac
Make lint/check-doc.py Python 3.4 compatible.
Also add .python-version for pyenv which will cause tests with too
modern syntax to fail on developer machine rather than on Travis.
688f665a5e Scripts and tools & Docs: Used #!/usr/bin/env bash instead of obsolete #!/bin/bash, added linting for .sh files shebang and updated the Developer Notes. (vim88)
Pull request description:
As it was discussed in [#13510](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/13510), it is better to use `#!/usr/bin/env bash` instead of `#!/bin/bash`.
Tree-SHA512: 25f71eb9a6a0cdc91568b5c6863205c5fe095f77a69e633503a2ac7805bd9013af8538e538c0c666ce96a28e3f43ce7a8df5f08d4ff007723bb588d85674f2da
65f3672f3b wallet: Refactor to use WalletLocation (João Barbosa)
01a4c095c8 wallet: Add WalletLocation utility class (João Barbosa)
Pull request description:
Advantages of this change:
- avoid resolving wallet absolute path and name repetitively and in multiple places;
- avoid calling `GetWalletDir` in multiple places;
- extract these details from the actual wallet implementation.
The `WalletLocation` class can be a way to represent a wallet not yet loaded that exists in the wallet directory.
Tree-SHA512: 71ec09786e038499710e7acafe92d66ab9883fc894964e267443ae9c10a6872a10995c3987a169c436a4e793dae96b28fb97bd7f78483c4b72ac930fa23f8686
854c85ae90 test: allow arguments to be forwarded to flake8 in lint-python.sh (James O'Beirne)
Pull request description:
In order to use `lint-python.sh` from within various in-editor linting frameworks (e.g. [ALE](https://github.com/w0rp/ale), [flycheck](https://github.com/flycheck/flycheck)), we need to allow its arguments to be forwarded to the wrapped flake8 invocation.
For what it's worth, here's my bitcoin-specific ALE vim config for doing so (requires this changeset):
```vim
$ grep python /home/james/src/bitcoin/.exrc
let g:ale_python_flake8_executable="/home/james/src/bitcoin/test/lint/lint-python.sh"
```
Tree-SHA512: 0d5500238ea5fde26ee9c21f6518a3a3dc8409c77ad1271ff7e7a94ef45a8c8d2e1b8ad3df3075dd4062ee0fff534625b1bc79613f869cd3c2d9260814ffc7ee
7ac911afe7 [docs] Add release notes for removing `-usehd` (John Newbery)
25548b2958 [wallet] Remove -usehd (John Newbery)
Pull request description:
`-usehd` is no longer used (except to tell the user that they've set it incorrectly for the wallet that they're loading). Remove it (in the same spirit as #14272)
Tree-SHA512: 5bdcd2bb9bb8504a01343595bcd1bd433d97b730255152c725103c1ac3fa3a9d9e5220a4c29d4c72307cf803e1c09d31080f83603c23dc77263846e17b1826f0