When importing a watch-only address over importmulti with a specific timestamp,
the wallet's nTimeFirstKey is currently set to 1. After this change, the
provided timestamp will be used and stored as metadata associated with
watch-only key. This can improve wallet performance because it can avoid the
need to scan the entire blockchain for watch only addresses when timestamps are
provided.
Also adds timestamp to validateaddress return value (needed for tests).
Fixes#9034.
Additionally, accept a "now" timestamp, to allow avoiding rescans for keys
which are known never to have been used.
Note that the behavior when "now" is specified is slightly different than the
previous behavior when no timestamp was specified at all. Previously, when no
timestamp was specified, it would avoid rescanning during the importmulti call,
but set the key's nCreateTime value to 1, which would not prevent future block
reads in later ScanForWalletTransactions calls. With this change, passing a
"now" timestamp will set the key's nCreateTime to the current block time
instead of 1.
Fixes#9491
These are (afaik) all long-standing races or concurrent accesses. Going
forward, we can clean these up so that they're not all individual atomic
accesses.
- Reintroduce cs_vRecv to guard receive-specific vars
- Lock vRecv/vSend for CNodeStats
- Make some vars atomic.
- Only set the connection time in CNode's constructor so that it doesn't change
Minimum boost version was bumped to 1.47.0 in #8920, which
means the configure step won't even pass with older boost.
This version has boost filesystem v3, which means the
(crappy) fallbacks for older versions can go.
If both numeric format specifiers and "others" are used, assume we're
dealing with a Qt-formatted message. In the case of Qt formatting (see
https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qstring.html#arg) only numeric formats are
replaced at all. This means "(percentage: %1%)" is valid (which was
introduced in #9461), without needing any kind of escaping that would be
necessary for strprintf. Without this, this function would wrongly
detect '%)' as a printf format specifier.
If a timeout happens while reading the proxy response, this effectively
means we timed out while connecting to the remote node. This is very
common for Tor, so do not print an error message.
a9baa6d Bugfix: Qt/Intro: Pruned nodes never require *more* space (Luke Dashjr)
93ffba7 Bugfix: Qt/Intro: Chain state needs to be stored even with the full blockchain (Luke Dashjr)
c8cee26 Qt/Intro: Update block chain size (Luke Dashjr)
Make sure that RPC tests are actually checking failures correctly by:
- Catching JSON RPC exceptions and verifying the error codes and messages.
- Failing the test case if the JSON RPC exception isn't raised.
618ee92 Further-enforce lockordering by enforcing directly after TRY_LOCKs (Matt Corallo)
2a962d4 Fixup style a bit by moving { to the same line as if statements (Matt Corallo)
8465631 Always enforce lock strict lock ordering (try or not) (Matt Corallo)
fd13eca Lock cs_vSend and cs_inventory in a consistent order even in TRY (Matt Corallo)
5cc2ebb Update OpenBSD and FreeBSD build steps (Wladimir J. van der Laan)
8713de8 build: Add options to override BDB cflags/libs (Wladimir J. van der Laan)
The initialization order of global data structures in different
implementation units is undefined. Making use of this is essentially
gambling on what the linker does, the so-called [Static initialization
order fiasco](https://isocpp.org/wiki/faq/ctors#static-init-order).
In this case it apparently worked on Linux but failed on OpenBSD and
FreeBSD.
To create it on first use, make the registration structure local to
a function.
Fixes#8910.