In CMainSignals::RegisterWithMempoolSignals running under Ubuntu 14.04
(QT 5.2), absent piecewise construction this fails to create the pair
because the argument is a connection, which is converted into a
non-copyable scoped_connection.
validationinterface.cpp:80:186: required from here
/usr/include/boost/signals2/connection.hpp:234:7: error: ‘boost::signals2::scoped_connection::scoped_connection(const boost::signals2::scoped_connection&)’ is private
scoped_connection(const scoped_connection &other);
^
In file included from /usr/include/c++/4.8/utility:70:0,
from /usr/include/c++/4.8/algorithm:60,
from ./prevector.h:13,
from ./script/script.h:10,
from ./primitives/transaction.h:11,
from ./validationinterface.h:9,
from validationinterface.cpp:6:
/usr/include/c++/4.8/bits/stl_pair.h:134:45: error: within this context
: first(std::forward<_U1>(__x)), second(__y) { }
https://travis-ci.org/bitcoin/bitcoin/jobs/473689141#L2172
2e023419c5 tests: unify RPC argument to cli argument conversion and handle dicts and lists (Andrew Chow)
Pull request description:
When running tests with --usecli, unify the conversion from argument objects to strings using a new function arg_to_cli(). This fixes boolean arguments when using named arguments.
Also use json.dumps() to get the string values for arguments that are dicts and lists so that bitcoind's JSON parser does not become confused.
Tree-SHA512: 472bef3cd78410a8552fd342b1852bcd7c57721cfa9176b26bacda6b0791cc0b3758561a529c4117a7428242f98bb7d5482b2a2dcd06bea0ef2b15ae26183405
82dcacb822 msvc: build leveldb locally (Chun Kuan Lee)
52091066be msvc: build secp256k1 locally (Chun Kuan Lee)
Pull request description:
In current MSVC build setup, the code depends on leveldb and secp256k1 that are installed from vcpkg which is not controlled by us. If we update our code, we have to wait for vcpkg port being merged.
This PR move them from vcpkg to local branch to make it as same as autoconf.
The leveldb changes is based on bitcoin-core/leveldb#14 and bitcoin-core/leveldb#18
Tree-SHA512: aa2cc1c3191e8d9cab23d555da4be296314c46d944f452c2ec6202b1779e4cc223b603e589b38196cd2c793a03a8bb0ba128cc66256b35a58c5e7bb358475206
When running tests with --usecli, unify the conversion from argument objects to
strings using a new function arg_to_cli(). This fixes boolean arguments when
using named arguments.
Also use json.dumps() to get the string values for arguments that are dicts and
lists so that bitcoind's JSON parser does not become confused.
14bc2a17dd Trivial: add doxygen-compatible comments relating to BerkeleyEnvironment (Pierre Rochard)
88b1d956fe Tests: add unit tests for GetWalletEnv (Pierre Rochard)
f1f4bb7345 Free BerkeleyEnvironment instances when not in use (Russell Yanofsky)
Pull request description:
Instead of adding BerkeleyEnvironment objects permanently to the g_dbenvs map, use reference counted shared pointers and remove map entries when the last BerkeleyEnvironment reference goes out of scope.
This change was requested by @TheBlueMatt and makes code that sets up mock databases cleaner. The mock database environment will now go out of scope and be reset on destruction so there is no need to call BerkeleyEnvironment::Reset() during wallet construction to clear out prior state.
This change does affect bitcoin behavior slightly. On startup, instead of same wallet environments staying open throughout VerifyWallets() and OpenWallets() calls, VerifyWallets() will open and close an environment once for each wallet, and OpenWallets() will create its own environment(s) later.
Tree-SHA512: 219d77a9e2268298435b86088f998795e059fdab1d2050ba284a9ab8d8a44961c9b5cf96e94ee521688108d23c6db680e3e3a999b8cb2ac2a8590f691d50668b
3c3e31c3a4 [tests] Add wallet-tool test (João Barbosa)
49d2374acf [tools] Add wallet inspection and modification tool (Jonas Schnelli)
Pull request description:
Adds an offline tool `bitcoin-wallet-tool` for wallet creation and maintenance.
Currently this tool can create a new wallet file, display information on an existing wallet, and run the salvage and zapwallettxes maintenance tasks on an existing wallet. It can later be extended to support other common wallet maintenance tasks.
Doing wallet maintenance tasks in an offline tool makes much more sense (and is potentially safer) than having to spin up a full node.
Tree-SHA512: 75a28b8a58858d9d76c7532db40eacdefc5714ea5aab536fb1dc9756e2f7d750d69d68d59c50a68e633ce38fb5b8c3e3d4880db30fe01561e07ce58d42bceb2b
f96dbd1bbe gdb attaching to process during tests has non-sudo solution (Gregory Sanders)
Pull request description:
There are some security considerations, so a link is attached.
Tree-SHA512: 67dd9c4b26b1e6d8e9a9fe766d309c0af69b752f6f544f3dce4bdcc95ae85feb9a49ac600c3f70d100629505d2340ab43932ded53b1485f80b97981e6df6a527
2bc4c3eaf9 Notify the GUI that the keypool has changed to set the receive button (Andrew Chow)
14bcdbe09c Check for more than private keys disabled to show receive button (Andrew Chow)
Pull request description:
Currently the Receive button in the GUI is displayed enabled or disabled by the initial state of the wallet when the wallet is first loaded. The button is only enabled or disabled depending on whether the disable private keys flag is set when the wallet is loaded. However, future changes to the wallet means that this initial state and check may no longer be accurate. #14938 introduces empty wallets which do not have private keys. An empty wallet that is loaded should have the Receive button disabled, and then it should become enabled once `sethdseed` is used so that a keypool can be generated and new keys generated. Likewise, with #14075, a wallet can be loaded with no keypool initially, so the button should be disabled. Later, public keys can be imported into the keypool, at which time the button should become enabled. When the keypool runs out again (no new keys are generated as the keypool only consists of imports), the button should become disabled.
This PR makes it so that the button becomes enabled and disabled as the keypool state changes. The check for whether to enable or disable the receive button has changed to checking whether it is possible to get new keys. It now checks for whether the wallet has an HD seed and, if not, whether the private keys are disabled. When an action happens which would make it possible for a new address to be retrieved or make it possible for a no more addresses to be retrieved, a signal is emitted which has the GUI recheck the conditions for the Receive button. These actions are setting a new HD seed, topping up the keypool, retrieving a key from the keypool, and returning a key to the keypool.
Tree-SHA512: eff15a5337f4c64ecd7169414fb47053c04f6a0f0130341b6dd9799ac4d79f451e25284701c668971fca33f0909d5352a474a2c12349375bedfdb59b63077d50
f24ed6d39f Delete README_osx.md and move its contents into build-osx.md (Martin Erlandsson)
Pull request description:
With its current name, the file `doc/README_osx.md` looks like an entry point README for OSX users, but it only contains specific instructions on how to build a DMG.
This PR deletes the file and moves the contents of the file into `doc/build-osx.md`.
Tree-SHA512: 2636b9da967f2a4c0d68cb9a157fb3db137bdb8fbff5d9d004f28b5d816e9c27fddc5c403e6b0c363d1dc9ddc7cac8b295efa01fc691126c0e36e21bb9b3cbd3
This commit adds wallet-tool, a tool for creating and interacting with
wallet files. Original implementation was by Jonas Schnelli
<dev@jonasschnelli.ch> with modifications by John Newbery
<john@johnnewbery.com>
MSVC files were provided by Chun Kuan Lee <ken2812221@gmail.com>:
build: Add MSVC project files for bitcoin-wallet-tool
fa5ce3f10e travis: Compile trusty with depends for now (MarcoFalke)
fa83999d92 travis: Compile once on trusty (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
To avoid accidentally regressing again on #15172, we should compile at least once with gcc4.8 (the minimum required version)
Note that this uses the trusty image, which will be removed in a few months from the docker hub, so in the future it had to be switched to the centos7 (or similar) image, which should come with gcc4.8 as well.
Tree-SHA512: 9d1704464bde8dbaf3319ac35f72d32dce549818730d3b2fb63df817f84a88dd64aa3419b97a57c1120ffb254784503b7d2675b1291d4ed073cd2a2488aa717d
2ca632e5b4 test: Build fuzz targets into seperate executables (MarcoFalke)
fab4bed68a [test] fuzz: make test_one_input return void (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
Currently our fuzzer is a single binary that decides on the first few bits of the buffer what target to pick. This is ineffective as the fuzzer needs to "learn" how the fuzz targets are organized and could get easily confused. Not to mention that the (seed) corpus can not be categorized by target, since targets might "leak" into each other. Also the corpus would potentially become invalid if we ever wanted to remove a target...
Solve that by building each fuzz target into their own executable.
Tree-SHA512: a874febc85a3c5e6729199542b65cad10640553fba6f663600c827fe144543744dd0f844fb62b4c95c6a04c670bfce32cdff3d5f26de2dfc25f10b258eda18ab
6f6514a080 Correct units for "-dbcache" and "-prune" (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
Actually, all `dbcache`-related values in the code are measured in MiB (not in megabytes, MB) or in bytes (e.g., `nTotalCache`).
See: https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/master/src/txdb.hba8c8b2227/src/init.cpp (L1405-L1424)
Also, "-prune" is fixed:
1. The GUI values in GB are translated to the node values in MiB correctly.
2. The maximum of the "prune" `QSpinBox` is not limited by default value of 99 (GB).
Fix: #15106
Tree-SHA512: 151ec43b31b1074db8b345fedb1dcc10bde225899a5296bfc183f57e1553d13ac27db8db100226646769ad03c9fcab29d88763065a471757c6c41ac51108459d
fa5e6ef55c wallet: Fixup rescanblockchain result doc (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
This was probably accidentally added to the wrong line when addressing the feedback here: https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/7061#discussion_r142199778
I already added the default values in #14877, but it could be clarified more that this really has no specific block height as default value, since the tip can change during a rescan.
Tree-SHA512: 48a3c5143e2b7129ee8f396d2e77550cb393fbe45f5936aeebeb7a201d61560336a3ae47b26bb757a4dbbe217e06abfd67a5a673aef266b6c4d7a80d049a2b49
04da9f4834 [RPC] Update getrawtransaction interface (Amiti Uttarwar)
Pull request description:
- stop checking unspent UTXOs for a transaction when txindex is not enabled, as per conversation here: https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/3220#issuecomment-377458383
- code contributed by sipa
Tree-SHA512: aa07353bccc14b81b7803992a25d076d6bc06d15ec7c1b85828dc10aea7e0498d9b49f71783e352ab8a14b0bb2010cfb7835de3dfd1bc6f2323f460449348e66
65bc38d1c1 [doc] add notes on release notes (John Newbery)
Pull request description:
Explains when and how release notes should be written.
Tree-SHA512: 94085d5a30499f41e6d1821b9f157aea40b3cff61a8ba606fed1b239e794ffe6769f985f53400715d712d12aadaa8db8cfca08dd1700a1fe17df86e0e554eac2
Python 3.4 is the mimimum supported version according to doc/dependencies.md
Systems with PyEnv ensure (via .python-version) that Python 3.4 is used
for the functional tests. However make check calls bitcoin-util-test.py
using the Python command found by configure.ac, which looks system wide.
On systems with multiple versions of Python this would cause make check
to fail, as it tries to call a version of Python that PyEnv blocks.
This is solved by preferring python3.4 in configure.ac
All dbcache-related values in the code are measured in MiB (not in
megabytes, MB) or in bytes.
The GUI "-prune" values in GB are translated to the node values in MiB
correctly. The maximum of the "-prune" QSpinBox is not limited by the
default value of 99 (GB).
Also, this improves log readability.
44de1561a Remove remaining chainActive references from CWallet (Russell Yanofsky)
db21f0264 Convert CWallet::ScanForWalletTransactions and SyncTransaction to the new Chain apis (Russell Yanofsky)
2ffb07929 Add findFork and findBlock to the Chain interface (Russell Yanofsky)
d93c4c1d6 Add time methods to the Chain interface (Russell Yanofsky)
700c42b85 Add height, depth, and hash methods to the Chain interface (Russell Yanofsky)
Pull request description:
This change removes uses of `chainActive` and `mapBlockIndex` globals in wallet code. It is a refactoring change which does not affect external behavior.
This is the next step in the larger #10973 refactoring change, which removes all other accesses to node global variables from wallet code. Doing this is useful to provide a better defined interface between the wallet and node, and necessary to allow wallet and node code to run in separate processes in #10102.
Tree-SHA512: 4dcec8a31c458f54e2ea6ecf01e430469b0994c5b41a21a2d150efa67cd209f4c93ae210a101e064b3a87c52c6edfc70b070e979992be0e3a00fd425de6230a8
0297be61a Allow connections from misbehavior banned peers. (Gregory Maxwell)
Pull request description:
This allows incoming connections from peers which are only banned
due to an automatic misbehavior ban if doing so won't fill inbound.
These peers are preferred for eviction when inbound fills, but may
still be kept if they fall into the protected classes. This
eviction preference lasts the entire life of the connection even
if the ban expires.
If they misbehave again they'll still get disconnected.
The main purpose of banning on misbehavior is to prevent our
connections from being wasted on unhelpful peers such as ones
running incompatible consensus rules. For inbound peers this
can be better accomplished with eviction preferences.
A secondary purpose was to reduce resource waste from repeated
abuse but virtually any attacker can get a nearly unlimited
supply of addresses, so disconnection is about the best we can
do.
This can reduce the potential from negative impact due to incorrect misbehaviour bans.
Tree-SHA512: 03bc8ec8bae365cc437daf70000c8f2edc512e37db821bc4e0fafa6cf56cc185e9ab40453aa02445f48d6a2e3e7268767ca2017655aca5383108416f1e2cf20f
faa1522e5e RPCHelpMan: Pass through Result and Examples (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
Passing the rpc result and rpc examples through `RPCHelpMan` makes it clear in what order they appear in the stringified version. Future improvements could then autoformat or autogenerate them.
Tree-SHA512: b32a5c178cc80f50a7e9b93a38e2b26d5994188ecafe9e61bbc599941b44b9b0e4e4be6413d4464fac6e8e73661a191a77d34917f2e6293de19fb59519dd4487