To determine the default for `-par`, the number of script verification
threads, use [boost:🧵:physical_concurrency()](http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_58_0/doc/html/thread/thread_management.html#thread.thread_management.thread.physical_concurrency)
which counts only physical cores, not virtual cores.
Virtual cores are roughly a set of cached registers to avoid context
switches while threading, they cannot actually perform work, so spawning
a verification thread for them could even reduce efficiency and will put
undue load on the system.
Should fix issue #6358, as well as some other reported system overload
issues, especially on Intel processors.
The function was only introduced in boost 1.56, so provide a utility
function `GetNumCores` to fall back for older Boost versions.
- implement find_value() function for UniValue
- replace all Array/Value/Object types with UniValues, remove JSON Spirit to UniValue wrapper
- remove JSON Spirit sources
Previously due to an off-by-one error the wallet ignored
nLockTime-by-height transactions that would be valid in the next block
even though they are accepted into the mempool. The transactions
wouldn't show up until confirmed, nor would they be included in the
unconfirmed balance. Similar to the mempool behavior fix in 665bdd3b,
the wallet code was calling IsFinalTx() directly without taking into
account the fact that doing so tells you if the transaction could have
been mined in the *current* block, rather than the next block.
To fix this we strip IsFinalTx() of non-consensus-critical
functionality, removing the default arguments, and add CheckFinalTx() to
check if a transaction will be final in the next block.
- write "Bitcoins" uppercase
- replace secure/insecure for payment requests with
authenticated/unauthenticated
- change a translatable string for payment request expiry to match another
existing string to only get ONE resulting string to translate
According to Tor's extensions to the SOCKS protocol
(https://gitweb.torproject.org/torspec.git/tree/socks-extensions.txt)
it is possible to perform stream isolation by providing authentication
to the proxy. Each set of credentials will create a new circuit,
which makes it harder to correlate connections.
This patch adds an option, `-proxyrandomize` (on by default) that randomizes
credentials for every outgoing connection, thus creating a new circuit.
2015-03-16 15:29:59 SOCKS5 Sending proxy authentication 3842137544:3256031132
Before and after was tested in Windows:
before:
GUI: ReportInvalidCertificate : Payment server found
an invalid certificate: ("Microsoft Authenticode(tm) Root Authority")
GUI: ReportInvalidCertificate : Payment server found
an invalid certificate: ()
GUI: ReportInvalidCertificate : Payment server found
an invalid certificate: ()
GUI: ReportInvalidCertificate : Payment server found
an invalid certificate: ()
after:
GUI: ReportInvalidCertificate: Payment server found an
invalid certificate: "01" ("Microsoft Authenticode(tm) Root Authority")
() ()
GUI: ReportInvalidCertificate: Payment server found an
invalid certificate: "01" () () ("Copyright (c) 1997 Microsoft Corp.",
"Microsoft Time Stamping Service Root", "Microsoft Corporation")
GUI: ReportInvalidCertificate: Payment server found an
invalid certificate: "4a:19:d2:38:8c:82:59:1c:a5:5d:73:5f:15:5d:dc:a3" ()
() ("NO LIABILITY ACCEPTED, (c)97 VeriSign, Inc.", "VeriSign Time Stamping
Service Root", "VeriSign, Inc.")
GUI: ReportInvalidCertificate: Payment server found an
invalid certificate: "e4:9e:fd:f3:3a:e8:0e:cf:a5:11:3e:19:a4:24:02:32" ()
() ("Class 3 Public Primary Certification Authority")