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.
Easier to understand what the button does (it resets the graph view).
'Clear' might mean that the graph is emptied and stops updating, whereas
its easier to see that you're just starting fresh with 'Reset'.
Preserve comment, order form, and account strings from the original wallet
transaction. Also set fTimeReceivedIsTxTime and fFromMe fields for consistency
with CWallet::CreateTransaction. The latter two fields don't influence current
wallet behavior, but do record that the transaction originated in the wallet
instead of coming from the network or sendrawtransaction.
This silently skips trying to merge signatures from inputs which
do not exist from transactions provided to signrawtransaction,
instead of hitting an assert.
Since ForEach* are can be used to send messages to all nodes, the caller may
end up sending a message before the version handshake is complete. To limit
this, filter out these nodes. While we're at it, may as well filter out
disconnected nodes as well.
Delete unused methods rather than updating them.
This avoids having some vars set if the version negotiation fails.
Also copy it all into CNode at the same site. nVersion and
fSuccessfullyConnected are set last, as they are the gates for the other vars.
Make them atomic for that reason.
Once the CNode has been added to vNodes, it is possible that it is
disconnected+deleted in the socket handler thread. However, after
that we now call InitializeNode, which accesses the pnode.
helgrind managed to tickle this case (somehow), but I suspect it
requires in immensely braindead scheduler.
More accurate than simply adding one byte per input, and properly handles the
case where the original transaction happened to have very small signatures
The result value indicates the actual fee on the transaction that was replaced. But there is an error message which uses the description 'oldfee' to refer to the original fee rate applied to the new transaction's estimated max size. It was confusing that two different uses of 'oldfee' had two different numeric values.
Have wallet's default bump value be higher than the default incrementalRelayFee to future proof against changes to incremental relay fee. Only applies when not setting the fee rate directly.
Use the wallet's fee calculation logic to properly clamp fee against minimums and maximums when calculating the fee for a bumpfee transaction. Unless totalFee is explictly given, in which case, manually check against min, but do nothing to adjust given fee.
In all cases do a final check against maxTxFee (after adding any incremental amount).
Before this commit, the checkbox would always start off unchecked. After this
commit it will respect the -walletrbf setting (which is currently false by
default).