This adds a mode argument to `getmemoryinfo`. By default the output
will remain the same. However if a mode argument of `mallocinfo` is
provided the result of glibc `malloc_info` (if available) will
be returned as a string, as-is.
This is useful for tracking heap usage over time or troubleshooting
memory fragmentation issues.
Instead of the WIN32-specific workaround, detect lack of `MSG_DONTWAIT`
in the build system. This allows other platforms without `MSG_DONTWAIT`
to work too.
These are available in sandboxes without access to files or
devices. Also [they are safer and more straightforward](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entropy-supplying_system_calls)
to use than `/dev/urandom` as reading from a file has quite a few edge
cases:
- Linux: `getrandom(buf, buflen, 0)`. [getrandom(2)](http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/getrandom.2.html)
was introduced in version 3.17 of the Linux kernel.
- OpenBSD: `getentropy(buf, buflen)`. The [getentropy(2)](http://man.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi/OpenBSD-current/man2/getentropy.2)
function appeared in OpenBSD 5.6.
- FreeBSD and NetBSD: `sysctl(KERN_ARND)`. Not sure when this was added
but it has existed for quite a while.
Alternatives:
- Linux has sysctl `CTL_KERN` / `KERN_RANDOM` / `RANDOM_UUID`
which gives 16 bytes of randomness. This may be available
on older kernels, however [sysctl is deprecated on Linux](https://lwn.net/Articles/605392/)
and even removed in some distros so we shouldn't use it.
Add tests for `GetOSRand()`:
- Test that no error happens (otherwise `RandFailure()` which aborts)
- Test that all 32 bytes are overwritten (initialize with zeros, try multiple times)
Discussion:
- When to use these? Currently they are always used when available.
Another option would be to use them only when `/dev/urandom` is not
available. But this would mean these code paths receive less testing,
and I'm not sure there is any reason to prefer `/dev/urandom`.
Closes: #9676
8225239 Merge #433: Make the libcrypto detection fail the newer API.
12de863 Make the libcrypto detection fail the newer API.
2928420 Merge #427: Remove Schnorr from travis as well
8eecc4a Remove Schnorr from travis as well
a8abae7 Merge #310: Add exhaustive test for group functions on a low-order subgroup
b4ceedf Add exhaustive test for verification
83836a9 Add exhaustive tests for group arithmetic, signing, and ecmult on a small group
20b8877 Add exhaustive test for group functions on a low-order subgroup
80773a6 Merge #425: Remove Schnorr experiment
e06e878 Remove Schnorr experiment
04c8ef3 Merge #407: Modify parameter order of internal functions to match API parameter order
6e06696 Merge #411: Remove guarantees about memcmp-ability
40c8d7e Merge #421: Update scalar_4x64_impl.h
a922365 Merge #422: Restructure nonce clearing
3769783 Restructure nonce clearing
0f9e69d Restructure nonce clearing
9d67afa Update scalar_4x64_impl.h
7d15cd7 Merge #413: fix auto-enabled static precompuatation
00c5d2e fix auto-enabled static precompuatation
91219a1 Remove guarantees about memcmp-ability
353c1bf Fix secp256k1_ge_set_table_gej_var parameter order
541b783 Fix secp256k1_ge_set_all_gej_var parameter order
7d893f4 Fix secp256k1_fe_inv_all_var parameter order
git-subtree-dir: src/secp256k1
git-subtree-split: 8225239f490f79842a5a3b82ad6cc8aa11d5208e
OBJCXX's std flags don't get defined by our cxx macro. Rather than hard-coding
to c++11, just force OBJCXX to be the same as CXX unless the user specified
otherwise.
Simplified version of #8278. Assumes that every OS that (a) is supported
by Bitcoin Core (b) supports daemonization has the `daemon()` function
in its C library.
- Removes the fallback path for operating systems that support
daemonization but not `daemon()`. This prevents never-exercised code from
ending up in the repository (see discussion here:
https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/8278#issuecomment-242704745).
- Removes the windows-specific path. Windows doesn't support `daemon()`,
so it don't support daemonization there, automatically.
Original code by Matthew King, adapted by Wladimir van der Laan.
- LevelDB platform was not guessed correctly (it ended up defining
`-DOS_OPENBSD59` instead of `-DOS_OPENBSD`)
- On OpenBSD there is no convenience link from `python3.5` to `python3`:
add detection for other python interpreter names.
- If it has to guess the LevelDB OS, print a autoconf warning so that
the user can check.
7a49cac Merge #410: Add string.h include to ecmult_impl
0bbd5d4 Add string.h include to ecmult_impl
c5b32e1 Merge #405: Make secp256k1_fe_sqrt constant time
926836a Make secp256k1_fe_sqrt constant time
e2a8e92 Merge #404: Replace 3M + 4S doubling formula with 2M + 5S one
8ec49d8 Add note about 2M + 5S doubling formula
5a91bd7 Merge #400: A couple minor cleanups
ac01378 build: add -DSECP256K1_BUILD to benchmark_internal build flags
a6c6f99 Remove a bunch of unused stdlib #includes
65285a6 Merge #403: configure: add flag to disable OpenSSL tests
a9b2a5d configure: add flag to disable OpenSSL tests
b340123 Merge #402: Add support for testing quadratic residues
e6e9805 Add function for testing quadratic residue field/group elements.
efd953a Add Jacobi symbol test via GMP
fa36a0d Merge #401: ecmult_const: unify endomorphism and non-endomorphism skew cases
c6191fd ecmult_const: unify endomorphism and non-endomorphism skew cases
0b3e618 Merge #378: .gitignore build-aux cleanup
6042217 Merge #384: JNI: align shared files copyright/comments to bitcoinj's
24ad20f Merge #399: build: verify that the native compiler works for static precomp
b3be852 Merge #398: Test whether ECDH and Schnorr are enabled for JNI
aa0b1fd build: verify that the native compiler works for static precomp
eee808d Test whether ECDH and Schnorr are enabled for JNI
7b0fb18 Merge #366: ARM assembly implementation of field_10x26 inner (rebase of #173)
001f176 ARM assembly implementation of field_10x26 inner
0172be9 Merge #397: Small fixes for sha256
3f8b78e Fix undefs in hash_impl.h
2ab4695 Fix state size in sha256 struct
6875b01 Merge #386: Add some missing `VERIFY_CHECK(ctx != NULL)`
2c52b5d Merge #389: Cast pointers through uintptr_t under JNI
43097a4 Merge #390: Update bitcoin-core GitHub links
31c9c12 Merge #391: JNI: Only call ecdsa_verify if its inputs parsed correctly
1cb2302 Merge #392: Add testcase which hits additional branch in secp256k1_scalar_sqr
d2ee340 Merge #388: bench_ecdh: fix call to secp256k1_context_create
093a497 Add testcase which hits additional branch in secp256k1_scalar_sqr
a40c701 JNI: Only call ecdsa_verify if its inputs parsed correctly
faa2a11 Update bitcoin-core GitHub links
47b9e78 Cast pointers through uintptr_t under JNI
f36f9c6 bench_ecdh: fix call to secp256k1_context_create
bcc4881 Add some missing `VERIFY_CHECK(ctx != NULL)` for functions that use `ARG_CHECK`
6ceea2c align shared files copyright/comments to bitcoinj's
70141a8 Update .gitignore
7b549b1 Merge #373: build: fix x86_64 asm detection for some compilers
bc7c93c Merge #374: Add note about y=0 being possible on one of the sextic twists
e457018 Merge #364: JNI rebased
86e2d07 JNI library: cleanup, removed unimplemented code
3093576a JNI library
bd2895f Merge pull request #371
e72e93a Add note about y=0 being possible on one of the sextic twists
3f8fdfb build: fix x86_64 asm detection for some compilers
e5a9047 [Trivial] Remove double semicolons
c18b869 Merge pull request #360
3026daa Merge pull request #302
03d4611 Add sage verification script for the group laws
a965937 Merge pull request #361
83221ec Add experimental features to configure
5d4c5a3 Prevent damage_array in the signature test from going out of bounds.
419bf7f Merge pull request #356
03d84a4 Benchmark against OpenSSL verification
git-subtree-dir: src/secp256k1
git-subtree-split: 7a49cacd3937311fcb1cb36b6ba3336fca811991
We don't use any elliptic curves from OpenSSL anymore, nor include this
header anywhere but optionally in the tests of secp256k1 (which has
its own autoconf setup).
Reported by sinetek on IRC.
- guard PKG_PROG_PKG_CONFIG with an m4_ifdef. If not building for windows,
require it
- add nops as necessary in case the ifdef reduces the if/then to nothing
- AC_SUBST some missing _LIBS. These were split out over time, but not all were
properly substituted. They continued to work if pkg-config is installed
because it does the AC_SUBST itself
- create a script to handle split debug. This will also eventually need to check
targets, and use dsymutil for osx.
- update config.guess/config.sub for bdb for aarch64.
- temporarily disable symbol checks for arm/aarch64
- quit renaming to linux32/linux64 and use the host directly
This also adds a hack to work around an Ubuntu bug in the gcc-multilib package:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gcc-defaults-armhf-cross/+bug/1347820
The problem is that gcc-multilib conflicts with the aarch toolchain.
gcc-multilib installs a symlink that points
/usr/include/asm -> /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/asm.
Without this link, gcc -m32 can't find asm/errno.h (and others), since
/usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu isn't in its default include path. But
/usr/include/i386-linux-gnu is (though it doesn't exist on disk).
So work around the problem by linking
/usr/include/i386-linux-gnu/asm -> /usr/include/x86_64-linux-gnu/asm.
The symlink fix is actually quite reasonable, but echoing the password into
sudo is nasty, and should probably be addressed in gitian itself. It makes more
sense to enable passwordless sudo for the build user by default.
- Link pull-tester/rpc-tests.py to the build dir
- Add the build-dir's config to the python path so that tests can find it
- The tests themselves are in srcdir
- Clean up __pycache__ in 'make clean'
Disabling warnings can be tricky, because doing so can cause a different
compiler to create new warnings about unsupported disable flags. Also, some
warnings don't surface until they're paired with another warning (gcc). For
example, adding "-Wno-foo" won't cause any trouble, but if there's a legitimate
warning emitted, the "unknown option -Wno-foo" will show up as well.
Work around this in 2 ways:
1. When checking to see if -Wno-foo is supported, check for "-Wfoo" instead.
2. Enable -Werror while checking 1.
If "-Werror -Wfoo" compiles, "-Wno-foo" is almost guaranteed to be supported.
-Werror itself is also checked. If that fails to compile by itself, it likely
means that the user added a flag that adds a warning. In that case, -Werror
won't be used while checking, and the build may be extra noisy. The user would
need to fix the bad input flag.
Also, silence 2 more additional warnings that can show up post-c++11.
leveldb's buildsystem causes us a few problems:
- breaks out-of-tree builds
- forces flags used for some tools
- limits cross builds
Rather than continuing to add wrappers around it, simply integrate it into our
build.