0) Adjust BIP30 enforcement values
1) Reduce amount that peers can adjust our time to eliminate an attack vector. Thanks to
coblee for this fix.
2) Zeitgeist2 patch - thanks to Lolcust and ArtForz. This fixes an issue where a
51% attack can change difficulty at will. Go back the full period unless it's the
first retarget after genesis.
3) Avoid overflow in CalculateNextWorkRequired(). Thanks to pooler for the overflow fix.
4) Zeitgeist2 bool fshift bnNew.bits(). Thanks to romanornr for this path.
5) SegWit ContextualCheckBlockHeader adjustment and extra coverage.
6) Reject peer proto version below 70002. Thanks to wtogami for this patch.
7) Send final alert message to nodes warning about removal of the alert system. Thanks to coblee for this patch.
8) Adjust default settings for Litecoin.
44407100f broke inserting entries into addrman from static seeds
(as well as dnsseeds which did not support service bits). Static
seeds were already being filtered by UA for 0.13.1+ (ie
NODE_WITNESS), so simply changing the default service bits to
include NODE_WITNESS (and updating docs appropriately) is
sufficient.
For DNS Seeds, we will later fix by falling back to oneshot if a
seed does not support filtering.
Unfortunately, FreeBSD uses yet another syntax for `sha256`.
Support FreeBSD's syntax too. Using `uname` is a bit of a hack but it
works and I found no way to distinguish the two.
Trailing X=Y arguments are supposed to be passed through unchanged
to bdb's configure. This was not the case, at least with OpenBSD
6.2's shell.
Fix this by not storing the arguments in a temporary variable but
passing "$@" through directly.
Replace the clang patch with a new and improved version that also fixes
the build issues with OpenBSD and FreeBSD's clang, and apply it
unconditionally.
This needs testing on OSX.
Instead of maintaining not-easily-tested instructions for building BerkeleyDB
in doc/build-unix.md, package the installation as a script in contrib/. This
allows shared usage from a number of contexts, e.g. Docker.
Thanks to @jonasschnelli, @laanwj for feedback.
We have several pieces of information about subtrees:
1) What their current directory contents is
2) What their directory contents was at the time of the last subtree merge
3) What the directory contents of the upstream project is in the commit referred to by the subtree merge.
Normally, all 3 should be identical. git-subtree-check.sh so far only compared (1) with (3) however.
Fix this by comparing all three, and give some more useful diff output in the case of mismatch.
The added benefit is that (1) and (2) can be compared without needing to see the upstream repository.
Lint checks should not test these, they are historical documents,
and we don't want to encourage silly changes to them to satisfy
a checker.
Hopefully makes travis pass again on master.
Tree-SHA512: 37e6716c4fd5e8a4e579f9b84042e6b0ac224836b6c851cd1ca3f7d46611ffd3003bed0ae08dd0457f69d6eaa485a0d21c631e7ef16b14bdb0f2f78ea700332d
This adds a new CHECK_DOC check that looks for newly introduced trailing
whitespace. Existing trailing whitespace (of which there is plenty!)
will not trigger an error.
This is written in a generic way so that new lint-*.sh scripts can be
added to contrib/devtools/, as I'd like to contribute additional lint
checks in the future.
Parse the dispatch tables from the server implementation files,
and the conversion table from the client.
Perform the following consistency checks:
- Arguments defined in conversion table, must be present in dispatch
table. If not, it was probably forgotten to add them to the
dispatch table, and they will not work.
- Arguments defined in conversion table must have the same names as
in the dispatch table. If not, they will not work.
- All aliases for an argument must either be present in the
conversion table, or not. Anything in between means an oversight
and some aliases won't work.
Any of these results in an error.
It also performs a consistency check to see if the same
named argument is sometimes converted, and sometimes not. E.g.
one RPC call might have a 'verbose' argument that is converted,
another RPC call might have one that is not converted. This is not
necessarily wrong, but points at a possible error (as well as
makes the API harder to memorize) - so it is emitted as a warning
(could upgrade this to error).
Fetch the destination branch as well as PR in one go. Saves a few
seconds (as well as one ssh authentication, when using a yubikey) when
using github-merge.py.