6.4 KiB
Contents
This directory contains tools for developers working on this repository.
check-doc.py
Check if all command line args are documented. The return value indicates the number of undocumented args.
clang-format-diff.py
A script to format unified git diffs according to .clang-format.
For instance, to format the last commit with 0 lines of context, the script should be called from the git root folder as follows.
git diff -U0 HEAD~1.. | ./contrib/devtools/clang-format-diff.py -p1 -i -v
copyright_header.py
Provides utilities for managing copyright headers of The Bitcoin Core developers
in repository source files. It has three subcommands:
$ ./copyright_header.py report <base_directory> [verbose]
$ ./copyright_header.py update <base_directory>
$ ./copyright_header.py insert <file>
Running these subcommands without arguments displays a usage string.
copyright_header.py report <base_directory> [verbose]
Produces a report of all copyright header notices found inside the source files
of a repository. Useful to quickly visualize the state of the headers.
Specifying verbose
will list the full filenames of files of each category.
copyright_header.py update <base_directory> [verbose]
Updates all the copyright headers of The Bitcoin Core developers
which were
changed in a year more recent than is listed. For example:
// Copyright (c) <firstYear>-<lastYear> The Bitcoin Core developers
will be updated to:
// Copyright (c) <firstYear>-<lastModifiedYear> The Bitcoin Core developers
where <lastModifiedYear>
is obtained from the git log
history.
This subcommand also handles copyright headers that have only a single year. In those cases:
// Copyright (c) <year> The Bitcoin Core developers
will be updated to:
// Copyright (c) <year>-<lastModifiedYear> The Bitcoin Core developers
where the update is appropriate.
copyright_header.py insert <file>
Inserts a copyright header for The Bitcoin Core developers
at the top of the
file in either Python or C++ style as determined by the file extension. If the
file is a Python file and it has #!
starting the first line, the header is
inserted in the line below it.
The copyright dates will be set to be <year_introduced>-<current_year>
where
<year_introduced>
is according to the git log
history. If
<year_introduced>
is equal to <current_year>
, it will be set as a single
year rather than two hyphenated years.
If the file already has a copyright for The Bitcoin Core developers
, the
script will exit.
gen-manpages.sh
A small script to automatically create manpages in ../../doc/man by running the release binaries with the -help option. This requires help2man which can be found at: https://www.gnu.org/software/help2man/
git-subtree-check.sh
Run this script from the root of the repository to verify that a subtree matches the contents of the commit it claims to have been updated to.
To use, make sure that you have fetched the upstream repository branch in which the subtree is maintained:
- for
src/secp256k1
: https://github.com/bitcoin-core/secp256k1.git (branch master) - for
src/leveldb
: https://github.com/bitcoin-core/leveldb.git (branch bitcoin-fork) - for
src/univalue
: https://github.com/bitcoin-core/univalue.git (branch master) - for
src/crypto/ctaes
: https://github.com/bitcoin-core/ctaes.git (branch master)
Usage: git-subtree-check.sh DIR (COMMIT)
COMMIT
may be omitted, in which case HEAD
is used.
github-merge.py
A small script to automate merging pull-requests securely and sign them with GPG.
For example:
./github-merge.py 3077
(in any git repository) will help you merge pull request #3077 for the bitcoin/bitcoin repository.
What it does:
- Fetch master and the pull request.
- Locally construct a merge commit.
- Show the diff that merge results in.
- Ask you to verify the resulting source tree (so you can do a make check or whatever).
- Ask you whether to GPG sign the merge commit.
- Ask you whether to push the result upstream.
This means that there are no potential race conditions (where a pullreq gets updated while you're reviewing it, but before you click merge), and when using GPG signatures, that even a compromised github couldn't mess with the sources.
Setup
Configuring the github-merge tool for the bitcoin repository is done in the following way:
git config githubmerge.repository bitcoin/bitcoin
git config githubmerge.testcmd "make -j4 check" (adapt to whatever you want to use for testing)
git config --global user.signingkey mykeyid (if you want to GPG sign)
optimize-pngs.py
A script to optimize png files in the bitcoin repository (requires pngcrush).
security-check.py and test-security-check.py
Perform basic ELF security checks on a series of executables.
symbol-check.py
A script to check that the (Linux) executables produced by gitian only contain allowed gcc, glibc and libstdc++ version symbols. This makes sure they are still compatible with the minimum supported Linux distribution versions.
Example usage after a gitian build:
find ../gitian-builder/build -type f -executable | xargs python contrib/devtools/symbol-check.py
If only supported symbols are used the return value will be 0 and the output will be empty.
If there are 'unsupported' symbols, the return value will be 1 a list like this will be printed:
.../64/test_bitcoin: symbol memcpy from unsupported version GLIBC_2.14
.../64/test_bitcoin: symbol __fdelt_chk from unsupported version GLIBC_2.15
.../64/test_bitcoin: symbol std::out_of_range::~out_of_range() from unsupported version GLIBCXX_3.4.15
.../64/test_bitcoin: symbol _ZNSt8__detail15_List_nod from unsupported version GLIBCXX_3.4.15
update-translations.py
Run this script from the root of the repository to update all translations from transifex. It will do the following automatically:
- fetch all translations
- post-process them into valid and committable format
- add missing translations to the build system (TODO)
See doc/translation-process.md for more information.