A release or so ago we added `non_exhaustive` to the `Network` enum,
this turned out to make usage of the enum un-ergonomic for downstream
users. After much debate we decided that a way forward was to just
minimize the usage of the enum in the public API by instead use
`AsRef<Params>` so that downstream could define their own network enum
based on the networks they support.
Minimize usage of `Network` by using `AsRef<Params>` as a parameter type
instead. "minimize" because the `Network` still appears in some places.
fd6fedc3ad Improve API for max target threshold calculation (Tobin C. Harding)
6e47d57744 Rename difficulty transition threshold functions (Tobin C. Harding)
4121c9a09f Rename Params::pow_limit to max_attainable_target (Tobin C. Harding)
f0f6d3f162 Take Params instead of Network in difficulty function (Tobin C. Harding)
104dee9376 Debug assert that target != zero in difficulty calc (Tobin C. Harding)
c1ba496a07 Document current behaviour of difficulty_float (Tobin C. Harding)
3d01146374 Allow needless-borrows-for-generic-args (Tobin C. Harding)
2a6821b426 Use link to CompactTarget in rustdoc (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
When computing the maximum difficulty transition threshold we forgot to check that the returned `Target` is not bigger than the maximum. This value is network specific so keep the original logic but with `_unchecked` on the function name.
This was noted in the discussion on #2161
ACKs for top commit:
apoelstra:
ACK fd6fedc3ad
sanket1729:
ACK fd6fedc3ad
Tree-SHA512: 520ee2a07edb251c84b5ce8b48ed6e5a5c1945126dc7bcdb5570e97101ec4a3dc63fa7992725194869e22b21ee4f5955579d5e2499fcb48167637fd1fb3ae74d
This lint triggers when parsing a reference to a large struct as a
generic argument, which is wrong.
Allow it crate wide because [subjectively] this lint never warns for
anything useful.
d91cdd20bf docs: Document ordered feature (Tobin C. Harding)
3520f550f0 Implement ArbitraryOrd for relative::LockTime (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
TL;DR As we do for `absolute::LockTime` and for the same reasons; implement `ArbitraryOrd` for `relative::LockTime`.
locktimes do not have a semantic ordering if they differ (blocks, time) so we do not derive `Ord` however it is useful for downstream to be able to order structs that contain lock times. This is exactly what the `ArbitraryOrd` trait is for.
Fix: #2566
ACKs for top commit:
sanket1729:
ACK d91cdd20bf
apoelstra:
ACK d91cdd20bf
Tree-SHA512: 52ace9222e765dfa266d003b4aff3e93e35d1414c9fd579c4a4a36998d6d1b08bf6d4964a6f1c1d769068d65e47a882495daa4aacf254909a35dce8e01c99a9e
Move the following unit types to the new `units` crate:
- `locktime::absolute::{Height, Time}`
- `locktime::relative::{Height, Time}`
- `FeeRate`
- `Weight`
Also move the `parse` module as well as constants as required.
Do minimal changes to get things building:
- Feature gate on "alloc" as needed.
- Remove rustdocs that use `bitcoin` types.
- Re-export units types so this is a non-breaking change.
- Fix import paths.
b873a3cd44 Do infallible int from hex conversions (Tobin C. Harding)
4d762cb08c Remove the FromHexStr trait (Tobin C. Harding)
026537807f Remove mention of packed (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
The `FromHexStr` trait is used to parse integer-like types, however we can achieve the same using inherent methods.
Move the hex parsing functionality to inherent methods, keeping the same behaviour in regard to the `0x` prefix.
Patch 1 is trivial preparatory cleanup.
ACKs for top commit:
apoelstra:
ACK b873a3cd44
sanket1729:
ACK b873a3cd44
Tree-SHA512: a280169b68304fcc1a531cc9ffb6914b70238efc4c2241a766105053911a373a0334b73e5ea3525c331ccb81ce98c43fea96dae77668804e608376a48d5ed8ac
The `FromHexStr` trait is used to parse integer-like types, however we
can achieve the same using inherent methods.
Move the hex parsing functionality to inherent methods, keeping the same
behaviour in regard to the `0x` prefix.
Add a new `base58` crate to the workspace and move the `bitcoin::base58`
module to it.
Done as part of crate smashing, specifically so that we can make `bip32`
into a separate crate.
Make the trait level attributes uniform across all released crates in
the repo. Excludes things that are obviously not needed, eg, bench stuff
if there is not bench code.
- Remove `uninhabited_references` - this is allow by default now.
- Remove `unconditional_recursion` and mark the single false positive we
have with an `allow`.
Note, this does not add `missing_docs` to the `io` crate. There is an
open PR at the moment to add that along with the required docs.
20a5f1f35f Use KnowHrp instead of Network (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
We have a bunch of functions that take `Network` when what they really want is something that can be converted to a `KnownHrp`.
Make `KnownHrp` public and accept `impl Into<KnownHrp>`.
ACKs for top commit:
Kixunil:
ACK 20a5f1f35f
apoelstra:
ACK 20a5f1f35f
Tree-SHA512: d13ae989ca5136523902e938a04357776e00c650ec8699b335f04798a2fb4ea55e596b200b3ba1807d897884362ef9c419a15193ffdbd4ec26be53152a8ac1d3
We have a bunch of functions that take `Network` when what they really
want is something that can be converted to a `KnownHrp`.
Make `KnownHrp` public and accept `impl Into<KnownHrp>`.
The only place that `bech32` appears in the pubic API is as a pub extern
crate re-export. This is totally unnecessary since no other `bech32`
functions or types appear in the public API.
Removing `bech32` from the public API allows us to stabilize
`rust-bitcoin` without waiting for `bech32` to stabalize - WIN.
Our decoding code reads bytes in very small chunks. Which is not
efficient when dealing with the OS where the cost of a context switch is
significant. People could already buffer the data but it's easy to
forget it by accident.
This change requires the new `io::BufRead` trait instead of `io::Read`
in all bounds.
Code such as `Transaction::consensus_decode(&mut File::open(foo))` will
break after this is applied, uncovering the inefficiency.
This was originally Kix's work, done before we had the `io` crate.
Changes to `bitcoin` were originally his, any new mistakes are my own.
Changes to `io` are mine.
Co-developed-by: Martin Habovstiak <martin.habovstiak@gmail.com>
518f0970c9 Implement ArbitaryOrd for absolute::LockTime (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
At times we would like to provide types that do not implement `PartialOrd` and `Ord` because it does not make sense. I.e we do not want users writing `a < b`. This could range from kind-of-iffy to down-right-buggy (like comparing absolute locktimes).
However this decision effects downstream users who may not care about what the ordering means they just need to use it for some other reason e.g., to use as part of a key for a `BTreeMap` (as we do in `miniscript` requiring the `AbsLockTime` type).
A solution to this problem is to provide a wrapper data type that adds `PartialOrd` and `Ord` implementations. I wrote the `ordered` crate is for this very purpose.
ACKs for top commit:
apoelstra:
ACK 518f0970c9
Kixunil:
ACK 518f0970c9
Tree-SHA512: 05c753e650b6e2f181caf7dc363c4f8ec89237b42883bd695a64da0661436c9a7e715347f8fcf4fb19ce069cbf75a93032052e946f05fd8029f61860cf9c6225
At times we would like to provide types that do not implement
`PartialOrd` and `Ord` because it does not make sense. I.e., we do not
want users writing `a < b`. This could range from kind-of-iffy to
down-right-buggy (like comparing absolute locktimes).
However this decision effects downstream users who may not care about
what the ordering means they just need to use it for some other reason
e.g., to use as part of a key for a `BTreeMap` (as we do in `miniscript`
requiring the `AbsLockTime` type).
A solution to this problem is to provide a wrapper data type that adds
`PartialOrd` and `Ord` implementations. I wrote the `ordered` crate is
for this very purpose.
Feature gate a new dependency on `ordered` and implement `ArbitraryOrd`
for `absolute::LockTime`.
This lint triggers on `fn input_len(&self) -> usize { match *self {} }`
where Self is an infallible type, claiming that the dereference of self
is UB. Maybe it would be, if this were possible. But it's not, and this
is literally the only point of using infallible types, so this lint is
always wrong.
Enabled in rustc 1.76 as warn by default.
Add a new type `NetworkKind` the describes the kind of network we are
on, ether mainnet or one of the test nets (testnet, regtest, signet).
Do not use the type yet.
a92d49fe33 Implement `CompressedPublicKey` (Martin Habovstiak)
Pull request description:
P2WPKH requires keys to be compressed which introduces error handling even in cases when it's statically known that a key is compressed. To avoid it, this change introduces `CompressedPublicKey` which is similar to `PublicKey` except it's statically known to be compressed.
This also changes relevant code to use `CompressedPublicKey` instead of `PublicKey`.
ACKs for top commit:
tcharding:
ACK a92d49fe33
apoelstra:
ACK a92d49fe33
Tree-SHA512: ff5ff8f0cf81035f042dd8fdd52a0801f0488aea56f3cdd840663abaf7ac1d25a0339cd8d1b00f1f92878c5bd55881bc1740424683cde0c28539b546f171ed4b
43b1ed1b86 Fully encapsulate bitcoinconsensus (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
The `bitcoinconsensus` crate is not fully under our control because it exposes code from Core, so we cannot guarantee its stability across versions. To make our semver compliance easier we can fully encapsulate the `bitcoinconsensus` crate so it does not appear in our public API.
### Please note that with this applied:
- The `bitcoinconsenus` crate is no longer exported at the crate root
- No `bitcoinconsensus` types appear in our public API
ACKs for top commit:
Kixunil:
ACK 43b1ed1b86
apoelstra:
ACK 43b1ed1b86
Tree-SHA512: 9fc4f01a35396562e980a647784b22667cbd289e45b5c122610d23a1f8bcf0fe8b9c27e33745f14ee010050d4c2d2669b679fb39c7a108e4e86d2c14fd60571a
The `bitcoinconsensus` crate is not fully under our control because it
exposes code from Core, so we cannot guarantee its stability across
versions. To make our semver compliance easier we can fully encapsulate
the `bitcoinconsensus` crate so it does not appear in our public API.
However, it is useful to have the crate itself exported, here we add an
"unstable" feature and only publicly export the `bitcoinconsensus` crate
if the "unstable" feature is enabled.
P2WPKH requires keys to be compressed which introduces error handling
even in cases when it's statically known that a key is compressed. To
avoid it, this change introduces `CompressedPublicKey` which is similar
to `PublicKey` except it's statically known to be compressed.
This also changes relevant code to use `CompressedPublicKey` instead of
`PublicKey`.
There is no advantage in having `io::Read` as opposed to `Read` and
importing the trait. It is surprising that we do so.
Remove `io::` path from `io::Read` and `io::Write`. Some docs keep the
path, leave them as is. Add import `use io::{Read, Write}`.
Refactor only, no logic changes.
396e049a7a Use InputString instead of String (Tobin C. Harding)
acacf45edf Add ParseDenominationError (Tobin C. Harding)
69e56a64ed Add bitcoin-units crate (Tobin C. Harding)
4ecb1fe7da internals: Add docs to InputString (Tobin C. Harding)
fa8d3002cd internals: Fix docs typo (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
Create a new `bitcoin-units` crate as described [here](https://github.com/rust-bitcoin/rust-bitcoin/issues/550#issuecomment-1012103022).
Only the `amount` module is currently included.
I've resolved the `Encodale/Decodable` issue by keeping the `amount` module in `bitcoin`.
ACKs for top commit:
Kixunil:
ACK 396e049a7a
apoelstra:
ACK 396e049a7a
Tree-SHA512: caf5e9da0458435ab19d00d4506896257e898525a4472d435fdac1d1a37bb747befd56993b106673f938475e5777d952a13ba04a2d3cb710d7afe7f5faebb7b8
e1cc98986c Put `#[inline]` on trivial functions (Martin Habovstiak)
e531fa612b Move `TaprootMerkleBranch` and impl `IntoIterator` (Martin Habovstiak)
9d23c1d0a8 Implement std traits for `TaprootMerkleBranch` (Martin Habovstiak)
93b415589d Rename `inner` to `slice`/`vec` (Martin Habovstiak)
bb0f839c2f Lint with nightly (Martin Habovstiak)
Pull request description:
This contains several improvements to `TaprootMerkleBranch` that make the API more idiomatic.
ACKs for top commit:
tcharding:
ACK e1cc98986c
apoelstra:
ACK e1cc98986c
Tree-SHA512: b2bf52b027e7c1f8588c54e8b8d7a5fa54011dc521bd917995011d5fcc16c50a486eb89c0cdae2557a58adbe7708a4f2bc8f4c492e3d88c679f2abf85b1e7c83
801c72e056 Add deprecation comment to hash_types module (Tobin C. Harding)
61351c917f Move impl_asref_push_bytes to internal_macros (Tobin C. Harding)
2b4b66dee3 Move impl_hashencode to internal_macros (Tobin C. Harding)
2a0ac1258a Move the bip158 filter hash types (Tobin C. Harding)
3107f80aac Move transaction hash types (Tobin C. Harding)
61c02ff202 Move block hash types (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
Move hash types out of `hash_types` and into the modules where they are primarily used. Adds deprecated re-export so this is not a breaking change.
Is an alternate solution to #2072Resolves: #2072
ACKs for top commit:
apoelstra:
ACK 801c72e056
Kixunil:
ACK 801c72e056
Tree-SHA512: 4ccac63553de3f7d417213429c0f5c2b7ebc3c2d77a9feb6d4a7daa233565fc62617edf6426a421d251eadc0841235a719bd7fd3f980302c7a2bf3dacb8b4a61
While `clippy` now allows `TBD` to be used in `since` parameter of
`deprecated` attribute it is only available in the newest, nightly,
version. Switch `clippy` version to nightly to enable the `TBD` value.
Currently `bitcoin` cannot be built with no features enabled, it must
have either "no-std" or "std" enabled. This is an artifact from when
we depended on `core2` for "no-std", now that we have our own `io` crate
and we unconditionally depend on it we can remove the "no-std" feature.
We would like all the various hash types to be defined where they
rightly live instead of in the `hash_types` module.
Move the BIP-158 filter hash types to the `bip158` module.
We would like all the various hash types to be defined where they
rightly live instead of in the `hash_types` module.
Move transaction hash types to the `transaction` module.
We would like all the various hash types to be defined where they
rightly live instead of in the `hash_types` module.
Move the block hash types to the `block` module. While moving, add full
stops to the rustdoc of each hash.
Re-export _all four_ types from lib.rs (previously `WitnessMerkleNode`
was not re-exported).
Its not immediately obvious why we nest the whole `io` code in an `io`
submodule within `lib.rs`. As far as I can tell we can inline it and
re-export from `rust-bitcoin` same as we do for our other dependencies.
This change would effect other users of the crate but since the `io`
crate is unreleased this effects no-one except us.
add371d263 Remove `core2` dependency entirely (Matt Corallo)
b7dd16da99 [IO] Use our own io::Error type (Matt Corallo)
c95b59327a Explicitly use `std::io::Error` when implementing `std` traits (Matt Corallo)
9e1cd372cb Use `io::Error::get_ref()` over `std::error::Error::source()` (Matt Corallo)
3caaadf9bb [IO] Replace the `io::Cursor` re-export with our own `Cursor` (Matt Corallo)
141343edb4 [IO] Move to custom `Read` trait mirroring `std::io::Read` (Matt Corallo)
7395093f94 Stop relying on `Take`'s `by_ref` method (Matt Corallo)
2364e1a877 Stop relying on blanket Read impl for all &mut Read (Matt Corallo)
6aa7ccf841 [IO] Replace `std::io::Sink` usage with our own trivial impl (Matt Corallo)
7eb5d65bda [IO] Provide a macro which implements `io::Write` for types (Matt Corallo)
ac678bb435 [IO] Move to custom `Write` trait mirroring `std::io::Write` (Matt Corallo)
5f2395ce56 Add missing `?Sized` bounds to `io::Write` parameters (Matt Corallo)
2348449d2a Stop relying on `std::io::Write`'s `&mut Write` blanket impl (Matt Corallo)
5e0209569c Use `io::sink` rather than our custom `EmptyWrite` utility (Matt Corallo)
a0ade883b6 [IO] Move io module into selected re-exports (Matt Corallo)
27c7c4e26a Add a `bitcoin_io` crate (Matt Corallo)
Pull request description:
In order to support standard (de)serialization of structs, the
`rust-bitcoin` ecosystem uses the standard `std::io::{Read,Write}`
traits. This works great for environments with `std`, however sadly
the `std::io` module has not yet been added to the `core` crate.
Thus, in `no-std`, the `rust-bitcoin` ecosystem has historically
used the `core2` crate to provide copies of the `std::io` module
without any major dependencies. Sadly, its one dependency,
`memchr`, recently broke our MSRV.
Worse, because we didn't want to take on any excess dependencies
for `std` builds, `rust-bitcoin` has had to have
mutually-exclusive `std` and `no-std` builds. This breaks general
assumptions about how features work in Rust, causing substantial
pain for applications far downstream of `rust-bitcoin` crates.
This is mostly done, I'm still finalizing the `io::Error` commit at the end to drop the `core2` required dep in no-std, but its getting there. Would love further feedback on the approach or code-level review on these first handful of commits.
ACKs for top commit:
tcharding:
ACK add371d263
apoelstra:
ACK add371d263
Kixunil:
ACK add371d263
Tree-SHA512: 18698ea8b1b65108ee0f695d5062d2562c8df2f50bf85d93442648da3b35a4184a5d5d2a493aed0adaadc83f663f0cd2ac735c34941cc9a6fa58d826e548e091
In order to support standard (de)serialization of structs, the
`rust-bitcoin` ecosystem uses the standard `std::io::{Read,Write}`
traits. This works great for environments with `std`, however sadly
the `std::io` module has not yet been added to the `core` crate.
Thus, in `no-std`, the `rust-bitcoin` ecosystem has historically
used the `core2` crate to provide copies of the `std::io` module
without any major dependencies. Sadly, its one dependency,
`memchr`, recently broke our MSRV.
Worse, because we didn't want to take on any excess dependencies
for `std` builds, `rust-bitcoin` has had to have
mutually-exclusive `std` and `no-std` builds. This breaks general
assumptions about how features work in Rust, causing substantial
pain for applications far downstream of `rust-bitcoin` crates.
Here, we add a new `bitcoin_io` crate, making it an unconditional
dependency and using its `io` module in the in-repository crates
in place of `std::io` and `core2::io`. As it is not substantial
additional code, the `hashes` io implementations are no longer
feature-gated.
This doesn't actually accomplish anything on its own, only adding
the new crate which still depends on `core2`.
Improve the public exports in two ways:
1. Inline re-exports into the docs of the module that re-exports them.
2. Separate public and private use statements
Recently we discussed a way to separate the public and private import
statements to make the code more clear and prevent `rustfmt` joining
them all together.
Separate public exports using a code block and `#[rustfmt::skip]`. Has
the nice advantage of reducing the number of `#[doc(inline)]` attributes
also.
1. Modules first, as they are part of the project's structure.
2. Private imports
3. Public re-exports (using `rustfmt::skip` to prevent merge)
Use the format
```rust
mod xyz;
mod abc;
use ...;
pub use {
...,
};
```
This patch introduces changes to the rendered HTML docs.