5d71a9dd89 Correct input length check for uin128 fuzzer (Matt Corallo)
9c256cc88e Add a fuzz check for `Uint128::increment` (Matt Corallo)
a15f263c4e Move the `increment` fn into the uint macro to add it to Uint128 (Matt Corallo)
d52b88b525 Fix increment of Uint256 with carry (carolcapps)
Pull request description:
This is #578 with review feedback addressed.
ACKs for top commit:
apoelstra:
ACK 5d71a9dd89
sanket1729:
ACK 5d71a9d
Tree-SHA512: 32e5ea6387943ecad8f190a0de336a545fda72b6ff7388d3479037a5f880434276a7d0607f5cf61710d45e984c01954f4e3199a60c542be48b397717afb3d406
This clearly states lack of support for 16-bit architectures as well as
adds readable `compile_error!()` call. It also fixes a few stylistic
mistakes - headings (top-level should not be repeated) and missing
newlines.
Closes#660
76cf74fa9b Added test for the overflow bug and few others (Martin Habovstiak)
a0e1d2e706 Check for overflow in Script::bytes_to_asm_fmt() (Martin Habovstiak)
Pull request description:
This adds an overflow check in `Script::bytes_to_asm_fmt()` motivated by
`electrs` issue. While it was not tested yet, I'm very confident that
overflow is the cause of panic there and even if not it can cause panic
becuase the public function takes unvalidated byte array and reads
`data_len` from it.
The `electrs` issue: https://github.com/romanz/electrs/issues/490
~~Strangely, this breaks a test case and I can't see why. I'm publishing in case someone wants to help.~~
Edit: One damn character. :D Should be OK now.
ACKs for top commit:
apoelstra:
ACK 76cf74fa9b
Tree-SHA512: 4ffeca442a71b10c132f055f056128ae64e66cbdc1891662c3a4e743b82fa5d27075a44513e844be37888b33068eef3bbf6bcced5def70c17c9c5bd5b9d870cc
This adds a test case for script formatting which caused overflow in the
past and a few others from the same "interesting" transaction. Note that
to trigger the bug one has to run the test on 32 bit architecture.
This adds an overflow check in `Script::bytes_to_asm_fmt()` motivated by
`electrs` issue. While it was not tested yet, I'm very confident that
overflow is the cause of panic there and even if not it can cause panic
becuase the public function takes unvalidated byte array and reads
`data_len` from it.
The `electrs` issue: https://github.com/romanz/electrs/issues/490
c704ee7ffe [docs-only] Use backtick in addition to square parentheses for types references, clarify legacy, non_exhaustive comment, remove std:: (Riccardo Casatta)
f223be618f Rename access_witness to witness_mut and return Option (Riccardo Casatta)
c9bc0b928a [fmt-only] autoformatting with `rustfmt src/util/sighash.rs` (Riccardo Casatta)
07774917c2 Use get_or_insert_with in segwit_cache (Martin Habovstiak)
497dbfb7c3 Use get_or_insert_with in common_cache() (Martin Habovstiak)
ca80a5a030 Use get_or_insert_with in taproot_cache (Martin Habovstiak)
6e06a32ccc Wrap ErrorKind in Io enum variant, fix doc comment for the IO variant (Riccardo Casatta)
1a2b54ff23 introduce constant KEY_VERSION_0 (Riccardo Casatta)
417cfe31e3 Derive common traits for structs and enum, make internal struct not pub (Riccardo Casatta)
55ce3dd6ae Fix validation error if SINGLE with missing corresponding output, remove check_index and check with get().ok_or(), more details in errors (Riccardo Casatta)
2b3b22f559 impl Encodable for Annex to avoid allocation (Riccardo Casatta)
1a7afed068 Add Reserved variant to SigHashType for future use (ie SIGHASH_ANYPREVOUT) (Riccardo Casatta)
53d0e176d3 Deprecate bip143::SigHashCache in favor of sighash::SigHashCache (Riccardo Casatta)
15e3caf62d [test] Test also sighash legacy API with legacy tests (Riccardo Casatta)
24acfe3672 Implement Bip341 signature hash, create unified SigHashCache for taproot, segwit and legacy inputs (Riccardo Casatta)
683b9c14ff add [En|De]codable trait for sha256::Hash (Riccardo Casatta)
Pull request description:
Adds https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0341.mediawiki message signature algorithm
The base is taken from `bip143::SigHashCache`, some code results duplicated but I think it's more clear to keep things separated
Would mark some bullet point on https://github.com/rust-bitcoin/rust-bitcoin/issues/503
Test vectors are taken by running d1e4c56309/test/functional/feature_taproot.py with a modified `TaprootSignatureHash` function to print intermediate values that I cannot found in the bip341 [test vector json](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/bitcoin-core/qa-assets/main/unit_test_data/script_assets_test.json)
UPDATE: Latest version includes the suggestion from @sanket1729 to create a unified tool for signature message hash for legacy, segwit, and taproot inputs. In particular, makes sense for mixed segwit v0 and taproot v1 inputs because cached values could be shared
ACKs for top commit:
sanket1729:
ACK c704ee7ffe. Reviewed the diff from a37de1ade475e0c31c932121abaa7aec701b9987 which I previously ACKed
dr-orlovsky:
utACK c704ee7ffe by diffing it to 6e06a32ccc having my ACK before.
apoelstra:
ACK c704ee7ffe
Tree-SHA512: 35530995fe9d078acd0178cfca654ca980109f4502c91d578c1a0d5c6cafacab7db1ffd6216288eac99f6a763776cbc0298cfbdff00b5a83e98ec4b15aa764e8
This documents cargo features in two ways: explictly in text and in code
using `#[doc(cfg(...))]` attribute where possible. Notably, this is
impossible for `serde` derives. The attribute is contitional and only
activated for docs.rs or explicit local builds.
This change also adds `package.metadata.docs.rs` field to `Cargo.toml`
which instructs docs.rs to build with relevant features and with
`docsrs` config activated enabling `#[doc(cfg(...))] attributes.
I also took the opportunity to fix a few missing spaces in nearby code.
This refactors the code to make it possible to use `get_or_insert_with`
instead of unwrapping in `segwit_cache()`. To achieve it `common_cache`
is refactored into two functions: one taking only the required borrows
and the original calling the new one. `segwit_cache` then calls the new
function so that borrows are OK.
Apart from removing unwrap, this avoids calling `common_cache` multiple
times.
There was a question whether this is equally performant. There are
multiple good reasons why it should be:
1. `get_or_insert_with` is marked `#[inline]`
2. Any good optimizer will inline a function that is used exactly once
3. 1 and 2 conclude that the closure will get inlined
4. Computing self.tx can then be moved to the only branch where it is
required.
5. Even if get_or_insert_with didn't get optimized, which is extremely
unlikely, the `tx` field is at the beginning of the struct and it
probably has pointer alignment (`Deref` suggests it's a pointer).
Alignment larger than pointer is not used, so we can expect the
fields to be ordered as-defined. (This is not guaranteed by Rust but
there's not good reason to change the order in this case.) We can
assume that offset to tx is zero in most cases which means no
computation is actually needed so the expression before closure is
no-op short of passing it into the closure as an argument.
At the time of writing `#[inline]` can be seen at
https://doc.rust-lang.org/src/core/option.rs.html#933
Instead of using magic numbers we can define constants for the address
prefix bytes. This makes it easier for future readers of the code to see
what these values are if they don't know them and/or see that they are
correct if they do know them.
Based on the original work by Justin Moon.
*MSRV unchanged from 1.29.0.*
When `std` is off, `no-std` must be on, and we use the [`alloc`](https://doc.rust-lang.org/alloc/) and core2 crates. The `alloc` crate requires the user define a global allocator.
* Import from `core` and `alloc` instead of `std`
* `alloc` only used if `no-std` is on
* Create `std` feature
* Create `no-std` feature which adds a core2 dependency to polyfill `std::io` features. This is an experimental feature and should be
used with caution.
* CI runs tests `no-std`
* MSRV for `no-std` is 1.51 or so
Fixes#608. In #567 the Display impl for ChildNumber was
consciously changed, assuming the semver break would not
affect any correctly implemented downstream projects. We
were wrong.
It's very useful to Bitcoin applications, and especially "L2" ones, to
effectively compute feerates. Currently (and this is very unlikely to
change) bitcoind nodes compute the virtual size as a rounded-up division
of the size in witness units by 4, with a penalty for transactions that
are essentially >5% full of sigops.
Signed-off-by: Antoine Poinsot <darosior@protonmail.com>
This introduces some constants defined by Bitcoin Core which as a
consequence define some network rules in a new 'policy' module.
Only some were picked, which are very unlikely to change. Nonetheless a
Warning has been put in the module documentation.
Script-level constants are left into rust-miniscript where they are
already defined (src/miniscript/limits.rs).
It doesn't really make sense to have a constant for every common
script type's dust limit, instead we should just use the
`Script::dust_value()` function to have users calculate it.
The dust calculations added were only valid for P2WPKH and P2PKH
outputs, and somehow this fact was missed in review, despite the
upstream Core code being linked to and looked at by two reviewers
and the author (me).
Someday I will grow eyeballs, but that day is not today.
Right now, any sighash type could be parsed without error, which matches
consensus rules. However most of them would be invalid by standardness,
so it's a bit footgun-y (even more so for pre-signed transactions
protocols for which standardness is critical).
This adds `from_u32_standard()`, which takes care to error if we are
passed an invalid-by-current-policy-rules SIGHASH type.
Signed-off-by: Antoine Poinsot <darosior@protonmail.com>
Validating a block's proof-of-work involves computing the block hash.
Returning it from BlockHeader::validate_pow avoids having callers
recompute the block hash if it is needed.
This is instead of encode::Errors because the encoders should
not be allowed to return errors that don't originate in the writer
they are writing into.
This is a part of the method definition that has been relied upon for a
while already.
Instead of using a wildcard path for the `hash_types` module,
be explicit about what types we're using by using nested paths.
There are many benefits to this, including not polluting the namespace
and clearly demarcating the types' location.
Currently whenever an unrecognized network message is received, it is never
flushed from the read buffer, meaning that unless the stream is closed and
recreated it will keep returning the same error every time `read_next()` is
called.
This commit adds the length of the message to `UnrecognizedNetworkCommand`,
so that the `StreamReader` can flush those bytes before returning the error
to the caller.