Using the crate without allocation was previously disabled making the
crate empty without the feature. This chage makes it more fine-grained:
it only disables string and float conversions which use allocator. We
could later provide float conversions by using a sufficiently-long
`ArrayString`.
7bf478373a Model `TooBig` and `Negative` as `OutOfRange` (Martin Habovstiak)
54cbbf804f Express `i64::MAX + 1` as `i64::MIN.unsigned_abs()` (Martin Habovstiak)
b562a18914 Move denomination error out of `ParseAmountError` (Martin Habovstiak)
5e6c65bc1a Clean up `unsigned_abs` (Martin Habovstiak)
Pull request description:
Closes#2265Closes#2266
Disclaimer: I did this in December and don't remember why I haven't pushed it. Maybe because it's somehow broken but I don't see how so please review a bit more carefully just in case.
ACKs for top commit:
tcharding:
ACK 7bf478373a
apoelstra:
ACK 7bf478373a
Tree-SHA512: 1f6e9adae9168bd045c9b09f06d9a69efd47ccc7709ac9ecaf48cb86e265b448b9b52a199ac5e6838d5029f5bc7514c5d7deb15a4d7c8a4606a353f390745570
The error returned when parsing amount had a `Negative` variant which
was weird/unreachable when parsing `SignedAmount`. Also weirdly, parsing
would return `TooBig` when the amount was negative - too low.
To resolve this we merge them into one `OutOfRange` variant that nuges
the consumers to make principled decisions and print error messages as
amounts being more than or less than a specific value which is easier to
understand for the users. Notably, the API still allows getting
information about which type was parsed and which bound was crossed but
in a less obvious way. This is OK since users who have a very good
reason can use this information but most won't.
Closes#2266
The `from_str_in` methods on amounts returned `ParseAmountError` which
contained `InvalidDenomination` among its variants. This one was never
returned because the method doesn't parse denomination.
This change separates the error out.
Closes#2265
Previousle we copied `unsigned_abs` method from `core` because it was
unstable in older MSRV. Our current MSRV allows using the method
directly so this removes our old one and uses the one from standard
library instead.
b2344e019d units: Assert roundtrip SignedAmount/str overflows (Tobin C. Harding)
baadcf4c0a units: Test that SignedAmount float conversion overflows (Tobin C. Harding)
d768f25da8 units: Remove duplicate assertion (Tobin C. Harding)
1d536ac8b2 units: Enable parsing Amount from u64::MAX (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
Our `Amount` type uses an internal `u64` and we maintain no invariants on the inner value. Therefore we should be able to parse `u64::MAX`.
Fix the parsing code by removing the explicit, incorrect check and fix unit tests to mirror this behaviour.
Fix: #2297
ACKs for top commit:
Kixunil:
ACK b2344e019d
apoelstra:
ACK b2344e019d
Tree-SHA512: 944f8d0bfedc559f0444f75eca7d3fba042fbc204c4c032d09ff0edc29be280a3707f5b363dbc04f0d7bdf64701c0c4619e2e0de683d804a2663c2a20ac963f6
We should not be able to roundtrip a `SignedAmount` value greater than
`MAX`, add a test to prove so.
While we are at it document the assertion above that proves we can parse
a float representing an `Amount` greater than `SignedAmount::MAX`.
`Denomination::Bitcoin` and `Denomination::Satoshi` are often used,
especially in test code so this change adds `BTC` and `SAT` - short,
readable constants. Notably this doesn't add the other constants as that
would lead to either unidiomatic names or confusing casing (MSAT meaning
millisat not megasat) and they are not used that much anyway.
Our `Amount` type uses an internal `u64` and we maintain no invariants
on the inner value. Therefore we should be able to parse `u64::MAX`.
Fix the parsing code by removing the explicit, incorrect check and fix
unit tests to mirror this behaviour.
Fix: #2297
f06d12455f bitcoin: Remove the custom sink (Tobin C. Harding)
b503aa1544 Run the formatter (Tobin C. Harding)
3ca55fb163 Remove qualifying path from Read and Write (Tobin C. Harding)
ebeb21fa7a Import fmt::Write using underscore (Tobin C. Harding)
e2dbcb1d28 Use W for writer generic type (Tobin C. Harding)
8704d9f0ae docs: Fix grammar (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
A few cleanups to how we use the `io` crate, this is reasonably trivial but commit `a6c7e696 Remove qualifying path from Read and Write` is big, I have however gone to some effort to make sure it is easy to flick through the diff.
Done in preparation for another go at the `BufRead` stuff.
ACKs for top commit:
apoelstra:
ACK f06d12455f
Kixunil:
ACK f06d12455f
Tree-SHA512: 751c489c67901c7563f1cc91f7761a4e3c276ae1981010338134e8c13200720ba69fcc74948c1dc1e6e65390197da0da27b2b69b86034029748321b404142cba
When we use the `fmt::Write` trait it is just to call its methods, we
can therefore, without any change to the logic, use `as _` when
importing the trait. This prevents naming conflicts.
Done in preparation for importing the `io::Write` trait.