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
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>
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.
Taking an external dependency just to convert ints to byte arrays
is somewhat of a waste, especially when Rust isn't very aggressive
about doing cross-crate LTO.
Note that the latest LLVM pattern-matches this, and while I haven't
tested it, that should mean this means no loss of optimization.
* add client side block filters with code from murmel. use siphash from bitcoin_hashes pass Bitcoin Core tests upgrade to bitcoin_hashes 0.7
* add filter.filter_id() test use BlockFilter directly
* fixed edge cases of matching empty query sets or or using empty filter
This creates two ways to encode an empty transaction; we should use only the
Segwit-enabled one because that's what we do for 0-input non-0-output transactions.
- Move network::encodable::* to consensus::encode::*
- Rename Consensus{En,De}codable to {En,De}codable (now under
consensus::encode)
- Move network::serialize::Error to consensus::encode::Error
- Remove Raw{En,De}coder, implement {En,De}coder for T: {Write,Read}
instead
- Move network::serialize::Simple{En,De}coder to
consensus::encode::{En,De}coder
- Rename util::Error::Serialize to util::Error::Encode
- Modify comments to refer to new names
- Modify files to refer to new names
- Expose {En,De}cod{able,er}, {de,}serialize, Params
- Do not return Result for serialize{,_hex} as serializing to a Vec
should never fail
- Add serialize::Error::ParseFailed(&'static str) variant for
serialization errors without context
- Add appropriate variants to replace network::Error::Detail for
serialization error with context
- Remove error method from SimpleDecoders
- Separate serialize::Error and network::Error from util::Error
- Remove unneeded propagate_err and consume_err
- Change fuzzing code to ignore Err type
Previously this structure was unused, it's now being used by the `TxIn`
structure to simplify the code a little bit and avoid confusions. Also
the rust-lightning source code has an `OutPoint` similar to this one
but with the `vout` index as an `u16` to avoid unsafe conversions.
I've added to new methods to `OutPoint`:
- `null`: Creates a new "null" `OutPoint`.
- `is_null`: Checks if the given `OutPoint` is null.
Signed-off-by: Jean Pierre Dudey <jeandudey@hotmail.com>
The `serde_struct_impl!` macro has been modified to be compatible
with the serde 1.0 crate, we use this macro and not the `serde_derive`
crate because the latter doesn't support Rust 1.14.0 which is shipped
on Debian stable and we should remain compatible with it.
Two new features were added:
- "serde": enables serialization/deserialization for common types, it pulls
the serde 1.0 dependency.
- "serde-decimal": enables serialization/deserialization for `UDecimal`/`Decimal`,
this pulls the strason 0.4 depdendency and the serde 1.0 dependency.
Signed-off-by: Jean Pierre Dudey <jeandudey@hotmail.com>
Addresses #96.
Turns out it was being used for hex encoding/decoding, so replaced that with the `hex` crate.
i chose to import the `decode` method as:
```
use hex::decode as hex_decode
```
so that it is clear to the reader what is being decoded when it is called. "decode" is such a generic sounding function name that it would get confusing otherwise.