Commit Graph

14 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andrew Poelstra 7b89c15ed5 More changes, incl. dropping DumbHasher in favor of SipHasher
only json stuff left in this round of compiler errors :)
2015-04-05 14:43:44 -05:00
Andrew Poelstra 7738722ab5 Checkpoint commit; tons of disorganized changes for rustc
BTW after all this is done I'm gonna indent the entire codebase...
so `git blame` is gonna be totally broken anyway, hence my
capricious cadence of commits.
2015-04-05 12:58:49 -05:00
Andrew Poelstra a62a7d736c Several more changes for librustc changes 2015-04-04 13:08:49 -05:00
Andrew Poelstra 11dbc717c4 Show -> Debug 2015-03-26 10:35:31 -05:00
Andrew Poelstra 2101e4a56d Rename bitcoin-secp256k1-rs to secp256k1 2015-03-26 10:08:36 -05:00
Andrew Poelstra c3377032f8 Many syntax changes for rustc, incomplete 2015-01-18 17:39:51 -06:00
Andrew Poelstra 8f5c28a533 Fixes for rustc changes 2014-08-30 16:08:38 -07:00
Andrew Poelstra 38f8132067 Fix for upstream 2014-08-28 11:13:33 -07:00
Andrew Poelstra 688a77ef38 Rename Hash->Uint functions to denote endianness 2014-08-24 12:28:02 -07:00
Andrew Poelstra 2986e1f983 Fix for new partial-move rules; swap hash le_hex_string and be_hex_string
I noticed that the little/big endian hex string functions for Sha256dHash
did not match my intuition. What we should have is that the raw bytes
correspond to a little-endian representation (since we convert to Uint256
by transmuting, and Uint256's have little-endian representation) while
the reversed raw bytes are big-endian.

This means that the output from `sha256sum` is "little-endian", while the
standard "zeros on the left" output from bitcoind is "big-endian". This
is correct since we think of blockhashes as being "below the target" when
they have lots of zeros on the left, and we also notice that when hashing
Bitcoin objects with sha256sum that the output hashes are always reversed.

These two functions le_hex_string and be_hex_string should really not be
used outside of the library; the Encodable trait should give access to a
"big endian" representation while ConsensusEncodable gives access to a
"little endian" representation. That way we describe the split in terms
of user-facing/consensus code rather than big/little endian code, which
is a better way of thinking about it. After all, a hash is a collection
of bytes, not a number --- it doesn't have an intrinsic endianness.

Oh, and by the way, to compute a sha256d hash from sha256sum, you do

  echo -n 'data' | sha256sum | xxd -r -p | sha256dsum
2014-08-03 14:52:59 -07:00
Andrew Poelstra a2ce000b2b Revamp Serializable interface to be similar to Encoder/Encodable
This is a massive simplification, fixes a couple endianness bugs (though
not all of them I don't think), should give a speedup, gets rid of the
`serialize_iter` crap.
2014-08-01 09:01:39 -07:00
Andrew Poelstra cc942a47f3 Workaround for rustc hiccup in `for` loop restructuring, remove assert from deserialization code
Thanks to the assert change there is a segfault happening :(
2014-07-25 15:52:48 -07:00
Andrew Poelstra 93dadd6a6e Add iterators to patricia tree 2014-07-19 13:02:25 -07:00
Andrew Poelstra c9ad7c0b58 Initial commit, move into Cargo 2014-07-18 06:56:17 -07:00