Improve the rustdocs on the private `U256` type by doing:
- Remove link to self within constructors, just use backticks
- Use `U256` instead of `Self` or `self`
- Fix incorrect usage of `CompactTarget` [0]
[0] We knew this was wrong when we merged it but because the docs are
private we elected to do this follow up patch.
The `pow` types implement `fmt::LowerHex` but do not implement hex
parsing.
Add inherent methods `from_hex` and `from_prefixed_hex` to the
`pow` types.
The maximum target threshold has a network dependant upper bound.
Currently we are not checking this bound. One complication is that there
is currently heated open debate around the `Network` type.
We can bypass the `Network` issue by using `AsRef<Params>` instead.
Add a function that does the checks based on the `Params` type as well
as an unchecked version.
These two functions calculate the min/max threshold transition which is
a _target_ not a "difficulty" number. Using "difficulty" in the function
name is unnecessarily confusing.
Rename and deprecate the functions.
The maximum "attainable" target is a `rust-bitcoin` thing, Core use max
unattainable.
Deprecated the `Params::pow_limit` field and add a new field
`max_attainable_target`.
The `Params` type is `non_exhaustive` so this is not an API breaking
change.
What we really want is the maximum target, but since this is a const in
`Params` use an `AsRef<Params>` argument in the `difficulty` functions.
Requires implementation of `AsRef<Params> for Params`.
The `difficulty` calculation requires dividing a target value by `self`.
Add an assertion that `self` is not zero to help devs debug this.
Note that this should never really be hit, but its possible there is a
bug somewhere causing the target to be set to zero - so this may help
debugging.
Also, add panics section to rustdocs.
cbee9781e8 Move unit types to units (Tobin C. Harding)
5bd0d7194b Remove unused absolute::Error (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
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.
Patch 1 was originally #2526, putting it in via this PR to try and speed up the process.
Close: #2282
ACKs for top commit:
sanket1729:
ACK cbee9781e8
apoelstra:
ACK cbee9781e8 lgtm. this is a good start. I think the LockTime types should follow Height and Time
Tree-SHA512: 6b0d63c7b054008598d7fa81be7d8c112f2778883b5529d79d446617b94b3c196c9ac735f840d1dfb488700894d3161c6976d44ab0e12ac3af4008068eac5f87
f8de7954b2 Remove unused pow::TryFromError type (Tobin C. Harding)
43c5eb765c Fix witness_version leaf error type (Tobin C. Harding)
2af764e859 hashes: Fix leaf error type (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
In light of recent discussion go over the codebase and look for some places that the leaf errors are wrong. Does not do the whole code base, excludes `p2p` and a couple of other places.
ACKs for top commit:
apoelstra:
ACK f8de7954b2
Kixunil:
ACK f8de7954b2
Tree-SHA512: 2905878363869ee205cce49c58c060c712c9b7b55965ee60bb856128842968a4be86c93a194ffffdb35e215b2bea8ad33b04ee47e8e17cc784b0641ea48518e5
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.
We have three integer wrapping types that can be created from hex
strings where the conversion from an integer is infallible:
- `absolute::LockTime`
- `Sequence`
- `CompactTarget`
We would like to improve our handling of the two prefix characters (eg
0x) by making it explicit.
- Modify the inherent `from_hex` method on each type to error if the
input string does not contain a prefix.
- Add an additional inherent method on each type `from_unprefixed_hex`
that errors if the input string does contain a prefix.
This patch does not touch the wrapper types that cannot be infallibly
constructed from an integer (i.e. absolute `Height` and `Time`).
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.
7e1ba7895f Remove broken kani test (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
This test is failing. I do not want to dive back into kani right now, just remove it.
This is what I originally did in #2454 but changed directions and tried to fix it. Running kani test takes ages and I'd need to dig back to refresh my memory to work with kani. I don't have the motivation to do that at the moment. Just remove the test.
FTR I added the test recently without fulling thinking it through and it has never passed so we are not loosing any coverage. Doing this was the original mistake I should not have made.
ACKs for top commit:
Kixunil:
ACK 7e1ba7895f
apoelstra:
ACK 7e1ba7895f
Tree-SHA512: cb76807173b637be9d5ce790b015e711ca76add95ce0f0acfdc56947c075f57ea89774c09c4314dbc89086dcf7a8e21053552bfae805fd5dc9c91051cd53c468
faa45cf10f Remove stale comment (Tobin C. Harding)
c82f26e960 Use hex-conservative to display pubkey (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
We introduced `hex-conservative` ages ago, use it to display the `PublicKey`.
ACKs for top commit:
Kixunil:
ACK faa45cf10f
apoelstra:
ACK faa45cf10f
Tree-SHA512: 8ad14c7697314f8393ecb9a287215c505924d0655f7bf3536d4be83af983b142e06a96f802beb4548e2de051f1783549d8d1d1a8ebfb678f372a54010717752e
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>
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).
We have a convention in `rust-bitcoin` to use external crates directly
when importing them not via `crate::foo`.
Update all the import paths for `io` to use this form.
12d615d900 Use network when calculating difficulty (Tobin C. Harding)
62af5b54f3 Improve difficulty rustdocs (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
The difficulty is a ratio of the max and current targets, since the max is network specific the difficulty calculation is also network specific.
We already have network specific maximum target constants, use them when calculating the difficulty.
Patch 1 is a trival docs improvement to `block::Header::difficulty`.
ACKs for top commit:
Kixunil:
ACK 12d615d900
apoelstra:
ACK 12d615d900
Tree-SHA512: 8b414c975306667309b0918109b3e5e8774496fc4c0f3413709e95ad7499bebf1a017def4c180a2bb5f1750c69bb505d94c738a28525b7ccc8b36e5e42514000
The difficulty is a ratio of the max and current targets, since the
max is network specific the difficulty calculation is also network
specific.
We already have network specific maximum target constants, use them when
calculating the difficulty.
The `Params::pow_limit` field is currently a `Work` type, this is
incorrect. The proof of work limit is the highest _target_ not the
lowest work (even though these have a relationship).
Note that we use the highest _attainable_ target, this differs from
Bitcoin Core and the reasoning is already documented in the code.
Add new consts and document where they came from as well as how they
differ to Core.
Use the new consts in the various network specific `Params` types.
10374af75c Make error types uniform (Tobin C. Harding)
43d3306822 Use explicit error::Error impl instead of the default (Tobin C. Harding)
2512dbafc2 Remove impl_std_error macro (Tobin C. Harding)
6933ca4fc2 Add suffix to HiddenNodes error type (Tobin C. Harding)
2b40ea24fb Add suffix to IncompleteBuilder error type (Tobin C. Harding)
f41416a0ea Add suffix to UnknownMagic error type (Tobin C. Harding)
5658dac024 Add suffix to UnknownChainHash error type (Tobin C. Harding)
2fb71dd943 Move p2p error types to bottom of file (Tobin C. Harding)
39314ad52f Move error code to match conventional layout (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
PR aims to achieve two things:
- Make error code brain dead easy to read
- Get error code closer to being ready for v1.0
The first 8 patches are pretty basic, and are broken up into really small changes. The last patch is much bigger, it has a long git log to explain it but reviewing should not take too much brain power.
This PR does not introduce anything new, it just applies what we have been doing recently with errors. Before v1.0.0 others will likely want to re go over all the error types. As such I believe this PR can be merged under the one ack carve-out.
### TODOs (future PRs)
We have a few errors that still need splitting up:
- Split up `merkle_tree::block::MerkleBlockError`
- Split up `psbt::error::Error`
- Split up `IncompleteBuilderError`
Also, all error From's should probably have `#[inline]`, I noticed late in the process and did not have the heart to visit every error again.
ACKs for top commit:
apoelstra:
ACK 10374af75c
clarkmoody:
ACK 10374af75c
Tree-SHA512: 4f4f3533f42dc11af8e7978f3272752bb56d12a68199752ed4af0c02a46a87892b55c695b7007bc3d0bdf389493068d068e2be1780e8c3008815efec3a02eedf
On our way to v1.0.0 we are defining a standard for our error types,
this includes:
- Uses the following derives (unless not possible, usually because of `io::Error`)
`#[derive(Debug, Clone, PartialEq, Eq)]`
- Has `non_exhaustive` unless we really know we can commit to not adding
anything.
Furthermore, we are trying to make the codebase easy to read. Error code
is write-once-read-many (well it should be) so if we make all the error
code super uniform the users can flick to an error and quickly see what
it includes. In an effort to achieve this I have made up a style and
over recent times have change much of the error code to that new style,
this PR audits _all_ error types in the code base and enforces the
style, specifically:
- Is layed out: definition, [impl block], Display impl, error::Error impl, From impls
- `error::Error` impl matches on enum even if it returns `None` for all variants
- Display/Error impls import enum variants locally
- match uses *self and `ref e`
- error::Error variants that return `Some` come first, `None` after
Re: non_exhaustive
To make dev and review easier I have added `non_exhaustive` to _every_
error type. We can then remove it error by error as we see fit. This is
because it takes a bit of thinking to do and review where as this patch
should not take much brain power to review.
In a further effort to make the code brain-dead easy to read; use an
explicit implementation of `std::error::Error` that returns `None`
instead of relying on the default trait implementation.
As part of an ongoing effort to make our error types stable and useful
add a stand set of derives to all error types in the library.
`#[derive(Debug, Clone, PartialEq, Eq)]`
Add `Copy` if possible and the error type does not include
`#[non_exhaustive]`.
If an error type includes `io::Error` it only gets `#[derive(Debug)]`.
We have just released the `hex-conservative` crate, we can now use it.
Do the following:
- Depend on `hex-conservative` in `bitcoin` and `hashes`
- Re-export `hex-conservative` as `hex` from both crate roots.
- Remove all the old hex code from `hashes`
- Fix all the import statements (makes up the bulk of the lines changed
in this patch)
7cdc90565f Mutate mul_u64 with mutagen (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
Add the `mutate` attribute to mutate `mul_u64`. Add non-doc comments listing the two false positives. These are identical but we list them twice so when devs grep for `mutagen false pos` the same number of lines for each function is displayed as is displayed by the `mutagen` run. This coding false positives thing is also introduced in PR #1655.
ACKs for top commit:
apoelstra:
ACK 7cdc90565f
sanket1729:
utACK 7cdc90565f
Tree-SHA512: d066beb2f9ba198f5af36258ba15cfbd2c7c9ce7596f6340ed1fe2f62a2b0b5296eeb2cb4be30146d019671f1858521c29db917936895b5b3fd36bdb0bd07e57
8e6f953aa7 Expose valid (min, max) difficulty transition thresholds (Wilmer Paulino)
Pull request description:
Once `U256` was made private, we lost the ability to check whether a valid difficulty transition was made in the chain, since `Target` doesn't expose any operations. We only choose to expose `Shl<u32>` and `Shr<u32>` such that we can compute the min and max target thresholds allowed for a difficulty transition.
This is something we realized was missing after bumping to `rust-bitcoin v0.30.0` in `rust-lightning`, specifically for our `lightning-block-sync` crate. It may also be worth having a helper in `rust-bitcoin` that checks a header properly builds upon the previous, but that can be left for future work.
ACKs for top commit:
Kixunil:
ACK 8e6f953aa7
sanket1729:
ACK 8e6f953aa7 . Sorry, was confused by some details.
apoelstra:
ACK 8e6f953aa7
Tree-SHA512: 740dd64089426463dc6a19726d5a562276bd0966e0e31af8e1e67b28d18945644ac0e50be3cf0cc7fa604acc3d2c5b912a77a7caa69d8cff85f70fd57e5328c5
Once `U256` was made private, we lost the ability to check whether a
valid difficulty transition was made in the chain, since `Target`
no longer exposes any arithmetic operations.
Our previous MSRV did not support MIN/MAX associated consts so we had
methods min/max_value. Now that our MSRV is Rust 1.48.0 we can use the
consts.
Deprecate min/max_value methods in favor of MIN/MAX associated conts.
We currently use the functions `min_value` and `max_value` because the
consts were not available in Rust 1.41.1, however we recently bumped the
MSRV so we can use the consts now.