Do various whitespace refactorings, of note:
- Use space around equals e.g., 'since = "blah"'
- Put return/break/continue on separate line
Whitespace only, no logic changes.
247a14f4c3 Use test big block for bench_stream_reader instead of making one (Riccardo Casatta)
b92dfbb63f exclude test_data when publishing the crate (Riccardo Casatta)
f5a9681a2a include a big block in test_data, use it for ser/de benchmark (Riccardo Casatta)
09dada55d6 Move bip158 test vectors to test_data (Riccardo Casatta)
06d1a820c3 Remove testnet block hex from tests, use test_data with include_bytes! (Riccardo Casatta)
Pull request description:
In the first two commits I moved some data from source files to the newly introduced `test_data` dir, including it with `include_[str|bytes]!` macro.
The second-to-last commit introduces a big block in test_data which is very handy in ser/de benchmark (I used it for #672) because with smaller blocks you may not notice performance improvements.
Since I don't want to pollute the package the last commit excludes the `test_data` dir from the published package. I think it's fine to do it because dependent packages don't run dependencies tests.
ACKs for top commit:
apoelstra:
ACK 247a14f4c3
Kixunil:
tACK 247a14f4c3
Tree-SHA512: a2beb635b0a358737d0b57d3e7205b1ddf87652b9a8c889ce63e2867659a8eaf7e43a5b87a453345d56d953745913f40b58596f449e5fbc87340e0dd2aef0727
Rust idiomatic style is to put the rustdoc _above_ any attributes on
types, functions, etc.
Audit the codebase and move comments/attributes to the correct place.
Add a trailing full stop at times to neaten things up a little extra.
This is the initial step towards using and maybe enforcing clippy.
It does not fix all lints as some are not applicable. They may be
explicitly ignored later.
Docs can always do with a bit of love.
Clean up the module level (`//!`) rustdocs for all public modules.
I claim uniform is better than any specific method/style. I tried to fit
in with what ever was either most sane of most prevalent, therefore
attaining uniformity without unnecessary code churn (one exception being
the changes to headings described below).
Notes:
* Headings - use heading as a regular sentence for all modules e.g.,
```
//! Bitcoin network messages.
```
as opposed to
```
//! # Bitcoin Network Messages
```
It was not clear which style to use so I picked a 'random' mature
project and copied their style.
* Added 'This module' in _most_ places as the start of the module
description, however I was not religious about this one.
* Fixed line length if necessary since most of our code seems to follow
short (80 char) line lengths for comments anyways.
* Added periods and fixed obvious (and sometimes not so obvious)
grammatically errors.
* Added a trailing `//!` to every block since this was almost universal
already. I don't really like this one but I'm guessing it is Andrew's
preferred style since its on the copyright notices as well.
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
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.
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.
The protocol has a bug where a 0u8 is pushed at the end of each
block header on the wire in headers messages. WHy this bug came
about is unrealted and shouldn't impact API design.