Our usage of `SigHash` implies that 'sighash' is _two_ words; 'sighash'
is a well known word in the Bitcoin ecosystem it should appear in
identifiers as `Sighash`.
Rename `SigHashTypeParseError` to `SighashTypeParseError`.
Our usage of `SigHash` implies that 'sighash' is _two_ words; 'sighash'
is a well known word in the Bitcoin ecosystem it should appear in
identifiers as `Sighash`.
Rename `SchnorrSigHashType` to `SchnorrSighashType`.
Our usage of `SigHash` implies that 'sighash' is _two_ words; 'sighash'
is a well known word in the Bitcoin ecosystem it should appear in
identifiers as `Sighash`.
Rename `EcdsaSigHashType` to `EcdsaSighashType`.
992857ad0a PsbtSighashType unit tests (Dr Maxim Orlovsky)
5be1cdb8c7 PsbtSigHashType Display and FromStr implementation (Dr Maxim Orlovsky)
7cdcdaad6c Support SIGHASH_RESERVED in SchnorrSigHashType::from_u8 (Dr Maxim Orlovsky)
Pull request description:
The newly introduced `PsbtSigHashType` uses very different serde formatting from previously used `EcdsaSigHashType`; for instance it does not output human-readable sighash. This is especially obvious when printing out PSBT as JSON/YAML object and is a breaking change from the `0.27`. Serde human-readable implementation requires `Display/FromStr`, which were also absent.
ACKs for top commit:
sanket1729:
ACK 992857ad0a. This is much better
apoelstra:
ACK 992857ad0a
Tree-SHA512: 71a46471f34b5481e4c1273a66846f59d61bfd98fcb65e7823ca216ff0dd419d81ca86d99c7aaf674fcfe2b1c010e899c8e74328f60a1e809015c663c453cc89
Rust naming conventions stipulate that conversion methods from owned ->
owned for `Copy` types use the naming convention `to_`.
This change makes the function name objectively better, however it makes
no claims of being the 'best' name. We have had much discussion on using
`to_standard` vs `to_u32` but are unable to reach consensus.
We currently implement `Display` and `FromStr` on `EcdsaSigHashType` and
use them in the `serde_string_impl` macro to implement ser/de.
Mirror this logic in `SchnorrSigHashType`.
The exact code formatting we use is not as important as uniformity.
Since we do not use tooling to control the formatting we have to be
vigilant ourselves. Recently I (Tobin) changed the way default type
parameters were formatted (arbitrarily but uniformly). Turns out I
picked the wrong way, there is already a convention as shown in the rust
documentation online (e.g. [1]).
Use 'conventional' spacing for default type parameters. Make the change
across the whole repository, found using
git grep '\<.* = .*\>'
[1] - https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/ch19-03-advanced-traits.html
This avoids some allocation of creating a vec of TxOut to
create a slice incase the data is already available in psbt/other
methods. Facilitates creation of Prevouts from &[TxOut] as well as
&[&TxOut]
Rust convention is to use `to_` for conversion methods that convert from
an owned type to an owned `Copy` type. `into_` is for owned to owned
non-`Copy` types.
Re-name conversion methods that use `into_` for `Copy` types to use
`to_`, no need to deprecate these ones because they are unreleased.
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.
7d982fa9a2 Add all tests from BIP 371 (sanket1729)
d22e0149ad Taproot psbt impl BIP 371 (sanket1729)
108fc3d4db Impl encodable traits for TapLeafhash (sanket1729)
c7478d8fd0 Derive serde for taproot stuctures (sanket1729)
Pull request description:
Built on top of #677 . Will rebase and mark ready for review after #677 is merged.
ACKs for top commit:
apoelstra:
ACK 7d982fa9a2
dr-orlovsky:
re-tACK 7d982fa9a2 basing on `git range-diff`. The original PR before last re-base was tested commit-by-commit.
Tree-SHA512: feb30e4b38d13110a9c0fabf6466d8f0fb7df09a82f4e01d70b8371b34ab0187004a6c63f9796c6585ee30841e8ee765ae9becae139d2e1e3d839553d64c3d1e
106acdc3ac Add fuzzing for Witness struct (Riccardo Casatta)
2fd0125bfa Introduce Witness struct mainly to improve ser/de performance while keeping most usability. (Riccardo Casatta)
Pull request description:
At the moment the Witness struct is `Vec<Vec<u8>>`, the vec inside a vec cause a lot of allocations, specifically:
- empty witness -> 1 allocation, while an empty vec doesn't allocate, the outer vec is not empty
- witness with n elements -> n+1 allocations
The proposed Witness struct contains the serialized format of the witness. This reduces the allocations to:
- empty witness -> 0 allocations
- witness with n elements -> 1 allocation for most common cases (you don't know how many bytes is long the entire witness beforehand, thus you need to estimate a good value, not too big to avoid wasting space and not too low to avoid vector reallocation, I used 128 since it covers about 80% of cases on mainnet)
The inconvenience is having slightly less comfortable access to the witness, but the iterator is efficient (no allocations) and you can always collect the iteration to have a Vec of slices. If you collect the iteration you end up doing allocation anyway, but the rationale is that it is an operation you need to do rarely while ser/de is done much more often.
I had to add a bigger block to better see the improvement (ae860247e191e2136d7c87382f78c96e0908d700), these are the results of the benches on my machine:
```
RCasatta/master_with_block
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_block_deserialize ... bench: 5,496,821 ns/iter (+/- 298,859)
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_block_serialize ... bench: 437,389 ns/iter (+/- 31,576)
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_block_serialize_logic ... bench: 108,759 ns/iter (+/- 5,807)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_deserialize ... bench: 670 ns/iter (+/- 49)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_get_size ... bench: 7 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_serialize ... bench: 51 ns/iter (+/- 5)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_serialize_logic ... bench: 13 ns/iter (+/- 0)
branch witness_with_block (this one)
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_block_deserialize ... bench: 4,302,788 ns/iter (+/- 424,806)
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_block_serialize ... bench: 366,493 ns/iter (+/- 42,216)
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_block_serialize_logic ... bench: 84,646 ns/iter (+/- 7,366)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_deserialize ... bench: 648 ns/iter (+/- 77)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_get_size ... bench: 7 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_serialize ... bench: 50 ns/iter (+/- 5)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_serialize_logic ... bench: 14 ns/iter (+/- 0)
```
With an increased performance to deserialize a block of about 21% and to serialize a block of about 16% (seems even higher than expected, need to do more tests to confirm, I'll appreciate tests results from reviewers)
ACKs for top commit:
apoelstra:
ACK 106acdc3ac
sanket1729:
ACK 106acdc3ac
dr-orlovsky:
utACK 106acdc3ac
Tree-SHA512: e4f23bdd55075c7ea788bc55846fd9e30f9cb76d5847cb259bddbf72523857715b0d4dbac505be3dfb9d4b1bcae289384ab39885b4887e188f8f1c06caf4049a
Witness struct is in place of the Vec<Vec<u8>> we have before this commit.
from_vec() and to_vec() methods are provided to switch between this type and Vec<Vec<u8>>
Moreover, implementation of Default, Iterator and others allows to have similar behaviour but
using a single Vec prevent many allocations during deserialization which in turns results in
better performance, even 20% better perfomance on recent block.
last() and second_to_last() allows to access respective element without going through costly Vec
transformation
Instead of always requiring the full raw script and leaf version, allow
just specifying a raw leaf hash to the sighash computation functions.
This is very useful when dealing with PSBTs, because the
`PSBT_IN_TAP_BIP32_DERIVATION` field only maps a public key to a leaf
hash, so a signer could just take it and produce a signature with it
rathern than having to jump through hoops to recover the full raw
script.
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.
This refactors the code to make it possible to use `get_or_insert_with`
instead of unwrapping in `segwit_cache()`. To achieve it `common_cache`
is refactored into two functions: one taking only the required borrows
and the original calling the new one. `segwit_cache` then calls the new
function so that borrows are OK.
Apart from removing unwrap, this avoids calling `common_cache` multiple
times.
There was a question whether this is equally performant. There are
multiple good reasons why it should be:
1. `get_or_insert_with` is marked `#[inline]`
2. Any good optimizer will inline a function that is used exactly once
3. 1 and 2 conclude that the closure will get inlined
4. Computing self.tx can then be moved to the only branch where it is
required.
5. Even if get_or_insert_with didn't get optimized, which is extremely
unlikely, the `tx` field is at the beginning of the struct and it
probably has pointer alignment (`Deref` suggests it's a pointer).
Alignment larger than pointer is not used, so we can expect the
fields to be ordered as-defined. (This is not guaranteed by Rust but
there's not good reason to change the order in this case.) We can
assume that offset to tx is zero in most cases which means no
computation is actually needed so the expression before closure is
no-op short of passing it into the closure as an argument.
At the time of writing `#[inline]` can be seen at
https://doc.rust-lang.org/src/core/option.rs.html#933