Recently in #2451 we disallowed bip32 derivation paths with the leading
'm' variable.
There is some confusion as to what exactly the bip specifies however
Bitcoin Core RPC call `getaddressinfo` returns a derivation path with a
leading "m/". This means we need to be able to parse it irrespective of
what the bip says.
Be more liberal in what we accept as a derivation path, including both
with and without the leading 'm/'.
Leave the full investigation of the bip to a later date.
Change back some of the test strings as makes sense and include test
strings to showcase the full current behaviour.
We only check clippy in CI with --all-features, which usually is the
best way to get maximum coverage. But if you try a couple other feature
combos, especially those related to nostd, you can hit more code.
In BIP0032, m is used as a variable for the root extended key. It is not
meant to be used as a constant prefix when serializing paths.
Update the DerivationPath parser to no longer require the m prefix.
Remove the m prefix from the unit tests and the bip32, ecdsa-psbt,
and taproot-psbt examples.
close#2449
Applies to both `ecdsa::Signature` and `taproot::Signature`.
Re-name the `Signature` fields with more descriptive names. The
names used were decided upon in the issue discussion.
Impove rustdocs while we are at it.
Note, the change to `sign-tx-segwit-v0` is refactor only, the diff does
not show it but we have a local variable already called `sighash_type`
that is equal to `EcdsaSighashType::All`.
Includes a function argument rename as well, just to be uniform.
Fix: #2139
BIP-32 only differentiates between mainnet and some testnet when
encoding and decoding xpubs and xprivs. As such we can use the new
`NetworkKind` type instead of `Network` throughout the `bip32` module.
An `AddressInner` struct is created when parsing address strings however
address strings do not map 1:1 to `Network` because signet and testnet
use the same bech32 prefix "tb".
We can fix this by inlining the `Payload` variants into `AddressInner`
and adding prefix enums for legacy addresses and a `KnownHrp` for bech32
addresses.
Also enables removing the `AddressEncoding` struct as we can display the
`AddressInner` struct directly. (The `Display` impl is on `AddressInner`
and not directly on address to ignore the `NetworkValidation` wrapper,
may be able to be simplified still further.)
Remove the macro hex_script and replace with a function. Using
track_caller to accuretly report the test name and line number
during a panic is used in place of a macro.
The test helper files can panic when calling hex_psbt(). hex_psbt()
will report the calling function, instead of the offending test. Adding
track_caller to functions that call hex_psbt will report the line number
of the failing test.
Remove the macro hex_psbt and replace with a function. Using
track_caller to accuretly report the test name and line number
during a panic is used in place of a macro.
BIP-68 activated a fair while ago (circa 2019) and since then only
transaction versions 1 and 2 have been considered standard.
Currently in our `Transaction` struct we use an `i32`, this means users
can construct a non-standard transaction if they do not first look up
what the value should be. We can help folk out here by abstracting over
the version number.
Since the version number only governs standardness elect to make the
inner `i32` public (ie., not an invariant). The aim of the type is to
make life easy not restrict what versions are used.
Add transaction::Version data type that simply provides two consts `ONE`
and `TWO`.
Add a `Default` impl on `Version` that returns `Version::TWO`.
In tests that used version 0, instead use `Version::default` because the
test obviously does not care.
The BIP-32 extended public key and extended private key exist in the
Bitcoin vernacular as xpub and xpriv. We can use these terms with no
loss of clarity.
Rename our current BIP-32 types
- `ExtendedPubKey` to `Xpub`
- `ExtendedPrivKey` to `Xpriv`
This patch is a mechanical search-and-replace, followed by running the
formatter, no other manual changes.
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)
We've upgraded MSRV but didn't update clippy config, so some things that
could be improved aren't caught by clippy. This updates the config and
fixes the new issues.
I also `rg '1\.41\.1'`ed for interesting changes and found one
additional improvement.
Various formatting issues have crept into the codebase because we do not
run the formatter in CI.
In preparation for enabling formatting checks in CI run `cargo +nightly
fmt` to fix current formatting issues. No changes other than those
create by the formatter.
Implementing this for spendinfo is really complicated because it
contains some cached data without retaining the components that are used
to compute them.
Users should serde the 1) NodeInfo and 2) internal key and reconstruct
TaprootSpendInfo from it.
Cleanly separate `TapTree` and `NodeInfo`. Fix serde not respecting
invariants for several data structures
Repurpose some tests from removed taproot builder for taptree
We created the `crypto` crate as a container for cryptography modules
with the idea that it may be split out into a separate crate. There is
no reason for users of the lib to know about this module. Also, we have
two `taproot` modules, one in `crypto` and one at the crate root, this
makes for un-ergonomic usage of the lib.
Improve the public API by doing:
- Make the `crypto` module private (`pub(crate)`).
- Re-export `crypto::taproot::Signature` (and `Error`) from
`crate::taproot`
"schnorr" is a dirty word; the current `schnorr` module defines a
`Signature` that includes a sighash type, this sighash type is a bitcoin
specific construct related to taproot. Therefore the `Signature` is
better named `taproot::Signature`. Note also that the usage of `schnorr`
in `secp256k1` is probably justified because the
`secp256::schnorr::Signature` is just doing the crypto.
While we are at it, update docs and error messages to use "taproot"
instead of "schnorr". Also change function names and identifiers that
use "schnorr".
The `TaprootMerkleBranch` and `ControlBlock` both have methods on them
called `from_slice` but these methods do more that just basic copy from
a slice. `decode` is a more descriptive name.
Deprecate the `from_slice` methods and implement `decode`, on other
changes to the logic.
Remove `FromHex` from hash and script types
- Remove the `FromHex` implementation from hash types and `ScriptBuf`
- Remove the `FromStr` implementation from `ScriptBuf` because it does not
roundtrip with `Display`.
- Implement a method `from_hex` on `ScriptBuf`.
- Implement `FromStr` on hash types using a fixed size array.
This leaves `FromHex` implementations only on `Vec` and fixed size arrays.
This renames `Script` to `ScriptBuf` and adds unsized `Script` modeled
after `PathBuf`/`Path`. The change cleans up the API a bit, especially
all functions that previously accepted `&Script` now accept truly
borrowed version. Some functions that perviously accepted `&[u8]` can
now accept `&Script` because constructing it is no loger costly.
This can be replicated by deleting the `type PackedLockTime = LockTime'
line, and then running
find . -type f | xargs sed -i 's/PackedLockTime/LockTime/g
at the root of the repo.
My local scripts did not test serde feature on merge commit. While
merging 734, I accidently broke the serde feature on latest master. This
PR fixes it.
962abcc963 Add serde regression tests (Tobin Harding)
Pull request description:
Attempts to add regression tests for _all_ types defined in `rust-bitcoin` that implement `Serialize`/`Deserialize`.
- Add a `tests` directory and implement regression tests in there
- Use files for input hex and output bincode to reduce source file clutter
- Copy test block and `include_bytes!` usage from RCasatta's [PR](https://github.com/rust-bitcoin/rust-bitcoin/pull/750)
- Uses Kixunil's macro suggested below
- Adds a single regression test to `util/taproot.rs` for private types
## Note to reviewers
- Uses JSON for opcodes in a separate file (`tests/regression_opcodes.rs`), for all other tests uses bincode.
- Bypasses the order issue for maps by only serializing maps with a single element - is this correct?
Fixes#723
ACKs for top commit:
apoelstra:
ACK 962abcc963
sanket1729:
ACK 962abcc963. This has been open for a long time. Merging this in the interest of progress.
Tree-SHA512: e34e48e1c56fab5898bc74e7fb867435ed387d828dd3daf0c7d6df8f305e1da6883e91487115ac428618eb7d95bd16aa2cd209ca219684959bc95587ef0b4083
This transaction broke past versions of `rust-bitcoin` and LND so this
adds a test to avoid reintroducing the problem in the future.
See also https://github.com/romanz/electrs/issues/783
In order that we can safely change/maintain de/serialization code we
need to have regression tests with hard coded serializations for each
type that implements serde.
It is enough to test a single serde data format, use JSON for `opcodes`
and bincode for other types.
Do regression testing in a newly added `tests` module.