Add a `LockTime` type to hold the nLockTime `u32` value. Use it in
`Transaction` for `lock_time` instead of a `u32`. Make it public so this
new type can be used by rust-miniscript and other downstream projects.
Add a `PackedLockTime` type that wraps a raw `u32` and derives `Ord`,
this type is for wrapping a consensus lock time value for nesting in
types that would like to derive `Ord`.
Replace all instances of
`secp256k1::Message::from_slice(_).expect(_)` with
`secp256k1::Message::from(_)`.
Also adds an implementation of ThirtyTwoByteHash for
TapSighashHash.
Solves https://github.com/rust-bitcoin/rust-bitcoin/issues/824
For internal macros used only in this crate we do not need to use
`macro_use` and pollute the top level namespace now that we have edition
2018. We can add a `pub(crate) use` statement to each and then path
imports work for the macros like normal types.
36f29d4357 Upgrade to secp256k1 v0.23.0 (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
We recently released a new version of `rust-secp256k1`, upgrade to use it.
ACKs for top commit:
apoelstra:
ACK 36f29d4357
Kixunil:
ACK 36f29d4357
Tree-SHA512: 46a909dec8bc59daa78acdb76824d93f4f1da0e9736cf6ca443d3bbadfa43867e720293bb7c4919cb0658e75ec59daeffea080611f0e7eed4df439ddac0305de
91ff2f628c Introduce SPDX license identifiers (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
When `rust-bitcoin` was started in 2014 the SPDX license list and short identifiers where not a thing. Now that we have short identifiers and they are gaining popularity in other projects we can consider using them.
- Add links to the SPDX website in the readme
- Shorten the author section to a single line
- Remove all the licence information in each file and replace it with an
SPDX ID (see https://spdx.dev/ids/#how)
Of note:
- If the author of a file is explicitly listed, maintain this information
- If the 'author' is listed as the generic 'Rust Bitcoin developers' just remove the attribution, this is implicit. This does loose the date info but that can be seen at any time from the git index using
`git log --follow --format=%ad --date default <FILE> | tail -1`
apoelstra, please confirm that I'm not treading on your toes here, especially, are you ok with the new 'written by' string format?
### Ref
- https://spdx.dev/ids/#how
- https://spdx.org/licenses/CC0-1.0.html
- https://spdx.dev/ids/
ACKs for top commit:
apoelstra:
ACK 91ff2f628c
sanket1729:
ACK 91ff2f628c. I am also in IDGAF camp, but I like more red lines in diff.
Kixunil:
ACK 91ff2f628c
Tree-SHA512: ca8aac00f015c18ec18de83dfeb50dd6f4f840653c7def85daa2436a339021ada5f3c34ad0cdf6b18e3e39c45a6d58a8313742e4001d467785b10eee7fdbc938
1fea098dfb Support unsized `R` and `W` in consensus encode/decode (Dawid Ciężarkiewicz)
a24a3b0194 Forward `consensus_decode` to `consensus_decode_from_finite_reader` (Dawid Ciężarkiewicz)
9c754ca4de Take Writer/Reader by `&mut` in consensus en/decoding (Dawid Ciężarkiewicz)
Pull request description:
Fix#1020 (see more relevant discussion there)
This definitely makes the amount of generics compiler
has to generate by avoding generating the same functions
for `R`, `&mut R`, `&mut &mut R` and so on.
old:
```
> ls -al target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
-rwxrwxr-x 1 dpc dpc 9947832 Jun 2 22:42 target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
> strip target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
> ls -al target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
-rwxrwxr-x 1 dpc dpc 4463024 Jun 2 22:46 target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
```
new:
```
> ls -al target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
-rwxrwxr-x 1 dpc dpc 9866800 Jun 2 22:44 target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
> strip target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
> ls -al target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
-rwxrwxr-x 1 dpc dpc 4393392 Jun 2 22:45 target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
```
In the unit-test binary itself, it saves ~100KB of data.
I did not expect much performance gains, but turn out I was wrong(*):
old:
```
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_block_deserialize ... bench: 1,072,710 ns/iter (+/- 21,871)
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_block_serialize ... bench: 191,223 ns/iter (+/- 5,833)
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_block_serialize_logic ... bench: 37,543 ns/iter (+/- 732)
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_stream_reader ... bench: 1,872,455 ns/iter (+/- 149,519)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_deserialize ... bench: 136 ns/iter (+/- 3)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_serialize ... bench: 51 ns/iter (+/- 8)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_serialize_logic ... bench: 5 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_size ... bench: 3 ns/iter (+/- 0)
```
new:
```
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_block_deserialize ... bench: 1,028,574 ns/iter (+/- 10,910)
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_block_serialize ... bench: 162,143 ns/iter (+/- 3,363)
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_block_serialize_logic ... bench: 30,725 ns/iter (+/- 695)
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_stream_reader ... bench: 1,437,071 ns/iter (+/- 53,694)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_deserialize ... bench: 92 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_serialize ... bench: 17 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_serialize_logic ... bench: 5 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_size ... bench: 4 ns/iter (+/- 0)
```
(*) - I'm benchmarking on a noisy laptop. Take this with a grain of salt. But I think
at least it doesn't make anything slower.
While doing all this manual labor that will probably generate conflicts,
I took a liberty of changing generic type names and variable names to
`r` and `R` (reader) and `w` and `W` for writer.
ACKs for top commit:
RCasatta:
ACK 1fea098dfb tested in downstream lib, space saving in compiled code confirmed
apoelstra:
ACK 1fea098dfb
Tree-SHA512: bc11994791dc97cc468dc9d411b9abf52ad475f23adf5c43d563f323bae0da180c8f57f2f17c1bb7b9bdcf523584b0943763742b81362880206779872ad7489f
When `rust-bitcoin` was started in 2014 the SPDX license list and short
identifiers where not a thing. Now that we have short identifiers and
they are gaining popularity in other projects we can consider using
them.
- Add links to the SPDX website in the readme
- Shorten the author section to a single line
- Remove all the licence information in each file and replace it with an
SPDX ID (see https://spdx.dev/ids/#how)
Of note:
- If the author of a file is explicitly listed, maintain this
information
- If the 'author' is listed as the generic 'Rust Bitcoin developers'
just remove the attribution, this is implicit. This does loose the date
info but that can be seen at any time from the git index using
`git log --follow --format=%ad --date default <FILE> | tail -1`
The `u8` parameter in the `SchnorrSighashType` constructor is a
consensus valid `u8`. Re-name the constructor to make this explicit.
Deprecate `from_u8` as is typical.
TryFrom` became available in Rust 1.34 so we can use it now we have
bumped our MSRV.
Add a macro for implementing `TryFrom` for various lists of
`sha256::Hash` types. Use the macro to for vec, slice, and boxed slice.
Clippy emits:
warning: this function has an empty `#[must_use]` attribute, but
returns a type already marked as `#[must_use]`
This is because the return type of the function
`legacy_encode_signing_data_to` is `EncodeSigningDataResult` which is
already marked as `must_use`. There is no need to have `must_use` on the
function also.
I'm guessing this got through to master because we only just added
clippy to CI.
Fix#1020 (see more relevant discussion there)
This definitely makes the amount of generics compiler
has to generate by avoding generating the same functions
for `R`, &mut R`, `&mut &mut R` and so on.
old:
```
> ls -al target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
-rwxrwxr-x 1 dpc dpc 9947832 Jun 2 22:42 target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
> strip target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
> ls -al target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
-rwxrwxr-x 1 dpc dpc 4463024 Jun 2 22:46 target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
```
new:
```
> ls -al target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
-rwxrwxr-x 1 dpc dpc 9866800 Jun 2 22:44 target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
> strip target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
> ls -al target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
-rwxrwxr-x 1 dpc dpc 4393392 Jun 2 22:45 target/release/deps/bitcoin-07a9dabf1f3e0266
```
In the unit-test binary itself, it saves ~100KB of data.
I did not expect much performance gains, but turn out I was wrong(*):
old:
```
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_block_deserialize ... bench: 1,072,710 ns/iter (+/- 21,871)
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_block_serialize ... bench: 191,223 ns/iter (+/- 5,833)
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_block_serialize_logic ... bench: 37,543 ns/iter (+/- 732)
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_stream_reader ... bench: 1,872,455 ns/iter (+/- 149,519)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_deserialize ... bench: 136 ns/iter (+/- 3)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_serialize ... bench: 51 ns/iter (+/- 8)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_serialize_logic ... bench: 5 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_size ... bench: 3 ns/iter (+/- 0)
```
new:
```
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_block_deserialize ... bench: 1,028,574 ns/iter (+/- 10,910)
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_block_serialize ... bench: 162,143 ns/iter (+/- 3,363)
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_block_serialize_logic ... bench: 30,725 ns/iter (+/- 695)
test blockdata::block::benches::bench_stream_reader ... bench: 1,437,071 ns/iter (+/- 53,694)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_deserialize ... bench: 92 ns/iter (+/- 2)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_serialize ... bench: 17 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_serialize_logic ... bench: 5 ns/iter (+/- 0)
test blockdata::transaction::benches::bench_transaction_size ... bench: 4 ns/iter (+/- 0)
```
(*) - I'm benchmarking on a noisy laptop. Take this with a grain of salt. But I think
at least it doesn't make anything slower.
While doing all this manual labor that will probably generate conflicts,
I took a liberty of changing generic type names and variable names to
`r` and `R` (reader) and `w` and `W` for writer.
Clippy warns about creating a reference that is immediately
de-referenced.
Remove unnecessary explicit `&`, while we are at it remove unnecessary
explicit types that appear on the same lines of code.
57dd6739c3 Do not print error when displaying for std builds (Tobin C. Harding)
b80cfeed85 Bind to error_kind instead of e (Tobin C. Harding)
241ec72497 Bind to b instead of e (Tobin C. Harding)
01f481bf5c Bind to s instead of e (Tobin C. Harding)
5c6d369289 network: Remove unused error variants (Tobin C. Harding)
e67e97bb37 Put From impl below std::error::Error impl (Tobin C. Harding)
6ca98e5275 Remove error TODO (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
As part of the ongoing error improvement work and as a direct result of [this comment](https://github.com/rust-bitcoin/rust-bitcoin/pull/987#issuecomment-1135563287) improve the `Display` implementations of all our error types so as to not repeat the source error when printing.
The first 5 patches are trivial clean ups around the errors. Patch 6 is the real work.
EDIT: ~CC @Kixunil, have I got the right idea here bro?~ Patch 6 now includes a macro as suggested.
ACKs for top commit:
Kixunil:
ACK 57dd6739c3
apoelstra:
ACK 57dd6739c3
sanket1729:
ACK 57dd6739c3. Did not check if we covered all cases. We need to remember to use `write_err!` instead of `write!` in future.
Tree-SHA512: 1ed26b0cc5f9a0f71684c431cbb9f94404c116c9136be696434c56a2f56fd93cb5406b0955edbd0dc6f8612e77345c93fa70a70650118968cc58e680333a41de
99f565f932 Add non_exhaustive to all error enums (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
Adding an error variant to a public enum is an API breaking change, this means making, what could be, small refactorings or improvements harder. If we use `non_exhaustive` for error types then we mitigate this cost.
There is a tradeoff however, downstream users who explicitly match on our public error types must include a wildcard pattern.
ACKs for top commit:
apoelstra:
ACK 99f565f932
Kixunil:
ACK 99f565f932
Tree-SHA512: ff329f87d52b3fbe24654f32e4062ddae73173cba5a13d511591158e68ee278e9bdc0a70a3e0b42d6606b369255923f9c46d8b3d1b2ff75f8461a82567df80cd
Adding an error variant to a public enum is an API breaking change, this
means making what could be small refactorings or improvements harder. If
we use `non_exhaustive` for error types then we mitigate this cost.
There is a tradeoff however, downstream users who explicitly match on
our public error types must include a wildcard pattern.
97a5bb1439 Implement std::error::source codebase wide (Tobin C. Harding)
0a9191b429 Add parenthesis around left hand side of companion (Tobin C. Harding)
7cf8af2f86 Put Error impl block below Display (Tobin C. Harding)
2384712364 Re-order Display match arms (Tobin C. Harding)
Pull request description:
Now that we have MSRV of 1.41.1 we should use `source` instead of `cause`. Audit the whole codebase and implement `source` for _every_ error type we have.
The first three patches are preparatory cleanup, patch 3 is particularly shameful (adds parenthesis to make my editor work).
CC @Kixunil because he is championing the error stuff.
ACKs for top commit:
apoelstra:
ACK 97a5bb1439
Tree-SHA512: 46313a28929445f32e01e30ca3b0246b30bc9d5e43db5754d4b441e9c30d3e427efaf247100eb6b452f98beec5a4fcde1daba7943a772114aa34f78ab52cbc60
Improve documentation in `psbt/mod.rs` by doing:
- Use full sentences (full stops and capitalisation)
- Use 100 line column width
- Use back ticks and links as appropriate
- Use `Errors` section
- Use third person tense to describe functions
Improve the rustdoc documentation in the `sighash` module by doing:
- Improve grammar
- Use full sentences (full stops and capitalisation)
- Use 100 line column width
- Use back ticks and links as appropriate
- Improve correctness of `SigHashCache::new` function
Use cargo to upgrade from edition 2015 to edition 2018.
cargo fix --edition
No manual changes made. The result of the command above is just to fix
all the use statements (add `crate::`) and fix the fully qualified path
formats i.e., `::Foo` -> `crate::Foo`.
Recently we added a bunch of additional sighash types, some of the code
comments became stale. Use the non-specific term 'sighash type' instead
of a particular sighash identifier in comments to make the comments more
applicable.
Recently we update all types and docs to use `Sighash` instead of
`SigHash` because 'sighash' is a single word. We should apply the same
logic to functions and variable names.
Do not use an underscore in the identifier 'sighash'.
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 the `SigHash` type to `Sighash`.
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 the `InvalidSigHashType` variant to `InvalidSighashType`.
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 `SigHashCache` to `SighashCache`.
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.