Touch recovery module in no_std_test
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@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ version = "0.1.0"
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authors = ["Elichai Turkel <elichai.turkel@gmail.com>"]
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[dependencies]
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secp256k1 = { path = "../", default-features = false, features = ["serde", "rand"] }
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secp256k1 = { path = "../", default-features = false, features = ["serde", "rand", "recovery"] }
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libc = { version = "0.2", default-features = false }
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serde_cbor = { version = "0.10", default-features = false } # A random serializer that supports no-std.
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@ -15,7 +15,7 @@
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//! # secp256k1 no-std test.
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//! This binary is a short smallest rust code to produce a working binary *without libstd*.
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//! This gives us 2 things:
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//! 1. Test that the parts of the code that should work in a no-std enviroment actually work.
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//! 1. Test that the parts of the code that should work in a no-std enviroment actually work. Note that this is not a comprehensive list.
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//! 2. Test that we don't accidentally import libstd into `secp256k1`.
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//!
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//! The first is tested using the following command `cargo run --release | grep -q "Verified Successfully"`.
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@ -96,6 +96,13 @@ fn start(_argc: isize, _argv: *const *const u8) -> isize {
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let sig = secp.sign(&message, &secret_key);
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assert!(secp.verify(&message, &sig, &public_key).is_ok());
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let rec_sig = secp.sign_recoverable(&message, &secret_key);
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assert!(secp.verify(&message, &rec_sig.to_standard(), &public_key).is_ok());
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assert_eq!(public_key, secp.recover(&message, &rec_sig).unwrap());
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let (rec_id, data) = rec_sig.serialize_compact();
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let new_rec_sig = recovery::RecoverableSignature::from_compact(&data, rec_id).unwrap();
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assert_eq!(rec_sig, new_rec_sig);
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let mut cbor_ser = [0u8; 100];
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let writer = SliceWrite::new(&mut cbor_ser[..]);
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let mut ser = Serializer::new(writer);
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