This change moves the sanitizer runtime options out to dedicated files, such that they can be used in multiple places (CI, local runs) without any need to rewrite them.
ASAN wasn't able to keep track of `boost::coroutine` context switches, and would lead to many false positives being detected. By switching to `boost::coroutine2` and `ucontext`, ASAN is able to know about the context switches advertised by the `boost::fiber` class, which in turn leads to more cleaner ASAN analysis.
Subscribe tests have a problem that there is no way to synchronize application running in background threads and test threads. Threads are communicating via websocket messages. When the code is compiled in debug mode with code coverage enabled it executes quite slow, so receiving websocket messages by the client in subscribe tests may time out.
This change does 2 things to fix the problem:
* Increases timeout for receiving a websocket message.
* Decreases the number of tests running in parallel.
While testing the fix for subscribe test another flaky test in ledger replay was found, which has also been addressed.
The refs as previously used pointed to the source branch, not the target branch. However, determining the target branch is different depending on the GitHub event. The pull request logic was incorrect and needed to be fixed, and the logic inside the workflow could be simplified. Both modifications have been made in this commit.
The existing code added the git commit info (`GIT_COMMIT_HASH` and `GIT_BRANCH`) to every file, which was a problem for leveraging `ccache` to cache build objects. This change adds a separate C++ file from where these compile-time variables are propagated to wherever they are needed. A new CMake file is added to set the commit info if the `git` binary is available.
This change enables all clang-tidy checks that are already passing. It also modifies the clang-tidy CI job, so it runs against all files if .clang-tidy changed.
To allow developers to consume the latest unstable and (near-)stable versions of our `xrpl` Conan recipe, we should export and upload it whenever a push occurs to the corresponding branch or a release tag has been created. This way, developers do not have to figure out themselves what the most recent shortened commit hash was to determine the latest unstable recipe version (e.g. `3.2.0-b0+a1b2c3d`) or what the most recent release (candidate) was to determine the latest (near-)stable recipe version (e.g. `3.1.0-rc2`).
Now, pushes to the `develop` branch will produce the `develop` recipe version, pushes to the `release` branch will produce the `rc` recipe version, and creation of versioned tags will produce the `release` recipe version.
The `upload-conan-deps` workflow that's triggered on push is supposed to upload the Conan dependencies to our remote, so future PR commits can pull those dependencies from the remote. However, as the `sanitize` argument is missing, it was building different dependencies than what the PRs are building for the asan/tsan/ubsan job, so the latter would not find anything in the remote that they could use. This change sets the missing `sanitizers` input variable when running the `build-deps` action.
Separately, the `setup-conan` action showed the default profile, while we are using the `ci` profile. To ensure the profile is correctly printed when sanitizers are enabled, the environment variable the profile uses is set before calling the action.
The export and upload steps were initially in a separate action, where GitHub Actions does not support the `secrets` keyword, but only `inputs` for the credentials. After they were moved to a reusable workflow, only part of the references to the credentials were updated. This change correctly references to the Conan credentials via `secrets` instead of `inputs`.