This PR updates protobuf and grpc to their latest versions. The latest protobuf version no longer requires patches, so we can use it directly from the official Conan Center Index, while the latest grpc still needed a patch, which was added to our own Conan Center Index fork in XRPLF/conan-center-index#8.
This change substitutes the secp256k1 source code copy by the Conan recipe added in XRPLF/conan-center-index#24, which updates the version of the library to 0.7.0.
- Spec: XLS-66
- Introduces amendment "LendingProtocol", but leaves it UNSUPPORTED to
allow for standalone testing, future development work, and potential
bug fixes.
- AccountInfo RPC will indicate the type of pseudo-account when
appropriate.
- Refactors and improves several existing classes and functional areas,
including Number, STAmount, STObject, json_value, Asset, directory
handling, View helper functions, and unit test helpers.
This change moves the lockfile instructions into a script, and instead of removing packages it sets the Conan home directory to a temporary directory.
There are several advantages, such as:
* Not affecting the user's Conan home directory, so there is no need to remove packages.
* Only the script needs to be run, rather than several commands.
This change updates the instructions for how to generate a Conan lockfile that is compatible with Linux, macOS, and Windows.
Whenever Conan dependencies change, the Conan lock file needs to be regenerated. However, different OSes have slightly different requirements, and thus require slightly different dependencies. Luckily a single `conan.lock` file can be used, as long as the union of dependencies is included.
The current instructions in the `BUILD.md` file are insufficient to regenerate the lock file such that it is compatible with all OSes, which this change addresses. The three profiles contain the bare minimum needed to generate the lockfile; it does not particularly matter whether the build type is Debug or Release, for instance.
This change triggers the Clio pipeline on PRs that target any of the `release*` branches (in addition to the `master` branch), as opposed to only the `release` branch.
If the config disables SQL db usage, such as a validator:
```
[ledger_tx_tables]
use_tx_tables = 0
```
then the pointer to DB engine is null, but it was still resolved during startup. Although it didn't crash in Release mode, possibly due to the compiler optimizing it away, it did crash in Debug mode. This change explicitly checks for the validity of the pointer and generates a runtime error if not set.
The `ledger_entry` and `deposit_preauth` requests require an array of credentials. However, the array size is not checked before is gets processing. This fix adds checks and return errors in case array size is too big.
This PR splits `RPCHelpers.h` into two files, by moving out all the ledger-fetching-related functions into a separate file, `RPCLedgerHelpers.h`. It also moves `getAccountObjects` to `AccountObjects.h`, since it is only used in that one place.
Technically b0 is not a release, so no "release" prefix here. It marks the point at which we moved the preceding release (3.0.0 in this case) from Beta to Release Candidate.
This change fixes floating point errors in conversion of shares to assets and other way, used in `VaultDeposit`, `VaultWithdraw` and `VaultClawback`. In the floating point calculations the division introduces a larger error than multiplication. If we do division first, then the error introduced will be increased by the multiplication that follows, which is therefore the wrong order to perform these two operations. This change flips the order of arithmetic operations, which minimizes the error.
Rather than having a single `XRPL_RETIRE` macro that applies to both feature and fix amendments, this change replaces it by new `XRPL_RETIRE_FIX` and `XRPL_RETIRE_FEATURE` macros that avoids confusion between whether to prefix the amendment name with `feature` or `fix`.
This updates the CI image hashes after following change: https://github.com/XRPLF/ci/pull/81. And, since we use latest Conan, we can have `conan.lock` with a newline at the end, and we don't need to exclude it from `pre-commit` hooks any longer.
This change fixes JSON parsing of negative `int` input in `STNumber` and `STAmount`. The conversion of JSON to `STNumber` or `STAmount` may trigger a condition where we negate smallest possible `int` value, which is undefined behaviour. We use a temporary storage as `int64_t` to avoid this bug. Note that this only affects RPC, because we do not parse JSON in the protocol layer, and hence no amendment is needed.
This change removes unused definitions from the CMake files, moves variable definitions from `XrplSanity` to `XrplSettings` where they better belong, and updates the minimum GCC and Clang versions to match what we actually minimally support.
This change unifies the build and test jobs into a single job, and adds `ctest` to coverage reporting.
The mechanics of coverage reporting is slightly complex and most of it is encapsulated in the `coverage` target. The status quo way of preparing coverage reports involves running a single target `cmake --build . --target coverage`, which does three things:
* Build the `rippled` binary (via target dependency)
* Prepare coverage reports:
* Run `./rippled -u` unit tests.
* Gather test output and build reports.
This makes it awkward to add an additional `ctest` step between build and coverage reporting steps. The better solution is to split `coverage` target into separate build, followed by `ctest`, followed by test generation. Luckily, the `coverage` target has been designed specifically to support such case; it does not need to build `rippled`, it's just a dependency. Similarly it allows additional tests to be run before gathering test outputs; in principle we could even strip it from running tests and run them separately instead. This means we can keep build, `ctest` and generation of coverage reports as separate steps, as long as the state of build directory is fully (including file timestamps, additional coverage files etc.) preserved between the steps. This means that in order to run `ctest` for coverage reporting we need to integrate build and test into a single job, which this change does.