In certain cases, such as when modifying headers used by many compilation units, performing a unity build is slower than when performing a regular build with `ccache` enabled. There is also a benefit to a unity build in that it can detect things such as macro redefinitions within the group of files that are compiled together as a unit. This change therefore restores the ability to perform unity builds. However, instead of running every configuration with and without unity enabled, it is now only enabled for a single configuration to maintain lower computational use.
As part of restoring the code, it became clear that currently two configurations have coverage enabled, since the check doesn't focus specifically on Debian Bookworm so it also applies to Debian Trixie. This has been fixed too in this change.
Unity builds were intended to speed up builds, by bundling multiple files into compilation units. However, now that ccache is available on all platforms, there is no need for unity builds anymore, as ccache stores compiled individual build objects for reuse. This change therefore removes the ability to make unity builds.
This change removes unnecessary version numbers in the OpenSSL and Boost `find_package` CMake statements. An unnecessary OpenSSL definition is removed, while Conan options for SSL are updated to disable insecure ciphers. Moreover, the statements are now ordered alphabetically and more logically.
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.
This change downgrades OpenSSL 3.6.0 to 3.5.4. To avoid potential zero-day issues in a new major version of OpenSSL, 3.6.0, it is safer to stick with 3.5.4. While 3.6.0 has some nice new features, such as improved SHA512 hashing, it also introduces new features that could contain bugs. In contrast, 3.5.4 has seen quite a few bug fixes over 3.5.0 and has been used in the wild for a while now.
This change reverts #5617, because it will require extensive testing that will take up more time than we have before the next scheduled release.
Reverting this change does not mean we are abandoning it. We aim to pick it back up once there's a sufficient time window to allow for testing on multiple distros running a mixture of OpenSSL 1.x and 3.x.
This updates Boost to 1.88, which is needed because Clio wants to move to 1.88 as that fixes several ASAN false positives around coroutine usage. In order for Clio to move to newer boost, libXRPL needs to move too. Hence the changes in this PR. A lot has changed between 1.83 and 1.88 so there are lots of changes in the diff, especially in regards to Boost.Asio and coroutines in particular.
This change updates OpenSSL from 1.1.1w to 3.5.2. The code works as-is, but many functions have been marked as deprecated and thus will need to be rewritten. For now we explicitly add the `-DOPENSSL_SUPPRESS_DEPRECATED` to give us time to do so, while providing us with the benefits of the updated version.
This change updates RocksDB to its latest version. RocksDB is backward-compatible, so even though this is a major version bump, databases created with previous versions will continue to function.
The external RocksDB folder is removed, as the latest version available via Conan Center no longer needs custom patches.
This PR updates several dependencies to their latest versions. Not all dependencies have been updated, as some need to be patched and some require additional code changes due to backward incompatibilities introduced by the version bump.
Having `boost::boost` in `self.requires` makes clio link with all boost libraries. There are additionally several Boost stacktrace backends that are both linked with, which violate ODR.
This change fixes the problem.
To be able to consume `rippled` in Conan 2, the recipe should specify transitive_headers for external libraries that are present in the exported header files. This change remains compatibility with Conan 1, where this flag was not present.
We are currently using old version 0.6.2 of `xxhash`, as a verbatim copy and paste of its header file `xxhash.h`. Switch to the more recent version 0.8.2. Since this version is in Conan Center (and properly protects its ABI by keeping the state object incomplete), add it as a Conan requirement. Switch to the SIMD instructions (in the new `XXH3` family) supported by the new version.