The RippleAddress class was used to represent a number of fundamentally
different types: account public keys, account secret keys, node public
keys, node secret keys, seeds and generators.
The class is replaced by the following types:
* PublicKey for account and node public keys
* SecretKey for account and node private keys
* Generator for generating secp256k1 accounts
* Seed for account, node and generator seeds
The new code removes the ability to specify domain names
in the [validators] configuration block, and no longer
supports the [validators_site] option.
More details on the supported configurations are available
under doc/rippled-example.cfg.
This is designed for use by proxies in front of rippled. Configured IPs
can forward identifying user data in HTTP headers, including
user name and origin IP. If the user name exists, then resource limits
are lifted for that session. However, administrative commands are still
reserved only for administrative sessions.
The existing delivered_amount logic will erroneously report
unavailable for ledgers that aren't in the network's live
chain because it is based solely on ledger sequence number.
This adds a check based on the ledger close time to permit
the code to give correct results in standalone mode and on
test networks.
* Move InboundTransactions to app/ledger
* Move TransactionAcquire to app/ledger
* Move LocalTxs to app/ledger
* Move Transaction to app/misc
* Move TransactionMaster to app/ledger
The first few transactions are added to the open ledger at
the base fee (ie. 10 drops). Once enough transactions are
added, the required fee will jump dramatically. If additional
transactions are added, the fee will grow exponentially.
Transactions that don't have a high enough fee to be applied to
the ledger are added to the queue in order from highest fee to
lowest. Whenever a new ledger is accepted as validated, transactions
are first applied from the queue to the open ledger in fee order
until either all transactions are applied or the fee again jumps
too high for the remaining transactions.
Current implementation is restricted to one transaction in the
queue per account. Some groundwork has been laid to expand in
the future.
Note that this fee logic escalates independently of the load-based
fee logic (ie. LoadFeeTrack). Submitted transactions must meet
the load fee to be considered for the queue, and must meet both
fees to be put into open ledger.
o The sign_for RPC command automatically fills in an empty
"SigningPubKey" field if the field is missing.
o The sign_for command returns the Signers list inside the
tx_json. This re-establishes symmetry with the
submit_multisigned command. It also means the returned
tx_blob might be useful, since it contains the multisignature.
o The sign_for command also now allows the inclusion of a Signers
array field in the input tx_json. If a Signers array is present,
the new signature is incorporated into the passed array. This
supports a model where multisignatures are accumulated serially.
o Syntax hints are improved.
o Remove warning written to log by sign_for command.
o The sign_for RPC command previously only worked in the
"json sign_for" form. The command now works as a straight
"sign_for". The "offline" parameter also works.
o Don't autofill Fee or Paths when signing offline.
The digest for a transaction (its transaction ID, or tid) is
computed once upon constructed when the STTx is deserialized.
Subsequent calls to retrieve the digest use the cached value.
Any code which modifies the STTx and then attempts to
retrieve the digest will terminate the process with a
logic error contract violation.
* Nested types removed
* All STTx are contained as const
(Except in transaction sign, which must modify)
* tid in STTx is computed once on deserialization
* All checks flow through ripple::checkValidity, which transparently caches result flags.
* All external transaction submission code paths use checkValidity.
* SF_SIGGOOD flag no longer appears outside of HashRouter / checkValidity.
* Validity can be forced in known or trusted scenarios.
In usage it was determined that the submit_multisigned RPC
command could be improved by moving the Signers array inside the
tx_json in the submitted form of the command. This has the
advantage that the RPC command is more similar to the native form.
Also the returned JSON looks more like the submitted JSON.
* Avoid throwing in OrderBookDB::processTxn
* Fix missing space in debug output
* Avoid duplicate lock of PathRequest in updateAll
* Avoid shadowing in insertPathRequest
* Improve indentation in runOnCoroutine
* Remove extraneous space in ServerHandlerImp::processRequest
The server's open ledger is now an instance of the OpenView
class, managed by an instance of the OpenLedger class. This
should improve the performance of operations on open ledgers
because they are no longer Ledger/SHAMap operation.
Replace TxnSignApiFacade with separate passed in arguments to
the various sign/submit RPC commands.
Also increase unit test coverage of the submit_multisign RPC
command.
Eventually multisign will need to be enabled onto the network, at
which point compiling it in or out will no longer be an option.
In preparation, the compile guards are removed and multisign is
being enabled with a Feature.
You can locally enable a Feature using your config file. To
enable multisign with your config file add a section like this:
[features]
MultiSign
The exact spelling and capitalization of both "features" and
"MultiSign" is important. If you don't get those right multisign
will not be enabled.
There is a minor issue. The "sign_for" and "submit_multisigned"
RPC commands are only enabled if multisign is enabled. However
those commands are still shown in the help message even if
multisign is disabled. This is because the code that produces
the help message doesn't read the config file (where the Features
are kept). This problem will become irrelevant once multisign is
enabled onto the network.
With this changeset two-level multisigning is removed from the
codebase and replaced with single-level multisigning.
Additionally, SignerLists in the ledger are prepared for the
possibility of multiple SignerLists per account. This was done
by adding a defaulted 32-bit SignerListID to each SignerList.
The SignerListIndex calculation incorporates the SignerListID.
There are three known missing elements:
1. Multisigned transactions should require higher fees than
regular (single-signed) transaction. That's not yet
implemented.
2. It should be possible to disable the master key on an account
if that account is multisign enabled (has a signer list).
That's not yet implemented.
3. Documentation about multisigning needs to be improved.
Multisigning is still compiled out of the code base. To enable
multisigning for a stand-alone rippled, change the
RIPPLE_ENABLE_MULTI_SIGN macro (in BeastConfig.h) to "1" and
rebuild.
This commit also addresses:
o RIPD-912: Remove multisign APIs from STObject, and
o RIPD-944: Replace common_transactor with jtx at call sites.
* Remove ltCURRENT
* Change getOwnerInfo
* Use ReadView in TransactionSign
* Change AcceptedLedger and ProposedTransaction to use ReadView
* Change RPC::accounts