Files
rippled/src
Scott Schurr ef51128270 Enable simple multisign with a Feature (RIPD-182):
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.
2015-09-03 11:43:25 -07:00
..
2015-08-04 13:51:02 -07:00
2015-07-12 12:03:27 -07:00
2014-06-03 21:43:59 -07:00
2015-03-18 19:37:08 -07:00
2014-08-20 16:19:28 -07:00

src

Some of these directories come from entire outside repositories brought in using git-subtree. This means that the source files are inserted directly into the rippled repository. They can be edited and committed just as if they were normal files.

However, if you create a commit that contains files both from a subtree, and from the ripple source tree please use care when designing the commit message, since it will appear in the subtree's individual repository when the changes are pushed back to the upstream.

When submitting pull request, make sure that any commits which include files from subtrees are isolated - i.e. do not mix files from subtrees and ripple in the same commit. This way, the commit message will make sense. We don't want to see "Fix pathfinding bug with XRP" appearing in the LevelDB or Beast commit log, for example.

About git-subtree:

https://github.com/apenwarr/git-subtree
http://blogs.atlassian.com/2013/05/alternatives-to-git-submodule-git-subtree/

dir What
beast Beast, the amazing cross-platform library.
git@github.com:vinniefalco/Beast.git

./beast

Beast, the amazing cross-platform library.

Repository

git@github.com:vinniefalco/Beast.git

Branch

master

HyperLevelDB

Ripple's fork of HyperLevelDB

Repository

git@github.com:ripple/HyperLevelDB.git

Branch

ripple-fork

LevelDB

Ripple's fork of LevelDB.

Repository

git@github.com:ripple/LevelDB.git

Branch

ripple-fork

LightningDB (a.k.a. MDB)

Ripple's fork of MDB, a fast memory-mapped key value database system.

Repository

git@github.com:ripple/LightningDB.git

Branch

ripple-fork

websocket

Ripple's fork of websocketpp has some incompatible changes and Ripple specific includes.

Repository

git@github.com:ripple/websocketpp.git

Branch

ripple-fork

protobuf

Ripple's fork of protobuf. We've changed some names in order to support the unity-style of build (a single .cpp added to the project, instead of linking to a separately built static library).

Repository

git@github.com:ripple/protobuf.git

Branch

master

NOTE Linux builds use the protobuf installed in /usr/lib. This will be fixed in a future revision.

SQLite

Not technically a subtree but included here because it is a direct copy of the official SQLite distributions available here:

http://sqlite.org/download.html