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.
In command line usage (only), the "sign", "submit", and "sign_for"
commands do not require the submitted JSON to be wrapped in a
tx_json object. Make the submit_multisigned command line behave
consistently with the command line form of those other commands.
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.
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.
All AccountID functionality is removed from RippleAddress and
replaced with free functions. The AccountID to string conversion
cache is factored out as an explicit type with an instance in
the Application object. New base58 conversion functions are used,
with no dependence on OpenSSL.
All types and free functions related to AccountID are consolidated
into one header file. Routines to operate on "tokens" are also
introduced and consolidated into a single header file.
A token one of the cryptographic primitives used in Ripple:
Secret Seed
Server Public Key
Server Secret Key
Account ID
Account Public Key
Account Private Key
and these deprecated primitives:
Account Family Seed
Account Family Generator
This commit provides support for 2-level multi-signing of
transactions. The ability is usually compiled out, since other
aspects of multi-signing are not yet complete.
Here are the missing parts:
o Full support for Tickets in transactions.
o Variable fees based on the number of signers,
o Multiple SignerLists with access control flags on accounts,
o Enable / disable operations based on access control flags,
o Enable / disable all of multi-signing based on an amendment,
o Integration tests, and
o Documentation.
* Remove the deprecated wallet_accounts command.
* Remove dead code for generator maps.
* Remove the help for the obsolete wallet_add and wallet_claim commands
(which have already been removed).
General RPC command that can retrieve objects in the account root.
* Add account objects integration test.
* Support tickets.
* Add removeElement in Json::Value
An alternative to the unity build, the classic build compiles each
translation unit individually. This adds more modules to the classic build:
* Remove unity header app.h
* Add missing includes as needed
* Remove obsolete NodeStore backend code
* Add app/, core/, crypto/, json/, net/, overlay/, peerfinder/ to classic build
Source files are moved between modules, includes changed and added,
and some code rewritten, with the goal of reducing cross-module dependencies
and eliminating cycles in the dependency graph of classes.
* Remove RippleAddress dependency in CKey_test
* ByteOrder.h, Blob.h, and strHex.h are moved to basics/. This makes
the basics/ module fully independent of other ripple sources.
* types/ is merged into protocol/. The protocol module now contains
all primitive types specific to the Ripple protocol.
* Move ErrorCodes to protocol/
* Move base_uint to basics/
* Move Base58 to crypto/
* Remove dependence on Serializer in GenerateDeterministicKey
* Eliminate unity header json.h
* Remove obsolete unity headers
* Remove unnecessary includes
* Replace SYSTEM_NAME and other macros with C++ constructs
* Remove RIPPLE_ARRAYSIZE and use std::extent or ranged for loops
* Remove old-style, unused offer crossing unit test
* Make STAmount::saFromRate free and remove default argument
Makes rippled configurable to support deletion of all data in its key-value
store (nodestore) and ledger and transaction SQLite databases based on
validated ledger sequence numbers. All records from a specified ledger
and forward shall remain available in the key-value store and SQLite, and
all data prior to that specific ledger may be deleted.
Additionally, the administrator may require that an RPC command be
executed to enable deletion. This is to align data deletion with local
policy.
* New src/ripple/crypto and src/ripple/protocol directories
* Merged src/ripple/common into src/ripple/basics
* Move resource/api files up a level
* Add headers for "include what you use"
* Normalized include guards
* Renamed to JsonFields.h
* Remove obsolete files
* Remove net.h unity header
* Remove resource.h unity header
* Removed some deprecated unity includes
This changes the behavior and configuration specification of the listening
ports that rippled uses to accept incoming connections for the supported
protocols: peer (Peer Protocol), http (JSON-RPC over HTTP), https (JSON-RPC)
over HTTPS, ws (Websockets Clients), and wss (Secure Websockets Clients).
Each listening port is now capable of handshaking in multiple protocols
specified in the configuration file (subject to some restrictions). Each
port can be configured to provide its own SSL certificate, or to use a
self-signed certificate. Ports can be configured to share settings, this
allows multiple ports to use the same certificate or values. The list of
ports is dynamic, administrators can open as few or as many ports as they
like. Authentication settings such as user/password or admin user/admin
password (for administrative commands on RPC or Websockets interfaces) can
also be specified per-port.
As the configuration file has changed significantly, administrators will
need to update their ripple.cfg files and carefully review the documentation
and new settings.
Changes:
* rippled-example.cfg updated with documentation and new example settings:
All obsolete websocket, rpc, and peer configuration sections have been
removed, the documentation updated, and a new documented set of example
settings added.
* HTTP::Writer abstraction for sending HTTP server requests and responses
* HTTP::Handler handler improvements to support Universal Port
* HTTP::Handler handler supports legacy Peer protocol handshakes
* HTTP::Port uses shared_ptr<boost::asio::ssl::context>
* HTTP::PeerImp and Overlay use ssl_bundle to support Universal Port
* New JsonWriter to stream message and body through HTTP server
* ServerHandler refactored to support Universal Port and legacy peers
* ServerHandler Setup struct updated for Universal Port
* Refactor some PeerFinder members
* WSDoor and Websocket code stores and uses the HTTP::Port configuration
* Websocket autotls class receives the current secure/plain SSL setting
* Remove PeerDoor and obsolete Overlay peer accept code
* Remove obsolete RPCDoor and synchronous RPC handling code
* Remove other obsolete classes, types, and files
* Command line tool uses ServerHandler Setup for port and authorization info
* Fix handling of admin_user, admin_password in administrative commands
* Fix adminRole to check credentials for Universal Port
* Updated Overlay README.md
* Overlay sends IP:port redirects on HTTP Upgrade peer connection requests:
Incoming peers who handshake using the HTTP Upgrade mechanism don't get
a slot, and always get HTTP Status 503 redirect containing a JSON
content-body with a set of alternate IP and port addresses to try, learned
from PeerFinder. A future commit related to the Hub and Spoke feature will
change the response to grant the peer a slot when there are peer slots
available.
* HTTP responses to outgoing Peer connect requests parse redirect IP:ports:
When the [overlay] configuration section (which is experimental) has
http_handshake = 1, HTTP redirect responses will have the JSON content-body
parsed to obtain the redirect IP:port addresses.
* Use a single io_service for HTTP::Server and Overlay:
This is necessary to allow HTTP::Server to pass sockets to and from Overlay
and eventually Websockets. Unfortunately Websockets is not so easily changed
to use an externally provided io_service. This will be addressed in a future
commit, and is one step necessary ease the restriction on ports configured
to offer Websocket protocols in the .cfg file.