This introduces functions get and set, and a family of specialized structs called STExchange. These interfaces allow efficient and seamless interchange between serialized object fields and user defined types, especially variable length objects. A new base class template TypedField is mixed into existing SField declarations to encode information on the field, allowing template metaprograms to both customize interchange based on the type and detect misuse at compile-time. New types AnyPublicKey and AnySecretKey are introduced. These are intended to replace the corresponding functionality in the deprecated class RippleAddress. Specializations of STExchange for these types are provided to allow interchange. New free functions verify and sign allow signature verification and signature generation for serialized objects. * Add Buffer and Slice primitives * Add TypedField and modify some SField * Add STExchange and specializations for STBlob and STInteger * Improve STBlob and STInteger to support STExchange * Expose raw data in RippleAddress and Serializer
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: