This adds [snap](https://snapcraft.io) packaging to the project. See the
link for more information on snaps. Snap packages install on all Linux
distributions. On Ubuntu, snap confinement with apparmor and seccomp
provide an additional layer of security.
This snap sets up monerod as a systemd service, which should start
immediately on install. To access the wallet CLI, simply run `monero`
(/snap/bin/monero). I think it's a really quick & easy way to get
started with monero.
I've made some opinionated decisions in the packaging just to kick this
off, but I'm happy to iterate on this stuff.
By default the flag is enabled whenever libunwind is found on the
system, with the exception of static build on OSX (for which we can't
install the throw hook #932 due to lack of support for --wrap in OSX
ld64 linker).
When an exception happens while reading the config file, we need
to print the error, as the logging system isn't initialized yet,
so the generic catch will not print anything.
It sets the max number of threads to use for a parallel job.
This is different that the number of total threads, since monero
binaries typically start a lot of them.
d662ab5 rpc: print human readable time since received when printing pool (moneromooo-monero)
5c9dd23 rpc: add a do_not_relay boolean to tx submission (moneromooo-monero)
This is a list of existing output amounts along with the number
of outputs of that amount in the blockchain.
The daemon command takes:
- no parameters: all outputs with at least 3 instances
- one parameter: all outputs with at least that many instances
- two parameters: all outputs within that many instances
The default starts at 3 to avoid massive spamming of all dust
outputs in the blockchain, and is the current minimum mixin
requirement.
An optional vector of amounts may be passed, to request
histogram only for those outputs.
The functions in src/cryptonote_core/checkpoints_create.{h,cpp} should
be member functions of the checkpoints class, if nothing else for the
sake of keeping their documentation together.
This commit covers moving those functions to be member functions of the
checkpoints class as well as documenting those functions.
Example of current return for `print_block 912345`:
timestamp: 1452793716
previous hash:
b61c58b2e0be53fad5ef9d9731a55e8a81d972b8d90ed07c04fd37ca6403ff78
nonce: 1646
is orphan: 0
height: 912345
depth: 85434
hash:
e22cf75f39ae720e8b71b3d120a5ac03f0db50bba6379e2850975b4859190bc6difficul
ty: 815625611
reward: 7388968946286
{
"major_version": 1,
"minor_version": 2,
…
Without `std::endl`, the difficulty gets smashed on the end of the hash.
bcac101 daemon: fix a few issues reported by valgrind (moneromooo-monero)
a7e8174 tx_pool: fix serialization of new relayed data (moneromooo-monero)
601ad76 hardfork: fix mixup in indexing variable in get_voting_info (moneromooo-monero)
444e22f blockchain: remove unused timer (moneromooo-monero)
7edfdd8 blockchain: fix m_sync_counter uninitialized variable use (moneromooo-monero)
d97582c epee: use generate_random_bytes for new random uuids (moneromooo-monero)
17c7c9c epee: remove dodgy random code that nobody uses (moneromooo-monero)
In particular, ensure we check the status of RPC response structures,
as some functions will return success, but with a BUSY status, when
the daemon is not yet synced, and the response will not filled.
In particular, <boost/program_options.hpp> blows up daemon.cpp.obj,
making it too big to compile in debug mode on Win32. Even on a
release build it drops daemon.cpp.o on Linux from 31MB to 20MB.
This has no effect on the final linked binary size.
This fixes coretests, which does not register daemon specific arguments,
but uses core, which uses those arguments. Also gets rid of an unwanted
dependency on daemon code from core.