`bitcoind -X -noX` ends up, unintuitively, with `X` set.
(for all boolean options X)
This result is due to the odd two-pass processing of arguments. This
patch fixes this oddity and simplifies the code at the same time.
9127e97 doc: Mention RPC strings for monetary amounts in release notes (Wladimir J. van der Laan)
7d226b7 [QA] add testcases for parsing strings as values (Jonas Schnelli)
614601b rpc: Accept strings in AmountFromValue (Wladimir J. van der Laan)
Accept strings containing decimal values, in addition to bare values.
Useful from JSON-RPC implementations where it's not possible to have
direct control over the text of numbers (e.g. where numbers are always
doubles), and it's still desired to send an exact value.
This would allow users to post JSON content with numbers encoded like
`{"value": "0.00000001"}` instead of `{"value": 0.00000001}` which some
php/python encoders wrap into 1e-8, or worse.
060b3d3 fixup: qt 5.5 snuck in another module that needs path hand-holding (Cory Fields)
ecd6a89 depends: make more qt flags explicit (Cory Fields)
ab67dd7 depends: bump to qt 5.5 (Cory Fields)
5189fe3 depends: split qt config options to separate lines (Jacob Welsh)
fe997df build: fix building against qt5.4/5.5 (Cory Fields)
- Budgets now store the seen objects locally so they're not overwritten when saving/loading to check validity of budget.dat
- Added safer sync "failure" mode, that will retry an hour later if the sync fails for some reason. This will stop the client from thinking it has budget data and rejecting blocks when they're valid.
- protocol bump
- version bump
- if(pindexPrev->nHeight + 4 < pindexBestHeader->nHeight || pindexPrev->nTime + 600 < GetTime()) return;
-- && allowed skipping in various situations, which caused blocks to be rejected because of lack of mnfinalbudget data
ec249d4 util: use locale-independent parsing in ParseDouble (Wladimir J. van der Laan)
7650449 univalue: Avoid unnecessary roundtrip through double for numbers (Wladimir J. van der Laan)
e061e27 rpc: Make ValueFromAmount always return 8 decimals (Wladimir J. van der Laan)