27f3218de9
* HD wallet Minimal set of changes (no refactoring) backported from Bitcoin upstream to make HD wallets work in Dash 0.12.1.x+ * minimal bip44 (hardcoded account and change) * minimal bip39 Additional cmd-line options for new wallet: -mnemonic -mnemonicpassphrase * Do not recreate HD wallet on encryption Adjusted keypool.py test * Do not store any private keys for hd wallet besides the master one Derive all keys on the fly. Original idea/implementation - btc PR9298, backported and improved * actually use bip39 * pbkdf2 test * backport wallet-hd.py test * Allow specifying hd seed, add dumphdseed rpc, fix bugs - -hdseed cmd-line param to specify HD seed on wallet creation - dumphdseed rpc to dump HD seed - allow seed of any size - fix dumpwallet rpc bug (wasn't decrypting HD seed) - print HD seed and extended public masterkey on dumpwallet * top up keypool on HD wallet encryption * split HD chain: external/internal * add missing cs_wallet lock in init.cpp * fix `const char *` issues (use strings) * default mnemonic passphrase is an empty string in all cases * store mnemonic/mnemonicpassphrase replace dumphdseed with dumphdinfo * Add fCrypted flag to CHDChain * prepare internal structures for multiple HD accounts (plus some code cleanup) * use secure allocator for storing sensitive HD data * use secure strings for mnemonic(passphrase) * small fix in GenerateNewHDChain * use 24 words for mnemonic by default * make sure mnemonic passphrase provided by user does not exceed 256 symbols * more usage of secure allocators and memory_cleanse * code cleanup * rename: CSecureVector -> SecureVector * add missing include * fix warning in rpcdump.cpp * refactor mnemonic_check (also fix a bug) * move bip39 functions to CMnemonic * Few fixes for CMnemonic: - use `SecureVector` for data, bits, seed - `Check` should return bool * init vectors with desired size where possible |
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.. | ||
pull-tester | ||
rpc-tests | ||
README.md |
The pull-tester folder contains a script to call multiple tests from the rpc-tests folder.
Every pull request to the Dash Core repository is built and run through the regression test suite. You can also run all or only individual tests locally.
Test dependencies
Before running the tests, the following must be installed.
Unix
The python-zmq library is required. On Ubuntu or Debian it can be installed via:
sudo apt-get install python-zmq
Running tests
You can run any single test by calling qa/pull-tester/rpc-tests.py <testname>
.
Or you can run any combination of tests by calling qa/pull-tester/rpc-tests.py <testname1> <testname2> <testname3> ...
Run the regression test suite with qa/pull-tester/rpc-tests.py
Run all possible tests with qa/pull-tester/rpc-tests.py -extended
Possible options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--nocleanup Leave dashds and test.* datadir on exit or error
--noshutdown Don't stop dashds after the test execution
--srcdir=SRCDIR Source directory containing dashd/dash-cli
(default: ../../src)
--tmpdir=TMPDIR Root directory for datadirs
--tracerpc Print out all RPC calls as they are made
--coveragedir=COVERAGEDIR
Write tested RPC commands into this directory
If you set the environment variable PYTHON_DEBUG=1
you will get some debug
output (example: PYTHON_DEBUG=1 qa/pull-tester/rpc-tests.py wallet
).
A 200-block -regtest blockchain and wallets for four nodes is created the first time a regression test is run and is stored in the cache/ directory. Each node has 25 mature blocks (25*500=12500 DASH) in its wallet.
After the first run, the cache/ blockchain and wallets are copied into a temporary directory and used as the initial test state.
If you get into a bad state, you should be able to recover with:
rm -rf cache
killall dashd
Writing tests
You are encouraged to write tests for new or existing features. Further information about the test framework and individual rpc tests is found in qa/rpc-tests.