1ac454a3844b9b8389de0f660fa9455c0efa7140 Enable ShellCheck rules (Hennadii Stepanov)
Pull request description:
Enable some simple ShellCheck rules.
Note for reviewers: `bash` and `shellcheck` on macOS are different from ones on Ubuntu.
For local tests the latest `shellcheck` version 0.6.0 should be used (see #15166).
ACKs for top commit:
practicalswift:
utACK 1ac454a3844b9b8389de0f660fa9455c0efa7140
dongcarl:
utACK 1ac454a
fanquake:
ACK 1ac454a3844b9b8389de0f660fa9455c0efa7140
Tree-SHA512: 8d0a3a5c09fe1a0c22120178f5e6b80f81f746f8c3356b7701ff301c117acb2edea8fe08f08fb54ed73f94b1617515fb239fa28e7ab4121f74872e6494b6f20e
47776a958b08382d76d69b5df7beed807af168b3 Add linter: Make sure all shell scripts opt out of locale dependence using "export LC_ALL=C" (practicalswift)
3352da8da1243c03fc83ba678d2f5d193bd5a0c2 Add "export LC_ALL=C" to all shell scripts (practicalswift)
Pull request description:
~~Make sure `LC_ALL=C` is set when using `grep` range expressions.~~
Make sure `LC_ALL=C` is set in all shell scripts.
From the `grep(1)` documentation:
> Within a bracket expression, a range expression consists of two characters separated by a hyphen. It matches any single character that sorts between the two characters, inclusive, using the locale's collating sequence and character set. For example, in the default C locale, `[a-d]` is equivalent to `[abcd]`. Many locales sort characters in dictionary order, and in these locales `[a-d]` is typically not equivalent to `[abcd]`; it might be equivalent to `[aBbCcDd]`, for example. To obtain the traditional interpretation of bracket expressions, you can use the C locale by setting the `LC_ALL` environment variable to the value C.
Context: [Locale issue found when reviewing #13450](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/13450/files#r194877736)
Tree-SHA512: fd74d2612998f9b49ef9be24410e505d8c842716f84d085157fc7f9799d40e8a7b4969de783afcf99b7fae4f91bbb4559651f7dd6578a6a081a50bdea29f0909
Rather than fetching a signature.tar.gz from somewhere on the net, instruct
Gitian to use a signature from a tag in the bitcoin-detached-sigs repository
which corresponds to the tag of the release being built.
This changes detached-sig-apply.sh to take a dirname rather than a tarball as
an argument, though detached-sig-create.sh still outputs a tarball for
convenience.