libminiupnpc changed their required static define to the much more sane
"MINIUPNP_STATICLIB". Sadly, they don't respect the old "STATICLIB" for
back-compat. Define them both since the old one didn't seem to be conflicting
anywhere.
Also go ahead and split out the cppflags so that they can be applied only where
they're needed. This will help us to build dll's from our libs without having
their import/export declspecs poisoned.
Split up util.cpp/h into:
- string utilities (hex, base32, base64): no internal dependencies, no dependency on boost (apart from foreach)
- money utilities (parsesmoney, formatmoney)
- time utilities (gettime*, sleep, format date):
- and the rest (logging, argument parsing, config file parsing)
The latter is basically the environment and OS handling,
and is stripped of all utility functions, so we may want to
rename it to something else than util.cpp/h for clarity (Matt suggested
osinterface).
Breaks dependency of sha256.cpp on all the things pulled in by util.
This was committed previously as 4975ae172 and reverted, because the flags were
applied even if the checks didn't pass. This is the same commit, fixed up to
actually disable the functionality when necessary.
Enabled automatically if boost >= 1.49.
See: https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/2309
Also, check for a default visibility attribute, so that we can mark future
api functions correctly.
No need to waste startup time building something that can be done
at compile time.
This also resolves a clang++ warning originally reported in #4714,
univalue/univalue_write.cpp:33:12: warning: array subscript is of type 'char
escapes['"'] = "\\"";
^~~~
etc.
Enabled automatically if boost >= 1.49.
See: https://svn.boost.org/trac/boost/ticket/2309
Also, check for a default visibility attribute, so that we can mark future
api functions correctly.
While we're at it, reduce the use of LIBS as well. This makes dependencies
explicit.
Fixes building with (the not-yet-merged) libsecp256k1 as well.
Github-Pull: #4689
Rebased-By: Wladimir J. van der laan <laanwj@gmail.com>
Rebased-From: 909b347 c0e5dda
This makes it possible for a node with `-onlynet=tor` to bootstrap
itself.
It also adds the base infrastructure for adding IPv6 seed nodes.
Also represent IPv4 fixed seed addresses in 16-byte format.
This is a simple utility that provides command line manipulation of
a hex-encoded TX. The utility takes a hex string on the command line
as input, performs zero or more mutations, and outputs a hex string
to standard output.
This utility is also an intentional exercise of the "bitcoin library"
concept. It is designed to require minimal libraries, and works
entirely without need for any RPC or P2P communication.
See "bitcoin-tx --help" for command and options summary.
Note: This is added to our existing automake targets rather than as a
libtool-style lib. The switch to libtool-style targets can come later if it
proves to not add any complications.
This commit removes all the unnecessary dependencies (key, core,
netbase, sync, ...) from bitcoin-cli.
To do this it shards the chain parameters into BaseParams, which
contains just the RPC port and data directory (as used by utils and
bitcoin-cli) and Params, with the rest.
bitcoin-config.h moved, but the old file is likely to still exist when
reconfiguring or switching branches. This would've caused files to not rebuild
correctly, and other strange problems.
Make the path explicit so that the old one cannot be found.
Core libs use config/bitcoin-config.h.
Libs (like crypto) which don't want access to bitcoin's headers continue
to use -Iconfig and #include bitcoin-config.h.
As it says on the tin. It was deprecated in version 0.9, and
at some point it should be removed.
Removes the dependency of bitcoind on libbitcoin-cli.a. Move
some functions that used to be shared but are now only used in
bitcoin-cli.cpp to that file.
After this change, an error is printed (and exit code 1 is returned)
when the user tries to send RPC commands using bitcoind.
Now that the build is non-recursive, adding to AM_CPPFLAGS means adding to
_all_ cppflags.
Logical groups of includes have been added instead, and are used individually
by various targets.