updates the bolt version to 6639cef095a2ecc7b8f0c48c6e7f2f906fbfbc58.
this requires us to use the new bolt parser at generate-bolt.py
and updates to all of the type specifications (ie. from u8 -> byte)
* remove libbase58, use base58 from libwally
This removes libbase58 and uses libwally instead.
It allocates and then frees some memory, we may want to
add a function in wally that doesn't or override
wally_operations to use tal.
Signed-off-by: Lawrence Nahum lawrence@greenaddress.it
This is a preparatory step for the automatic documentation generation
that is going to use `sphinx-doc`. Each document should include a top
level header that matches the name and scope of the document and all
following headers should be of a lower level than the top-level
header.
Signed-off-by: Christian Decker <decker.christian@gmail.com>
I went to the Nakamoto dinner last week and told some guys they
could get involved by improving our test coverage. So I updated
the docs for newbs like me. (I only recently discovered `PYTEST_PAR`).
Signed-off-by: Mark Beckwith <wythe@intrig.com>
structeq() is too dangerous: if a structure has padding, it can fail
silently.
The new ccan/structeq instead provides a macro to define foo_eq(),
which does the right thing in case of padding (which none of our
structures currently have anyway).
Upgrade ccan, and use it everywhere. Except run-peer-wire.c, which
is only testing code and can use raw memcmp(): valgrind will tell us
if padding exists.
Interestingly, we still declared short_channel_id_eq, even though
we didn't define it any more!
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This time the rendered output is slightly different, but mostly
because long preformatted lines are wrapped and contain an extra
continuation backslash now.