The large binary objects in p2p/src/main/resources/ are updated on every
Bisq release with the latest network data to avoid the need for new Bisq
clients to download all of this information from the network, which
would easily overload seed nodes and generally bog down the client.
This approach works well enough for its purposes, but comes with the
significant downside of storing all of this binary data in Git history
forever. The current version of these binary objects total about 65M,
and they grow with every release. In aggregate, this has caused the
total size of the repository to grow to 360M, making it cumbersome to
clone over a low-bandwith connection, and slowing down various local Git
operations.
To avoid further exacerbating this problem, this commit sets these files
up to be tracked via Git LFS. There's nothing we can do about the 360M
of files that already exist in history, but we can ensure it doesn't
grow in this unchecked way going forward. For an understanding of how
Git LFS works, see the reference material at [1], and see also the
sample project and README at [2].
The following command was used to track the files:
$ git lfs track "p2p/src/main/resources/*BTC_MAINNET"
Tracking "p2p/src/main/resources/AccountAgeWitnessStore_BTC_MAINNET"
Tracking "p2p/src/main/resources/BlindVoteStore_BTC_MAINNET"
Tracking "p2p/src/main/resources/DaoStateStore_BTC_MAINNET"
Tracking "p2p/src/main/resources/ProposalStore_BTC_MAINNET"
Tracking "p2p/src/main/resources/SignedWitnessStore_BTC_MAINNET"
Tracking "p2p/src/main/resources/TradeStatistics2Store_BTC_MAINNET"
We are using GitHub's built-in LFS service here, and it's important to
understand that there are storage and bandwidth limits there. We have
1G total storage and 1G per month of bandwidth on the free tier. We will
certainly exceed this, and so must purchase at least one "data pack"
from GitHub, possibly two. One gets us to 50G storage and bandwith.
In an attempt to avoid unnecessary LFS bandwidth usage, this commit also
updates the Travis CI build configuration to cache Git LFS files, such
that they are not re-downloaded on every CI build (see [3] and [4]
below). With that out of the way, the variable determining whether we
exceed the monthly limit is how many clones we have every month, and
there are many, though it's not clear how many are are Travis CI and how
many are users / developers.
Tracking these files via LFS means that developers will need to have Git
LFS installed in order to properly synchronize the files. If a developer
does not have LFS installed, cloning will complete successfully and the
build would complete successfully, but the app would fail when trying to
actually load the p2p data store files. For this reason, the build has
been updated to proactively check that the p2p data store files have
been properly synchronized via LFS, and if not, the build fails with a
helpful error message. The docs/build.md instructions have also been
updated accordingly.
It is important that we make this change now, not only to avoid growing
the repository in the way described above as we have been doing now for
many releases, but also because we are now considering adding yet more
binary objects to the repository, as proposed at
https://github.com/bisq-network/projects/issues/25.
[1]: https://git-lfs.github.com
[2]: https://github.com/cbeams/lfs-test
[3]: https://docs-staging.travis-ci.com/user/customizing-the-build/#git-lfs
[4]: https://github.com/travis-ci/travis-ci/issues/8787#issuecomment-394202791
Per https://docs.travis-ci.com/user/notifications/#Configuring-Slack-notifications
the default setting for Travis Slack notifications is to send a message
on every successful build. This commit changes this frequency, such that
notifications are always sent when builds fail and only sent when builds succeed
after a previous failure.
Builds began failing on Travis CI with the following message:
Gtk-WARNING **: cannot open display:
This is because of tests like ViewLoaderTest, which now initialize the
JavaFX toolkit and expect a display in the process. This change starts
an Xvfb server (conveniently already available under Travis CI) in order
to provide a lightweight X11 environment and eliminate this problem.
The Gradle JavaFX plugin requires Oracle JDK 8u20 or better. Travis CI
currently runs something older, and does not have a roadmap for
upgrading. This commit instructs the Travis CI VM to install JDK 8u20
via `apt` prior to actually beginning the build.
See #66
- Send notifications to #bitsquare instead of #bitsquare.io
- Skip join to cut down on noise (now that -n flag has been removed)
- Only notify on failures and first success
See #86