this is the correct way to do it. the way it is currently done means
that if a component is not declared in a module, guice still finds it
but does not use the singleton lifecycle
binding as singleton in the module is meant to be used for classes that
we don't have the sourcecode for (i.e. jdk classes)
A checkpoint at block 586920 with hash
523aaad4e760f6ac6196fec1b3ec9a2f42e5b272 to avoid that clients in
a corrupt state continue running.
Ignore checkpointing if ignoreDevMsg is set
* this class is not a clock but it watches the clock, detects standby
and runs periodic tasks.
* there is already a jdk method called clock
First i thought it should be called PeriodicTaskManager, now i find
ClockWatcher more fitting.
For very low volume offers, it can happen that the minimum buyer security
deposit by coin value is bigger than the maximum security deposit by
percentage of trade amount.
This caused the security deposit validity check in the offer editor to fail,
making it impossible to edit these offers.
This commit fixes the problem by setting the default percentage value to
the model instead of the calculated one in this specific case.
Implements the "possible fix" described in issue #2840 by appending the directive `java.net.preferIPv4Stack=true` to the JVM options.
Tested successfully on Debian 9 and Tails 3.14, using platform Tor and onion-grater.
After restoring from seed, the text shown under DAO /
BSQ Wallet / Transactions displays an incorrect progress - the numbers
are swapped. For example:
"Awaiting blocks... Verified 575,868 blocks out of 554,857"
Normally we get the latest block height from BitcoinJ as the
target height, and we request BSQ blocks from seed nodes up to latest
block.
But when restoring from seed, we receive the latest block height
from the seed nodes while BitcoinJ has not received all blocks yet and
is still syncing.
Fixes https://github.com/bisq-network/bisq/issues/2825