Mostly comments and docs: some places are actually paths, which
I have avoided changing. We may migrate them slowly, particularly
when they're user-visible.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
changed `make` to `poetry run make`.
Also moved the spot where `poetry install` is run as it wouldn't make sense to run it before the project is cloned.
This is required for the setuptools_scm package to correctly identify
the root of the git repository when installing from the
requirements.txt file in the root. It'd otherwise copy the source
directory, which doesn't yet include the version metadata, into a
separate directory and the building from there, which breaks the
git lookup.
`in-tree-build` is the future default, so we'll eventually be able to
strip that option again. See [1] for details.
[1] https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/7555
the PPA is no longer maintained, the new hotness is the snapd install.
except that snapd does some weirdness with the binary names, calling it
bitcoin-core.daemon and bitcoin-core.cli. To get around this, you can
create a symbolic link to the snap binaries, which is what we outline
here.
We had them split according the separate use-cases:
- testing
- doc-gen
- wire-gen
But that was causing new contributors to miss some dependencies when they
first got hacking. So this consolidates all of our own dependencies in a root
requirements.txt, with the notable exception of `pyln-client`, `pyln-testing`
and `pyln-proto` which are distributed as PyPI modules and therefore have
their own dependencies that need to be tracked in the module root.
Closes#3518
Now that c-lightning is in the FreeBSD ports system (\o/)
update the installation instructions, which basically boil down
to just `pkg install c-lightning`.
Changelog-None
We haven't touched the readme for quite some time, just randomly added to it,
and it's starting to show. This is my attempt at cleaning it up a bit (more to
come):
- No longer discourage users from running on mainnet, we're way beyond that
point.
- No longer instruct users to build from source, when we have real binary
releases, on the PPA, the releases page and the docker images.
- Cut down on the docker specific instructions, they are taking a lot of room
when only a minority will likely run them that way
- Generally make the README more of a dispatch for more in-depth
documentation rather than trying to address everything right on the
front-page.
- Add a bit of context about running on top of a pruned node
Signed-off-by: Christian Decker <decker.christian@gmail.com>
Header from folded patch 'fixup!_readme__first_pass_at_homogenizing_the_readme_a_bit.patch':
fixup! readme: First pass at homogenizing the readme a bit
This makes it build for me on FreeBSD 11:
1. $(MAKE) has to passed through into update-mocks.
2. FreeBSD sed doesn't turn \n into a newline on RHS.
3. Bash and mako dependencies were missing from INSTALL.md
Fixes: #2850
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
* 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>
Also one less headache for reproducible builds. But unlike
libsodium, this only seems common in Ubuntu.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
We need sudo on all the commands, and we have more dependencies (esp. if
we want to do development).
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Proposed fix for issue #1231 - FreeBSD (tcsh) build problem due
to HOST environment variable.
The variable is used for cross-compilation. The process may be
improved even further in the future. So far this hot fix.