The relative path makes for a difficult experience when people are reading on `https://lightning.readthedocs.io/`. Directly linking saves the reader a few clicks hunting down the correct location :)
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>
Having a list of very targeted suppressions allows us to still run the
majority of tests with valgrind checking, and not fail when Rust does
some trickery. This is for example the case with `std::sync::Once`
which uses `num_procs` calling out to the cgroups subsystem, sometimes
with a null path.
Suggested-by: Rusty Russell <@rustyrussell>
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
the tests are not possible only by having tests/requirements.txt .
Running the whole testsuite also runs contrib/pyln-proto/tests/test_invoice.py
which needs requiremnets of pyln-proto and so on.
Also requirement coincurve requires libsecp256k1-dev headers.
As most developers need all requiremtents and we should tell them.
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.