* Use an extended timeout for DKGs specifically
* Add a log statement when message-queue connection fails
* Add a 60 second keep-alive to connections
* Use zalloc for processor/message-queue/coordinator
An additional layer which protects us against edge cases with Zeroizing
(objects which don't support it or don't miss it).
* Add further logs to message-queue
* Further increase re-attempt timeouts in CI
* Remove misplaced continue inmessage-queue client
Fixes observed CI failures.
* Revert "Further increase re-attempt timeouts in CI"
This reverts commit 3723530cf6.
* Move message-queue to a fully binary representation
Additionally adds a timeout to the message queue test.
* coordinator clippy
* Remove contention for the message-queue socket by using per-request sockets
* clippy
reqwest was replaced with hyper and hyper-rustls within monero-serai due to
reqwest *solely* offering a connection pool API. In the process, it was
demonstrated how quickly we can achieve equivalent functionality to reqwest for
our use cases with a fraction of the code.
This adds our own reqwest alternative to the tree, applying it to both
bitcoin-serai and message-queue. By doing so, bitcoin-serai decreases its tree
by 21 packages and the processor by 18. Cargo.lock decreases by 8 dependencies,
solely adding simple-request. Notably removed is openssl-sys and openssl.
One noted decrease functionality is the requirement on the system having
installed CA certificates. While we could fallback to the rustls certificates
if the system doesn't have any, that's blocked by
https://github.com/rustls/hyper-rustls/pulls/228.