While Bitcoin practically doesn't have long re-orgs, it is possible for a
single miner to build a long chain. Recently, a miner found 5 blocks in a row,
which would be enough to re-org a transaction Serai considered finalized.
Needed for the in-instructions pallet to verify in-instructions are
appropriately signed and continue developing that.
Fixes a bug in the validator-sets pallet, moves several items from the pallet
to primitives.
* Partial move to ff 0.13
It turns out the newly released k256 0.12 isn't on ff 0.13, preventing further
work at this time.
* Update all crates to work on ff 0.13
The provided curves still need to be expanded to fit the new API.
* Finish adding dalek-ff-group ff 0.13 constants
* Correct FieldElement::product definition
Also stops exporting macros.
* Test most new parts of ff 0.13
* Additionally test ff-group-tests with BLS12-381 and the pasta curves
We only tested curves from RustCrypto. Now we test a curve offered by zk-crypto,
the group behind ff/group, and the pasta curves, which is by Zcash (though
Zcash developers are also behind zk-crypto).
* Finish Ed448
Fully specifies all constants, passes all tests in ff-group-tests, and finishes moving to ff-0.13.
* Add RustCrypto/elliptic-curves to allowed git repos
Needed due to k256/p256 incorrectly defining product.
* Finish writing ff 0.13 tests
* Add additional comments to dalek
* Further comments
* Update ethereum-serai to ff 0.13
Updates to polkadot-v0.9.40, with a variety of dependency updates accordingly.
Substrate thankfully now uses k256 0.13, pathing the way for #256. We couldn't
upgrade to polkadot-v0.9.40 without this due to polkadot-v0.9.40 having
fundamental changes to syncing. While we could've updated tendermint, it's not
worth the continued development effort given its inability to work with
multiple validator sets.
Purges sc-tendermint. Keeps tendermint-machine for #163.
Closes#137, #148, #157, #171. #96 and #99 should be re-scoped/clarified. #134
and #159 also should be clarified. #169 is also no longer a priority since
we're only considering temporal deployments of tendermint. #170 also isn't
since we're looking at effectively sharded validator sets, so there should
be no singular large set needing high performance.