Previously, a file containing the unencrypted Monero address was
created by default in the wallet's directory. This file might pose
as a privacy risk. The creation of this file is now opt-in and can
be enabled by providing
--create-address-file
0e7ad2e2 Wallet API: generalize 'bool testnet' to 'NetworkType nettype' (stoffu)
af773211 Stagenet (stoffu)
cc9a0bee command_line: allow args to depend on more than one args (stoffu)
55f8d917 command_line::get_arg: remove 'required' for dependent args as they're always optional (stoffu)
450306a0 command line: allow has_arg to handle arg_descriptor<bool,false,true> #3318 (stoffu)
9f9e095a Use `genesis_tx` parameter in `generate_genesis_block`. #3261 (Jean Pierre Dudey)
* src/cryptnote_config.h: The constant `config::testnet::GENESIS_TX` was
changed to be the same as `config::GENESIS_TX` (the mainnet's transaction)
because the mainnet's transaction was being used for both networks.
* src/cryptonote_core/cryptonote_tx_utils.cpp: The `generate_genesis_block` function
was ignoring the `genesis_tx` parameter, and instead it was using the `config::GENESIS_TX`
constant. That's why the testnet genesis transaction was changed. Also five lines of unused
code were removed.
Signed-off-by: Jean Pierre Dudey <jeandudey@hotmail.com>
The basic approach it to delegate all sensitive data (master key, secret
ephemeral key, key derivation, ....) and related operations to the device.
As device has low memory, it does not keep itself the values
(except for view/spend keys) but once computed there are encrypted (with AES
are equivalent) and return back to monero-wallet-cli. When they need to be
manipulated by the device, they are decrypted on receive.
Moreover, using the client for storing the value in encrypted form limits
the modification in the client code. Those values are transfered from one
C-structure to another one as previously.
The code modification has been done with the wishes to be open to any
other hardware wallet. To achieve that a C++ class hw::Device has been
introduced. Two initial implementations are provided: the "default", which
remaps all calls to initial Monero code, and the "Ledger", which delegates
all calls to Ledger device.
The logging to /tmp/bitmonero.daemon.stdout.stderr caused segfaults
if the /tmp mount was full (#2851).
Now the daemon is only logging to /tmp/bitmonero.daemon.stdout.stderr
in the debug builds.
When a block is added as part of a chunk (when syncing historical
blocks), a block may end up already in the blockchain if it was
added to the queue before being added to the chain (though it's
not clear how that could happen, but it's an implementation detail)
and thus may not be added to the chain when add_block is called.
This would cause m_blocks_txs_check to not be cleared, causing it
to get out of sync at next call, and thus wrongfully reject the
next block.