The `cargo doc` build started to fail with the rolling of `doc_auto_cfg` into
`doc_cfg`, so now we don't build docs for deps (as we can't reasonably update
`generic-array` at this time).
`home` has been patched as we are able to, not as a direct requirement of this
PR.
* Update `build-dependencies` CI action
* Update `develop` to `patch-polkadot-sdk`
Allows us to finally remove the old `serai-dex/substrate` repository _and_
should have CI pass without issue on `develop` again.
The changes made here should be trivial and maintain all prior
behavior/functionality. The most notable are to `chain_spec.rs`, in order to
still use a SCALE-encoded `GenesisConfig` (avoiding `serde_json`).
* CI fixes
* Add `/usr/local/opt/llvm/lib` to paths on macOS hosts
* Attempt to use `LD_LIBRARY_PATH` in macOS GitHub CI
* Use `libp2p 0.56` in `serai-node`
* Correct Windows build dependencies
* Correct `llvm/lib` path on macOS
* Correct how macOS 13 and 14 have different homebrew paths
* Use `sw_vers` instead of `uname` on macOS
Yields the macOS version instead of the kernel's version.
* Replace hard-coded path with the intended env variable to fix macOS 13
* Add `libclang-dev` as dependency to the Debian Dockerfile
* Set the `CODE` storage slot
* Update to a version of substrate without `wasmtimer`
Turns out `wasmtimer` is WASM only. This should restore the node's functioning
on non-WASM environments.
* Restore `clang` as a dependency due to the Debian Dockerfile as we require a C++ compiler
* Move from Debian bookworm to trixie
* Restore `chain_getBlockBin` to the RPC
* Always generate a new key for the P2P network
* Mention every account on-chain before they publish a transaction
`CheckNonce` required accounts have a provider in order to even have their
nonce considered. This shims that by claiming every account has a provider at
the start of a block, if it signs a transaction.
The actual execution could presumably diverge between block building (which
sets the provider before each transaction) and execution (which sets the
providers at the start of the block). It doesn't diverge in our current
configuration and it won't be propagated to `next` (which doesn't use
`CheckNonce`).
Also uses explicit indexes for the `serai_abi::{Call, Event}` `enum`s.
* Adopt `patch-polkadot-sdk` with fixed peering
* Manually insert the authority discovery key into the keystore
I did try pulling in `pallet-authority-discovery` for this, updating
`SessionKeys`, but that was insufficient for whatever reason.
* Update to latest `substrate-wasm-builder`
* Fix timeline for incrementing providers
e1671dd71b incremented the providers for every
single transaction's sender before execution, noting the solution was fragile
but it worked for us at this time. It did not work for us at this time.
The new solution replaces `inc_providers` with direct access to the `Account`
`StorageMap` to increment the providers, achieving the desired goal, _without_
emitting an event (which is ordered, and the disparate order between building
and execution was causing mismatches of the state root).
This solution is also fragile and may also be insufficient. None of this code
exists anymore on `next` however. It just has to work sufficiently for now.
* clippy
Part of https://github.com/serai-dex/serai/issues/682.
We don't remove the use of `tokio::sync::Mutex` now as `hyper` pulls in
`tokio::sync` anyways, so there's no point in replacing it. This doesn't yet
solve TLS for non-`tokio` `Client`s.
This helps identify where the various functionalities are used, or rather, not
used. The `Ciphersuite` trait present in `patches/ciphersuite`, facilitating
the entire FCMP++ tree, only requires the markers _and_ canonical point
decoding. I've opened a PR to upstream such a trait into `group`
(https://github.com/zkcrypto/group/pull/68).
`WrappedGroup` is still justified for as long as `Group::generator` exists.
Moving `::generator()` to its own trait, on an independent structure (upstream)
would be massively appreciated. @tarcieri also wanted to update from
`fn generator()` to `const GENERATOR`, which would encourage further discussion
on https://github.com/zkcrypto/group/issues/32 and
https://github.com/zkcrypto/group/issues/45, which have been stagnant.
The `Id` trait is occasionally used yet really should be first off the chopping
block.
Finally, `WithPreferredHash` is only actually used around a third of the time,
which more than justifies it being a separate trait.
---
Updates `dalek_ff_group::Scalar` to directly re-export
`curve25519_dalek::Scalar`, as without issue. `dalek_ff_group::RistrettoPoint`
also could be replaced with an export of `curve25519_dalek::RistrettoPoint`,
yet the coordinator relies on how we implemented `Hash` on it for the hell of
it so it isn't worth it at this time. `dalek_ff_group::EdwardsPoint` can't be
replaced for an re-export of `curve25519_dalek::SubgroupPoint` as it doesn't
implement `zeroize`, `subtle` traits within a released, non-yanked version.
Relevance to https://github.com/serai-dex/serai/issues/201 and
https://github.com/dalek-cryptography/curve25519-dalek/issues/811#issuecomment-3247732746.
Also updates the `Ristretto` ciphersuite to prefer `Blake2b-512` over
`SHA2-512`. In order to maintain compliance with FROST's IETF standard,
`modular-frost` defines its own ciphersuite for Ristretto which still uses
`SHA2-512`.
The prior workflow (now deleted) required manually specifying the packages to
check and only checked the package could compile under the stated MSRV. It
didn't verify it was actually the _minimum_ supported Rust version. The new
version finds the MSRV from scratch to check if the stated MSRV aligns.
Updates stated MSRVs accordingly.
Also removes many explicit dependencies from secq256k1 for their re-exports via
k256. Not directly relevant, just part of tidying up all the `toml`s.
This resolves the conflicts and gets the workspace `Cargo.toml`s to not be
invalid. It doesn't actually get clippy to pass again yet.
Does move `crypto/dkg/src/evrf` into a new `crypto/dkg/evrf` crate (which does
not yet compile).
It risked panicking if a non-monotonic distribution was returned. While the
provided RPC code won't return non-monotonic distributions, users are allowed
to define their own implementations and override the provided method. Said
implementations could omit this required check.
This commit replaces all usage of `unwrap` with `expect` within
`networks/monero`, clarifying why the panic risked is unreachable. This commit
also replaces some uses of `unwrap` with solutions which are guaranteed not to
fail.
Notably, compilation on 128-bit systems is prevented, ensuring
`u64::try_from(usize::MAX)` will never panic at runtime.
Slight breaking changes are additionally included as necessary to massage out
some avoidable panics.
This had ill-defined properties on Clone, as a mask could be sent multiple times
(unintended) and multiple algorithms may receive the same mask from a singular
sender.
Requires removing the Clone bound within modular-frost and expanding the test
helpers accordingly.
This was not raised in the audit yet upon independent review.
`read_vec` was unbounded. It now accepts an optional bound. In some places, we
are able to define and provide a bound (Bulletproofs(+)' `L` and `R` vectors).
In others, we cannot (the amount of inputs within a transaction, which is not
subject to any rule in the current consensus other than the total transaction
size limit). Usage of `None` in those locations preserves the existing
behavior.
This doesn't have a well-defined affine representation. k256's behavior,
mapping it to (0, 0), means this would've been rejected anyways (so this isn't
a change of any current behavior), but it's best not to rely on such an
implementation detail.
This moves to Rust 1.86 as were prior on Rust 1.81, and the new alloy
dependencies require 1.82.
The revm API changes were notable for us. Instead of relying on a modified call
instruction (with deep introspection into the EVM design), we now use the more
recent and now more prominent Inspector API. This:
1) Lets us perform far less introspection
2) Forces us to rewrite the gas estimation code we just had audited
Thankfully, it itself should be much easier to read/review, and our existing
test suite has extensively validated it.
This resolves 001 which was a concern for if/when this upgrade occurs. By doing
it now, with a dedicated test case ensuring the issue we would have had with
alloy-core 0.8 and `validate=false` isn't actively an issue, we resolve it.