Fixes `no-std` builds for packages which intended to be `no-std` (without
`alloc`).
Updates a variety of MSRVs to 1.73 due to `flexible-transcript` no longer using
`std-shims` to achieve 1.66 (as `std-shims` requires `alloc`). A future
improvement would be for `std-shims` to have an `alloc` feature and only
provide MSRV shims without it.
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.
monero-oxide relies on ciphersuite, which is in-tree, yet we've made breaking
changes since. This commit adds a patch so
monero-oxide -> patches/ciphersuite -> crypto/ciphersuite, with
patches/ciphersuite resolving the breaking changes.
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).
The new `FieldElement::from_u256` is sufficient to load an unreduced value. The
caller can perform the square themselves, without us explicitly supporting this
special case.
Updates the monero-oxide version used to one which no longer uses
`FieldElement::from_square` (as their use is why it was added).
flexible-transcript already had a shim to support <1.66. This was irrelevant
since flexible-transcript had a MSRV of 1.73. Due to how clunky it was, it has
been removed despite theoretically enabling an even lower MSRV.
Unused and unpublished. This was only added in the FCMP++ branch as a quick fix
for performance reasons. Finding a better API is still a tricky question, but
this API is _bad_.
This is technically a semver break due to bumping spin to 0.10, with the types
from spin being directly exposed. Long-term, we should not directly expose spin
but instead have our own types which are thin wrappers around spin (clearly
defining our API and allowing upgrading internals without breaking semver).