Luke Parker 6fec95b1a7 3.7.2 Remove code randomizing which side odd elements end up on
This could still be gamed. For [1, 2, 3], the options were ([1], [2, 3]) or
([1, 2], [3]). This means 2 would always have the maximum round count, and
thus this is still game-able. There's no point to keeping its complexity
accordingly when the algorithm is as efficient as it is.

While a proper random could be used to satisfy 3.7.2, it'd break the
expected determinism.
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Serai

Serai is a new DEX, built from the ground up, initially planning on listing Bitcoin, Ethereum, Monero, DAI, offering a liquidity pool trading experience. Funds are stored in an economically secured threshold multisig wallet.

Getting Started

Layout

  • docs: Documentation on the Serai protocol.

  • crypto: A series of composable cryptographic libraries built around the ff/group APIs achieving a variety of tasks. These range from generic infrastructure, to our IETF-compliant FROST implementation, to a DLEq proof as needed for Bitcoin-Monero atomic swaps.

  • coins: Various coin libraries intended for usage in Serai yet also by the wider community. This means they will always support the functionality Serai needs, yet won't disadvantage other use cases when possible.

  • processor: A generic chain processor to process data for Serai and process events from Serai, executing transactions as expected and needed.

  • contracts: Smart Contracts implementing Serai's functionality.

  • substrate: Substrate crates used to instantiate the Serai network.

Description
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Readme 26 MiB
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