4aebd832a4 db: Change DatabaseCursor::Next to return status enum (Andrew Chow)
d79e8dcf29 wallet: Have cursor users use DatabaseCursor directly (Andrew Chow)
7a198bba0a wallet: Introduce DatabaseCursor RAII class for managing cursor (Andrew Chow)
69efbc011b Move SafeDbt out of BerkeleyBatch (Andrew Chow)
Pull request description:
Instead of having database cursors be tied to a particular `DatabaseBatch` object and requiring its setup and teardown be separate functions in that batch, we can have cursors be separate RAII classes. This makes it easier to create and destroy cursors as well as having cursors that have slightly different behaviors.
Additionally, since reading data from a cursor is a tri-state, this PR changes the return value of the `Next` function (formerly `ReadAtCursor`) to return an Enum rather than the current system of 2 booleans. This greatly simplifies and unifies the code that deals with cursors as now there is no confusion as to what the function returns when there are no records left to be read.
Extracted from #24914
ACKs for top commit:
furszy:
diff ACK 4aebd83
theStack:
Code-review ACK 4aebd832a4
Tree-SHA512: 5d0be56a18de5b08c777dd5a73ba5a6ef1e696fdb07d1dca952a88ded07887b7c5c04342f9a76feb2f6fe24a45dc31f094f1f5d9500e6bdf4a44f4edb66dcaa1
Next()'s result is a tri-state - failed, more to go, complete. Replace
the way that this is returned with an enum with values FAIL, MORE, and
DONE rather than with two booleans.
Warning: Replacing fs::system_complete calls with fs::absolute calls
in this commit may cause minor changes in behaviour because fs::absolute
no longer strips trailing slashes; however these changes are believed to
be safe.
Co-authored-by: Russell Yanofsky <russ@yanofsky.org>
Co-authored-by: Hennadii Stepanov <32963518+hebasto@users.noreply.github.com>
fa5d2e678c Remove unused char serialize (MarcoFalke)
fa24493d63 Use spans of std::byte in serialize (MarcoFalke)
fa65bbf217 span: Add BytePtr helper (MarcoFalke)
Pull request description:
This changes the serialize code (`.read()` and `.write()` functions) to take a `Span` instead of a pointer and size. This is a breaking change for the serialize interface, so at no additional cost we can also switch to `std::byte` (instead of using `char`).
The benefits of using `Span`:
* Less verbose and less fragile code when passing an already existing `Span`(-like) object to or from serialization
The benefits of using `std::byte`:
* `std::byte` can't accidentally be mistaken for an integer
The goal here is to only change serialize to use spans of `std::byte`. If needed, `AsBytes`, `MakeUCharSpan`, ... can be used (temporarily) to pass spans of the right type.
Other changes that are included here:
* [#22167](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/22167) (refactor: Remove char serialize by MarcoFalke)
* [#21906](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/21906) (Preserve const in cast on CTransactionSignatureSerializer by promag)
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Concept and code review ACK fa5d2e678c
sipa:
re-utACK fa5d2e678c
Tree-SHA512: 08ee9eced5fb777cedae593b11e33660bed9a3e1711a7451a87b835089a96c99ce0632918bb4666a4e859c4d020f88fb50f2dd734216b0c3d1a9a704967ece6f
ac617cc141 wallettool: Check that the dumpfile checksum is the correct size (Andrew Chow)
Pull request description:
After parsing the checksum, make sure that it is the size that we expect it to be.
This issue was reported by Pedro Baptista.
ACKs for top commit:
laanwj:
Code review ACK ac617cc141
Tree-SHA512: 8135b3fb1f4f6b6c91cfbac7d1d3421f1f6c664a742c92940f68eae857f92ce49d042cc3aa5c2df6ef182825271483d65efc7543ec7a8ff047fd7c08666c8899
There is no change in behavior. This just helps prepare for the
transition from boost::filesystem to std::filesystem by avoiding calls
to methods which will be unsafe after the transaction to std::filesystem
to due lack of a boost::filesystem::path::imbue equivalent and inability
to set a predictable locale.
Co-authored-by: Hennadii Stepanov <32963518+hebasto@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Kiminuo <kiminuo@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: MarcoFalke <falke.marco@gmail.com>