When scanning the txpool without having first updated the
blockchain, the tx would be seen as neither in the txpool
nor the chain, and removed, so it'd only reappear once the
chain is refreshed, and the tx seen in a block.
A sort+uniq step was done for every tx in a 200 block chunk,
causing a lot of repeated scanning as the size of the offset
map got larger with every added tx. We now do the step only
once at the end of the loop.
Doing it this way potentially uses more memory, but testing
shows that it's currently only about 2% more.
Nanosecond timer precision won't work on Windows, but we don't
care since I'm using that just for profiling incremental code
paths, but a Windows coder is welcome to add it if there's a way.
The version of miniupnpc in external/ uses API version 16, but the
code also seems to work for API version 10. Also remove detection
of older unsupported versions.
Asks user for all the data required to merge secret keys from multisig wallets into one master wallet, which then gets full control of the multisig wallet. The resulting wallet will be the same as any other regular wallet.
If the number of blocks to check was not a multiple of the
number of preparation threads, the last few blocks would
not be included in the threaded long hash calculation.
Those would still get calculated when the block gets added
to the chain, however, so this was only a tiny performance
hit, rather than a security bug.
This avoids having to include p2p_protocol_defs.h in util.h,
as util.h is used a lot, and p2p_protocol_defs.h includes
a lot of other things that most users don't need.
Library code should definitely not ask for console input unless
it's clearly an input function. Delegating the user interaction
part to the caller means it can now be used by a GUI, or have a
decision algorithm better adapted to a particular caller.
They used to be sorted by amount, which was fine before rct,
but is now suboptimal, since amounts are not known anymore.
In particular, it would give a recipient knowledge of whether
change was higher or lower than the amount received.