If a rct transaction would cause no change to be generated, a zero
change output is added, and sent to a randomly generated address.
This ensures that no transaction will be sent with just one output,
which could cause the receiver to be able to determine which of the
inputs in the sent rings is the real one.
This is very rare, since it requires the sum of outputs to be equal
to the sum of outputs plus the fee, which is now a function of the
last few blocks.
0e18f465 db_lmdb: add info in an error message when we can't get an output (moneromooo-monero)
c96f9b02 db_lmdb: guard against going out of sync on unexpected db results (moneromooo-monero)
bef51e67 db_lmdb: minor pedantic tweaks (moneromooo-monero)
3465c4eb db_lmdb: set same packing format for output_data_t and pre_rct_output_data_t (moneromooo-monero)
5783dd8c tests: add unit tests for uri parsing (moneromooo-monero)
82ba2108 wallet: add API and RPC to create/parse monero: URIs (moneromooo-monero)
d9001b43 epee: add functions to convert from URL format (ie, %XX values) (moneromooo-monero)
8b0e04cb monero.supp: add a suppression for noisy boost cond var signalling (moneromooo-monero)
c3527daf epee: signal cond var before unlocking (moneromooo-monero)
This keeps the connections lock just for the time of looping
and adding connectoins to a list, and the dropping happens
after it. This should avoid lengthy delays waiting for the
connections lock.
If the block reward to use for the fee calculation can't be
calculated (should not happen in practice), use a high bound,
so we use a fee overestimate that will be accepted by the network.
m_num_outputs keeps track of the number of outputs, which should
be the same as the size of both the output_txs and output_amounts
databases. If one goes out of sync, we need to throw to abort
whatever it is we were doing.
Add consts in a few places where it makes sense, avoid unnecessary
memory reallocation where we know the full size needed at the outset,
simplify and avoid memory copy.
Daemon RPC version is now composed of a major and minor number,
so that incompatible changes bump the major version, while
compatible changes can still bump the minor version without
causing clients to unnecessarily complain.