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-rw-r--r--doc/README_osx.md97
-rw-r--r--doc/build-osx.md100
-rw-r--r--doc/fuzzing.md16
-rw-r--r--doc/init.md18
-rw-r--r--doc/release-notes/release-notes-pr12255.md17
-rw-r--r--doc/release-process.md2
-rw-r--r--doc/translation_process.md20
7 files changed, 158 insertions, 112 deletions
diff --git a/doc/README_osx.md b/doc/README_osx.md
deleted file mode 100644
index 739e22d634..0000000000
--- a/doc/README_osx.md
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,97 +0,0 @@
-Deterministic macOS DMG Notes.
-
-Working macOS DMGs are created in Linux by combining a recent clang,
-the Apple binutils (ld, ar, etc) and DMG authoring tools.
-
-Apple uses clang extensively for development and has upstreamed the necessary
-functionality so that a vanilla clang can take advantage. It supports the use
-of -F, -target, -mmacosx-version-min, and --sysroot, which are all necessary
-when building for macOS.
-
-Apple's version of binutils (called cctools) contains lots of functionality
-missing in the FSF's binutils. In addition to extra linker options for
-frameworks and sysroots, several other tools are needed as well such as
-install_name_tool, lipo, and nmedit. These do not build under linux, so they
-have been patched to do so. The work here was used as a starting point:
-[mingwandroid/toolchain4](https://github.com/mingwandroid/toolchain4).
-
-In order to build a working toolchain, the following source packages are needed
-from Apple: cctools, dyld, and ld64.
-
-These tools inject timestamps by default, which produce non-deterministic
-binaries. The ZERO_AR_DATE environment variable is used to disable that.
-
-This version of cctools has been patched to use the current version of clang's
-headers and its libLTO.so rather than those from llvmgcc, as it was
-originally done in toolchain4.
-
-To complicate things further, all builds must target an Apple SDK. These SDKs
-are free to download, but not redistributable.
-To obtain it, register for a developer account, then download the [Xcode 7.3.1 dmg](https://developer.apple.com/devcenter/download.action?path=/Developer_Tools/Xcode_7.3.1/Xcode_7.3.1.dmg).
-
-This file is several gigabytes in size, but only a single directory inside is
-needed:
-```
-Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.11.sdk
-```
-
-Unfortunately, the usual linux tools (7zip, hpmount, loopback mount) are incapable of opening this file.
-To create a tarball suitable for Gitian input, there are two options:
-
-Using macOS, you can mount the dmg, and then create it with:
-```
- $ hdiutil attach Xcode_7.3.1.dmg
- $ tar -C /Volumes/Xcode/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/ -czf MacOSX10.11.sdk.tar.gz MacOSX10.11.sdk
-```
-
-Alternatively, you can use 7zip and SleuthKit to extract the files one by one.
-The script contrib/macdeploy/extract-osx-sdk.sh automates this. First ensure
-the dmg file is in the current directory, and then run the script. You may wish
-to delete the intermediate 5.hfs file and MacOSX10.11.sdk (the directory) when
-you've confirmed the extraction succeeded.
-
-```bash
-apt-get install p7zip-full sleuthkit
-contrib/macdeploy/extract-osx-sdk.sh
-rm -rf 5.hfs MacOSX10.11.sdk
-```
-
-The Gitian descriptors build 2 sets of files: Linux tools, then Apple binaries
-which are created using these tools. The build process has been designed to
-avoid including the SDK's files in Gitian's outputs. All interim tarballs are
-fully deterministic and may be freely redistributed.
-
-genisoimage is used to create the initial DMG. It is not deterministic as-is,
-so it has been patched. A system genisoimage will work fine, but it will not
-be deterministic because the file-order will change between invocations.
-The patch can be seen here: [theuni/osx-cross-depends](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/theuni/osx-cross-depends/master/patches/cdrtools/genisoimage.diff).
-No effort was made to fix this cleanly, so it likely leaks memory badly. But
-it's only used for a single invocation, so that's no real concern.
-
-genisoimage cannot compress DMGs, so afterwards, the 'dmg' tool from the
-libdmg-hfsplus project is used to compress it. There are several bugs in this
-tool and its maintainer has seemingly abandoned the project. It has been forked
-and is available (with fixes) here: [theuni/libdmg-hfsplus](https://github.com/theuni/libdmg-hfsplus).
-
-The 'dmg' tool has the ability to create DMGs from scratch as well, but this
-functionality is broken. Only the compression feature is currently used.
-Ideally, the creation could be fixed and genisoimage would no longer be necessary.
-
-Background images and other features can be added to DMG files by inserting a
-.DS_Store before creation. This is generated by the script
-contrib/macdeploy/custom_dsstore.py.
-
-As of OS X 10.9 Mavericks, using an Apple-blessed key to sign binaries is a
-requirement in order to satisfy the new Gatekeeper requirements. Because this
-private key cannot be shared, we'll have to be a bit creative in order for the
-build process to remain somewhat deterministic. Here's how it works:
-
-- Builders use Gitian to create an unsigned release. This outputs an unsigned
- dmg which users may choose to bless and run. It also outputs an unsigned app
- structure in the form of a tarball, which also contains all of the tools
- that have been previously (deterministically) built in order to create a
- final dmg.
-- The Apple keyholder uses this unsigned app to create a detached signature,
- using the script that is also included there. Detached signatures are available from this [repository](https://github.com/bitcoin-core/bitcoin-detached-sigs).
-- Builders feed the unsigned app + detached signature back into Gitian. It
- uses the pre-built tools to recombine the pieces into a deterministic dmg.
diff --git a/doc/build-osx.md b/doc/build-osx.md
index c9a59bab83..119896dc67 100644
--- a/doc/build-osx.md
+++ b/doc/build-osx.md
@@ -105,3 +105,103 @@ Notes
* Tested on OS X 10.10 Yosemite through macOS 10.13 High Sierra on 64-bit Intel processors only.
* Building with downloaded Qt binaries is not officially supported. See the notes in [#7714](https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/7714)
+
+Deterministic macOS DMG Notes
+-----------------------------
+
+Working macOS DMGs are created in Linux by combining a recent clang,
+the Apple binutils (ld, ar, etc) and DMG authoring tools.
+
+Apple uses clang extensively for development and has upstreamed the necessary
+functionality so that a vanilla clang can take advantage. It supports the use
+of -F, -target, -mmacosx-version-min, and --sysroot, which are all necessary
+when building for macOS.
+
+Apple's version of binutils (called cctools) contains lots of functionality
+missing in the FSF's binutils. In addition to extra linker options for
+frameworks and sysroots, several other tools are needed as well such as
+install_name_tool, lipo, and nmedit. These do not build under linux, so they
+have been patched to do so. The work here was used as a starting point:
+[mingwandroid/toolchain4](https://github.com/mingwandroid/toolchain4).
+
+In order to build a working toolchain, the following source packages are needed
+from Apple: cctools, dyld, and ld64.
+
+These tools inject timestamps by default, which produce non-deterministic
+binaries. The ZERO_AR_DATE environment variable is used to disable that.
+
+This version of cctools has been patched to use the current version of clang's
+headers and its libLTO.so rather than those from llvmgcc, as it was
+originally done in toolchain4.
+
+To complicate things further, all builds must target an Apple SDK. These SDKs
+are free to download, but not redistributable.
+To obtain it, register for a developer account, then download the [Xcode 7.3.1 dmg](https://developer.apple.com/devcenter/download.action?path=/Developer_Tools/Xcode_7.3.1/Xcode_7.3.1.dmg).
+
+This file is several gigabytes in size, but only a single directory inside is
+needed:
+```
+Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.11.sdk
+```
+
+Unfortunately, the usual linux tools (7zip, hpmount, loopback mount) are incapable of opening this file.
+To create a tarball suitable for Gitian input, there are two options:
+
+Using macOS, you can mount the dmg, and then create it with:
+```
+ $ hdiutil attach Xcode_7.3.1.dmg
+ $ tar -C /Volumes/Xcode/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/ -czf MacOSX10.11.sdk.tar.gz MacOSX10.11.sdk
+```
+
+Alternatively, you can use 7zip and SleuthKit to extract the files one by one.
+The script contrib/macdeploy/extract-osx-sdk.sh automates this. First ensure
+the dmg file is in the current directory, and then run the script. You may wish
+to delete the intermediate 5.hfs file and MacOSX10.11.sdk (the directory) when
+you've confirmed the extraction succeeded.
+
+```bash
+apt-get install p7zip-full sleuthkit
+contrib/macdeploy/extract-osx-sdk.sh
+rm -rf 5.hfs MacOSX10.11.sdk
+```
+
+The Gitian descriptors build 2 sets of files: Linux tools, then Apple binaries
+which are created using these tools. The build process has been designed to
+avoid including the SDK's files in Gitian's outputs. All interim tarballs are
+fully deterministic and may be freely redistributed.
+
+genisoimage is used to create the initial DMG. It is not deterministic as-is,
+so it has been patched. A system genisoimage will work fine, but it will not
+be deterministic because the file-order will change between invocations.
+The patch can be seen here: [theuni/osx-cross-depends](https://raw.githubusercontent.com/theuni/osx-cross-depends/master/patches/cdrtools/genisoimage.diff).
+No effort was made to fix this cleanly, so it likely leaks memory badly. But
+it's only used for a single invocation, so that's no real concern.
+
+genisoimage cannot compress DMGs, so afterwards, the 'dmg' tool from the
+libdmg-hfsplus project is used to compress it. There are several bugs in this
+tool and its maintainer has seemingly abandoned the project. It has been forked
+and is available (with fixes) here: [theuni/libdmg-hfsplus](https://github.com/theuni/libdmg-hfsplus).
+
+The 'dmg' tool has the ability to create DMGs from scratch as well, but this
+functionality is broken. Only the compression feature is currently used.
+Ideally, the creation could be fixed and genisoimage would no longer be necessary.
+
+Background images and other features can be added to DMG files by inserting a
+.DS_Store before creation. This is generated by the script
+contrib/macdeploy/custom_dsstore.py.
+
+As of OS X 10.9 Mavericks, using an Apple-blessed key to sign binaries is a
+requirement in order to satisfy the new Gatekeeper requirements. Because this
+private key cannot be shared, we'll have to be a bit creative in order for the
+build process to remain somewhat deterministic. Here's how it works:
+
+- Builders use Gitian to create an unsigned release. This outputs an unsigned
+ dmg which users may choose to bless and run. It also outputs an unsigned app
+ structure in the form of a tarball, which also contains all of the tools
+ that have been previously (deterministically) built in order to create a
+ final dmg.
+- The Apple keyholder uses this unsigned app to create a detached signature,
+ using the script that is also included there. Detached signatures are available from this [repository](https://github.com/bitcoin-core/bitcoin-detached-sigs).
+- Builders feed the unsigned app + detached signature back into Gitian. It
+ uses the pre-built tools to recombine the pieces into a deterministic dmg.
+
diff --git a/doc/fuzzing.md b/doc/fuzzing.md
index 23317e938e..08b73d3b3c 100644
--- a/doc/fuzzing.md
+++ b/doc/fuzzing.md
@@ -1,9 +1,9 @@
Fuzz-testing Bitcoin Core
==========================
-A special test harness `test_bitcoin_fuzzy` is provided to provide an easy
-entry point for fuzzers and the like. In this document we'll describe how to
-use it with AFL and libFuzzer.
+A special test harness in `src/test/fuzz/` is provided for each fuzz target to
+provide an easy entry point for fuzzers and the like. In this document we'll
+describe how to use it with AFL and libFuzzer.
## AFL
@@ -23,10 +23,10 @@ export AFLPATH=$PWD
To build Bitcoin Core using AFL instrumentation (this assumes that the
`AFLPATH` was set as above):
```
-./configure --disable-ccache --disable-shared --enable-tests CC=${AFLPATH}/afl-gcc CXX=${AFLPATH}/afl-g++
+./configure --disable-ccache --disable-shared --enable-tests --enable-fuzz CC=${AFLPATH}/afl-gcc CXX=${AFLPATH}/afl-g++
export AFL_HARDEN=1
cd src/
-make test/test_bitcoin_fuzzy
+make
```
We disable ccache because we don't want to pollute the ccache with instrumented
objects, and similarly don't want to use non-instrumented cached objects linked
@@ -35,7 +35,7 @@ in.
The fuzzing can be sped up significantly (~200x) by using `afl-clang-fast` and
`afl-clang-fast++` in place of `afl-gcc` and `afl-g++` when compiling. When
compiling using `afl-clang-fast`/`afl-clang-fast++` the resulting
-`test_bitcoin_fuzzy` binary will be instrumented in such a way that the AFL
+binary will be instrumented in such a way that the AFL
features "persistent mode" and "deferred forkserver" can be used. See
https://github.com/mcarpenter/afl/tree/master/llvm_mode for details.
@@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ Extract these (or other starting inputs) into the `inputs` directory before star
To start the actual fuzzing use:
```
-$AFLPATH/afl-fuzz -i ${AFLIN} -o ${AFLOUT} -m52 -- test/test_bitcoin_fuzzy
+$AFLPATH/afl-fuzz -i ${AFLIN} -o ${AFLOUT} -m52 -- test/fuzz/fuzz_target_foo
```
You may have to change a few kernel parameters to test optimally - `afl-fuzz`
@@ -77,7 +77,7 @@ found in the `compiler-rt` runtime libraries package).
To build the `test/test_bitcoin_fuzzy` executable run
```
-./configure --disable-ccache --with-sanitizers=fuzzer,address CC=clang CXX=clang++
+./configure --disable-ccache --enable-fuzz --with-sanitizers=fuzzer,address CC=clang CXX=clang++
make
```
diff --git a/doc/init.md b/doc/init.md
index 5778b09d05..a6c9bb94d8 100644
--- a/doc/init.md
+++ b/doc/init.md
@@ -56,7 +56,7 @@ All three configurations assume several paths that might need to be adjusted.
Binary: `/usr/bin/bitcoind`
Configuration file: `/etc/bitcoin/bitcoin.conf`
Data directory: `/var/lib/bitcoind`
-PID file: `/var/run/bitcoind/bitcoind.pid` (OpenRC and Upstart) or `/var/lib/bitcoind/bitcoind.pid` (systemd)
+PID file: `/var/run/bitcoind/bitcoind.pid` (OpenRC and Upstart) or `/run/bitcoind/bitcoind.pid` (systemd)
Lock file: `/var/lock/subsys/bitcoind` (CentOS)
The configuration file, PID directory (if applicable) and data directory
@@ -65,6 +65,22 @@ reasons to make the configuration file and data directory only readable by the
bitcoin user and group. Access to bitcoin-cli and other bitcoind rpc clients
can then be controlled by group membership.
+NOTE: When using the systemd .service file, the creation of the aforementioned
+directories and the setting of their permissions is automatically handled by
+systemd. Directories are given a permission of 710, giving the bitcoin group
+access to files under it _if_ the files themselves give permission to the
+bitcoin group to do so (e.g. when `-sysperms` is specified). This does not allow
+for the listing of files under the directory.
+
+NOTE: It is not currently possible to override `datadir` in
+`/etc/bitcoin/bitcoin.conf` with the current systemd, OpenRC, and Upstart init
+files out-of-the-box. This is because the command line options specified in the
+init files take precedence over the configurations in
+`/etc/bitcoin/bitcoin.conf`. However, some init systems have their own
+configuration mechanisms that would allow for overriding the command line
+options specified in the init files (e.g. setting `BITCOIND_DATADIR` for
+OpenRC).
+
### macOS
Binary: `/usr/local/bin/bitcoind`
diff --git a/doc/release-notes/release-notes-pr12255.md b/doc/release-notes/release-notes-pr12255.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..5ac8b44283
--- /dev/null
+++ b/doc/release-notes/release-notes-pr12255.md
@@ -0,0 +1,17 @@
+systemd init file
+=========
+
+The systemd init file (`contrib/init/bitcoind.service`) has been changed to use
+`/var/lib/bitcoind` as the data directory instead of `~bitcoin/.bitcoin`. This
+change makes Bitcoin Core more consistent with other services, and makes the
+systemd init config more consistent with existing Upstart and OpenRC configs.
+
+The configuration, PID, and data directories are now completely managed by
+systemd, which will take care of their creation, permissions, etc. See
+[`systemd.exec (5)`](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.exec.html#RuntimeDirectory=)
+for more details.
+
+When using the provided init files under `contrib/init`, overriding the
+`datadir` option in `/etc/bitcoin/bitcoin.conf` will have no effect. This is
+because the command line arguments specified in the init files take precedence
+over the options specified in `/etc/bitcoin/bitcoin.conf`.
diff --git a/doc/release-process.md b/doc/release-process.md
index 9fcd5e2298..d20a3dc6b3 100644
--- a/doc/release-process.md
+++ b/doc/release-process.md
@@ -92,7 +92,7 @@ Ensure gitian-builder is up-to-date:
echo 'f9a8cdb38b9c309326764ebc937cba1523a3a751a7ab05df3ecc99d18ae466c9 inputs/osslsigncode-1.7.1.tar.gz' | sha256sum -c
popd
-Create the macOS SDK tarball, see the [macOS readme](README_osx.md) for details, and copy it into the inputs directory.
+Create the macOS SDK tarball, see the [macOS build instructions](build-osx.md#deterministic-macos-dmg-notes) for details, and copy it into the inputs directory.
### Optional: Seed the Gitian sources cache and offline git repositories
diff --git a/doc/translation_process.md b/doc/translation_process.md
index 19f145e9bf..9692832842 100644
--- a/doc/translation_process.md
+++ b/doc/translation_process.md
@@ -68,11 +68,21 @@ The Transifex Bitcoin project config file is included as part of the repo. It ca
To assist in updating translations, we have created a script to help.
1. `python contrib/devtools/update-translations.py`
-2. Update `src/qt/bitcoin_locale.qrc` manually or via
- `ls src/qt/locale/*ts|xargs -n1 basename|sed 's/\(bitcoin_\(.*\)\).ts/<file alias="\2">locale\/\1.qm<\/file>/'`
-3. Update `src/Makefile.qt.include` manually or via
- `ls src/qt/locale/*ts|xargs -n1 basename|sed 's/\(bitcoin_\(.*\)\).ts/ qt\/locale\/\1.ts \\/'`
-4. `git add` new translations from `src/qt/locale/`
+2. `git add` new translations from `src/qt/locale/`
+3. Update `src/qt/bitcoin_locale.qrc` manually or via
+```bash
+git ls-files src/qt/locale/*ts|xargs -n1 basename|sed 's/\(bitcoin_\(.*\)\).ts/<file alias="\2">locale\/\1.qm<\/file>/'
+```
+4. Update `src/Makefile.qt.include` manually or via
+```bash
+git ls-files src/qt/locale/*ts|xargs -n1 basename|sed 's/\(bitcoin_\(.*\)\).ts/ qt\/locale\/\1.ts \\/'
+```
+5. Update `build_msvc/libbitcoin_qt/libbitcoin_qt.vcxproj` or via
+```bash
+git ls-files src/qt/locale/*ts|xargs -n1 basename |
+ sed 's/@/%40/' |
+ sed 's/\(bitcoin_\(.*\)\).ts/ <None Include="..\\..\\src\\qt\\locale\\\1.ts">\n <DeploymentContent>true<\/DeploymentContent>\n <\/None>/'
+```
**Do not directly download translations** one by one from the Transifex website, as we do a few post-processing steps before committing the translations.