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The key module's functionality is not used by the kernel library, but
currently kernel users are still required to initialize the key module's
`secp256k1_context_sign` global as part of the `kernel::Context` through
`ECC_Start`.
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This change is mostly a refectoring that removes some code and gets rid of an
unnecessary layer of indirection after #27861
But it is not a pure refactoring since StartShutdown, AbortShutdown, and
WaitForShutdown functions used to abort on failure, and the replacement code
logs or returns errors instead.
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This change helps generalize shutdown code so an interrupt can be
provided to libbitcoinkernel callers. This may also be useful to
eventually de-globalize all of the shutdown code.
Co-authored-by: Russell Yanofsky <russ@yanofsky.org>
Co-authored-by: TheCharlatan <seb.kung@gmail.com>
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* Use SECP256K1_CONTEXT_NONE when creating signing context, as
SECP256K1_CONTEXT_SIGN is deprecated and unnecessary.
* Use secp256k1_static_context where applicable.
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...instead of explicitly calling init::{Set,Unset}Globals.
Cool thing about this is that in both the testing and bitcoin-chainstate
codepaths, we no longer need to explicitly unset globals. The
kernel::Context goes out of scope and the globals are unset
"automatically".
Also construct kernel::Context outside of AppInitSanityChecks()
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[META] In the next commit, we will move the init::{Set,Unset}Globals
logic into this struct.
Co-Authored-By: Ryan Ofsky <ryan@ofsky.org>
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