- includes are now sorted in consistent, logical order; first step in an attempt to fix the tomfoolery (no relation to Tom) brought in by include-what-you-use
- shuffled around some cmake linking to simplify dependency graph
- superfluous files removed
- Get rid of CryptoManager.
- Get rid of Crypto.
- Move all the Crypto instance methods to llarp::crypto functions.
(None of them needed to be methods at all, so this is simple).
- Move sodium/ntru initialization into static initialization.
- Add llarp::csrng, which is an available llarp::CSRNG instance which is
a bit easier than needing to construct a `CSRNG rng{};` in various
places.
- Various related small simplifications/cleanups.
- almost all errors have been commented out for refactor or already refactored
- committing this prior to sorting out the cmake structure
- upcoming include-what-you-use application
- Added call_get to ev.hpp to queue event loop operations w/ a return value
- de-mutexed NodeDB and made all operations via event loop. Some calls to NodeDB methods (like ::put_if_newer) were wrapped in call->get's, but some weren't. All function bodies were using mutex locks
- libsodium calls streamlined and moved away from stupid typedefs
- buffer handling taken away from buffer_t and towards ustrings and strings
- lots of stuff deleted
- team is working well
- re-implementing message handling in proper link_manager methods
We're defining formats for std::chrono types, which feels wrong (because
fmt itself also has these), so just replace them with functions:
short_time_from_now(...) gives a short "in 14m12s" or "5.123s ago" time
span relative to now, given a time point. Precision gets reduced for
larger deviations from now (e.g. "4h12m ago").
ToString(Duration_t) gives a string such as "-3h22m02.123s" for a
duration.
Replaces custom logging system with spdlog-based oxen logging. This
commit mainly replaces the backend logging with the spdlog-based system,
but doesn't (yet) convert all the existing LogWarn, etc. to use the new
format-based logging.
New logging statements will look like:
llarp::log::warning(cat, "blah: {}", val);
where `cat` should be set up in each .cpp or cluster of .cpp files, as
described in the oxen-logging README.
As part of spdlog we get fmt, which gives us nice format strings, where
are applied generously in this commit.
Making types printable now requires two steps:
- add a ToString() method
- add this specialization:
template <>
constexpr inline bool llarp::IsToStringFormattable<llarp::Whatever> = true;
This will then allow the type to be printed as a "{}" value in a
fmt::format string. This is applied to all our printable types here,
and all of the `operator<<` are removed.
This commit also:
- replaces various uses of `operator<<` to ToString()
- replaces various uses of std::stringstream with either fmt::format or
plain std::string
- Rename some to_string and toString() methods to ToString() for
consistency (and to work with fmt)
- Replace `stringify(...)` and `make_exception` usage with fmt::format
(and remove stringify/make_exception from util/str.hpp).
* when a path build times out, shitlist every router in the path except the first hop, this way eventually we get the nodedb pruned to only the routers that are currently actually alive, any ones we nuke that we need later we can always do lookups for.
* include stricter router profiling checks in path::Builder hop slection algorithm
* make intro selection function nicer by returning a std::optional instead of a bool with an "out" variable
All #ifndef guards on headers have been removed, I think,
in favor of #pragma once
Headers are now included as `#include "filename"` if the included file
resides in the same directory as the file including it, or any
subdirectory therein. Otherwise they are included as
`#include <project/top/dir/relative/path/filename>`
The above does not include system/os headers.
loop->call(...) is similar to the old logic->Call(...), but is smart
about the current thread: if called from within the event loop it simply
runs the argument directly, otherwise it queues it.
Similarly most of the other event loop calls are also now thread-aware:
for example, `call_later(...)` can queue the job directly when called if
in the event loop rather than having to double-queue through the even
loop (once to call, then inside the call to initiate the time).