* bump zmq static dep
* lokimq -> oxenmq
* llarp_nodedb -> llarp::NodeDB
* remove all crufty api parts of NodeDB
* make NodeDB rc selection api not suck
* make path builder api not suck
* propagate all above changes so that unit tests work and it all compiles
This replaces all use of std::optional's `opt.value()` with `*opt`
because macOS is great and the ghost of Steve Jobs says that actually
supporting std::optional's value() method is not for chumps before macOS
10.14. So don't use it because Apple is great.
Pretty much all of our use of it actually is done better with operator*
anyway (since operator* doesn't do a check that the optional has a
value).
Also replaced *most* of the `has_value()` calls with direct bool
context, except for one in the config section which looked really
confusing at a glance without a has_value().
This commit reflects changes to clang-format rules. Unfortunately,
these rule changes create a massive change to the codebase, which
causes an apparent rewrite of git history.
Git blame's --ignore-rev flag can be used to ignore this commit when
attempting to `git blame` some code.
This makes PrivateKey store both the key followed by the hash. For
PrivateKeys based on SecretKeys this just means the second half of the
SHA-512 of the seed, and makes a PrivateKey constructed from a SecretKey
give an identical signature to signing directly with sodium.
For derived keys we use a ShortHash of the root key's signing hash
concatenated with the publicly known hash value, so that our derived key
signing hash will be different from the root signing hash and also
different for different derivation parameters.
This also changed one of the asserts in crypto_noop, but upon closer
inspection the copying of the secret key into the signature seems really
wrong, so just changed them to fill with 0s.
The reason things weren't working here is because libsodium does
something completely unintuitive and called the seed the "secret key"
when it isn't, it's the seed.
This adds a new PrivateKey class (alongside the existing SecretKey and
PubKey) that holds just a private key value but no seed -- which we need
to do because there is no way we can get a seed after calculating a
derived keypair.
With these changes, we now generate exactly the same keys and subkeys as
Tor (and a new test case uses values generated in Tor to verify this).
This is incomplete -- the subkey signing code is still not implemented;
it has to be adapted to create a signature from a PrivateKey rather than
a SecretKey which will probably requiring working around/reimplementing
some of what libsodium does for creating a signature since it expects
"secret keys" i.e. the seed.