Mostly it's about Go 1.22+ syntax with ranging over integers, but it also
prefers ranging over slices where possible (it makes code a little better to
read).
Notice that we have a number of dangerous loops where slices are mutated
during loop execution, many of these can't be converted since we need proper
length evalutation at every iteration.
Signed-off-by: Roman Khimov <roman@nspcc.ru>
Since the AllowedGroups []*keys.PublicKey slice is used in the
initialization, the test should use the same structures.
Signed-off-by: Ekaterina Pavlova <ekt@morphbits.io>
This section contains genesis-related settings including genesis-related or natives-related
extensions. Currently it includes the set of node roles that may be designated
duing the native Designation contract initialisation.
Close#3156.
Signed-off-by: Anna Shaleva <shaleva.ann@nspcc.ru>
Everywhere including examples, external interop APIs, bindings generators
code and in other valuable places. A couple of `interface{}` usages are
intentionally left in the CHANGELOG.md, documentation and tests.
There is a security issue found in github.com/btcsuite/btcd that we don't care
about (we're only using 256k1 implementation), but GitHub complains about
it. We could update to github.com/btcsuite/btcd/btcec/v2, but it's now just a
thin wrapper over github.com/decred/dcrd/dcrec/secp256k1/v4, so we better use
it directly.
Which allows to create verification scripts without keys.PublicKey which is
convenient in some cases where we already have serialized key and don't want
to waste time decompressing it.
They're misleading now that we have variable number of committee
members/validators. The standby list can be seen in the configuration and the
appropriate numbers can be received from it also.
Attempts to reuse elliptic.Unmarshal() and elliptic.UnmarshalCompressed() lead
to this:
name old time/op new time/op delta
PublicDecodeBytes-8 59.5µs ± 2% 61.8µs ± 1% +3.78% (p=0.000 n=10+9)
name old alloc/op new alloc/op delta
PublicDecodeBytes-8 3.99kB ± 0% 4.27kB ± 0% +6.81% (p=0.000 n=9+10)
name old allocs/op new allocs/op delta
PublicDecodeBytes-8 136 ± 0% 135 ± 0% -0.74% (p=0.000 n=10+10)
So it makes no sense. Refs. #1319.
Go 1.15 provides native (*ecdsa.PublicKey).Equal method, but we can't drop our
own Equal because the types are different and there is still code using our
Equal (forcing it to convert types is counterproductive), while changing
(*PublicKey).Equal to use (*ecdsa.PublicKey).Equal internally with some kind of
(*ecdsa.PublicKey)(p).Equal((*ecdsa.PublicKey)(key))
slows it down:
name old time/op new time/op delta
PublicEqual-8 14.9ns ± 1% 18.4ns ± 2% +23.55% (p=0.000 n=9+10)
name old alloc/op new alloc/op delta
PublicEqual-8 0.00B 0.00B ~ (all equal)
name old allocs/op new allocs/op delta
PublicEqual-8 0.00 0.00 ~ (all equal)
So leave it as is, but add this micro-bench. Refs. #1319.