3.8 KiB
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README |
pre alpha documentation (mostly a wish list)
pre-requisite, Pandoc to build the html documentation from the markdown files.
Windows pre-requisites: Visual Studio and git-bash
To obtain the source code from which the project can be built, including this README, from the bash command line (git-bash in windows).
git clone --recurse-submodules missing url
To configure and build the required third party libraries in windows, then build the program and run unit test for the first time, launch the Visual Studio X64 native tools command prompt in the cloned directory, then:
winConfigure.bat
Should the libraries change in a subsequent pull
you will need
git pull
rem you get a status message indicating libraries have been updated.
git pull -force --recurse-submodules
winConfigure.bat
in order to rebuild the libraries.
The --force
is necessary, because winConfigure.bat
changes
many of the library files, and therefore git will abort the pull.
{target="_blank"}
The winConfigure script builds everything, including the documents, but
takes a while. Normally when you make changes to the source code you
should rebuild just the program, using wallet.sln
on windows.
To rebuild the documents after editing them, docs/mkdocs
winConfigure.bat also configures the repository you just created to use
.gitconfig
in the repository, causing git to to implement GPG signed
commits -- because cryptographic software is under attack from NSA
entryists and shills, who seek to introduce backdoors.
This may be inconvenient if you do not have gpg
installed and set up.
It also means that subsequent pulls and merges will require you to have gpg
trust the key public_key.gpg
, and if you submit a pull request, the puller will need to trust your gpg
public key.
.gitconfig
adds several git aliases:
git lg
to display the gpg trust information for the last four commits. For this to be useful you need to import the repository public keypublic_key.gpg
into gpg, and locally sign that key.git graph
to graph the commit tree with signing statusgit alias
to display the git aliases.
# To verify that the signature on future pulls is
# unchanged.
gpg --import public_key.gpg
gpg --lsign 096EAE16FB8D62E75D243199BC4482E49673711C
We ignore the Gpg Web of Trust model and instead use the Zooko identity model.
We use Gpg signatures to verify that remote repository code is coming from an unchanging entity, not for Gpg Web of Trust. Web of Trust is too complicated and too user hostile to be workable or safe.
Never --sign any Gpg key related to this project. --lsign it.
Never check any Gpg key related to this project against a public gpg key repository. It should not be there.
Never use any email address on a gpg key related to this project unless it is only used for project purposes, or a fake email, or the email of an enemy. We don't want Gpg used to link different email addresses as owned by the same entity, and we don't want email addresses used to link people to the project, because those identities would then come under state and quasi state pressure.
To build the documentation in its intended html form from the markdown
files, execute the bash script file docs/mkdocs.sh
, in an environment where
pandoc
is available. On Windows, if Git Bash and Pandoc
has been installed, you should be able to run this shell
file in bash by double clicking on it.
Pre alpha release, which means it does not yet work even well enough for it to be apparent what it would do if it did work.