521fb78cd4
You have to tell the user to do it.
77 lines
3.1 KiB
Markdown
77 lines
3.1 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: >-
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README
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---
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[pre alpha documentation (mostly a wish list)](docs/index.htm)
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[copyright © and license](./license.txt)
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pre-requisite, Pandoc to build the html documentation from the markdown files.
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Windows pre-requisites: Visual Studio and git-bash
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To obtain the source code from which the project can be built, including
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this README, from the bash command line (git-bash in windows).
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```bash2
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git clone missing url
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cd wallet
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./winConfigure.sh
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```
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To configure and build the required third party libraries in windows, then
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build the program and run unit test for the first time, launch the Visual
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Studio X64 native tools command prompt in the cloned directory, then:
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```bat
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winConfigure.bat
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```
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[cryptographic software is under attack]:./docs/contributor_code_of_conduct.html#code-will-be-cryptographically-signed
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"Contributor Code of Conduct"
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{target="_blank"}
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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`
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winConfigure.bat also configures the repository you just created to use
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`.gitconfig` in the repository, causing git to to implement GPG signed
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commits -- because [cryptographic software is under attack] from NSA
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entryists, and shills, who seek to introduce backdoors.
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This may be inconvenient if you do not have `gpg` installed and set up.
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`.gitconfig` adds several git aliases:
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1. `git lg` to display the gpg trust information for the last four commits.
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For this to be useful you need to import the repository public key
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`public_key.gpg` into gpg, and locally sign that key.
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1. `git fixws` to standardise white space to the project standards
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1. `git graph` to graph the commit tree
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1. `git alias` to display the git aliases.
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```bash
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# To verify that the signature on future pulls is unchanged.
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gpg --import public_key.gpg
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gpg --lsign 096EAE16FB8D62E75D243199BC4482E49673711C
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# We ignore the Gpg Web of Trust model and instead use
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# the Zooko identity model.
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# We use Gpg signatures to verify that remote repository
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# code is coming from an unchanging entity, not for
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# Gpg Web of Trust. Web of Trust is too complicated
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# and too user hostile to be workable or safe.
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# Never --sign any Gpg key related to this project. --lsign it.
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# Never check any Gpg key related to this project against a
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# public gpg key repository. It should not be there.
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# Never use any email address on a gpg key related to this project
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# unless it is only used for project purposes, or a fake email,
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# or the email of someone whom you do not like.
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```
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To build the documentation in its intended html form from the markdown
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files, execute the bash script file `docs/mkdocs.sh`, in an environment where
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`pandoc` is available. On Windows, if Git Bash and Pandoc has been
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installed, you should be able to run a shell file in bash by double clicking on it.
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[Pre alpha release](./RELEASE_NOTES.html), which means it does not yet work even well enough for
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it to be apparent what it would do if it did work.
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