It is difficult to maintain one build system, let alone two - especially
if one build system is known to be better maintained and the other build
system continues to be used - with bug and feature requests raised
against it.
The maintainers are aware that there are people using the CMake system,
but believe that the extra maintainability of only having one build
system, combined with the knowledge that the current CI system
demonstrates that all supported architectures are working with the
Makefiles make the use of these Makefiles a more sustainable direction.
* UPnP port redirection is supported.
* compile fixes
* compile fix
* optimize reconnection code
* prepared upnp threadification to counter main loop stall at supernode change
* NAT-PMP port forwarding support, temporarily merge codes to resolve conflicts.
* make compile fix
* prepared threadification in more detail
* adopted threadification to new file setup
* cleaned up
* renamed functions and data structures
* fixes
* differentiated between miniupnp and natpmp and added corresponding lib support to makefile
* name
* commented unused header includes
* comments
* license
* fixes
* fixes
* fixes
* NAT-PMP is already available.
* added CLI parameter to disable port forwarding if required
* preliminary made use of multithreading
* adjusted log level
* added man page documentation
* def'ed conf
* made pmpnat adjustments
Co-authored-by: fengdaolong <fengdaolong@gmail.com>
* Factor build packages out into a more maintainable list
* Create a location for scripts to live
* Provide a make target to return the source dir as close as reasonable to the original distributed state
* Add a code lint step, checking the coding style
* Change test harness as recommended by shellcheck
* Ensure we actually have the linter tool installed
* Use the correct directory for cmake to run the tests
* Adjust for the older uncrustify in the current github ubuntu-latest
* Make one file pass the linter
* Integrate the lint with the existing test workflow
* Add files with minimal changes needed to the linter
* Add more files with minimal changes needed to the linter
* Dont build binaries if we fail the lint test
* Update the phony targets with the lint steps
* Ensure the flake8 package is installed in the new lint workflow job
* Use the makefile to drive the packages needed to install for linting
* No need to add dependancies on lint, just rely on the workflow status to show failure
* Update the scripts dir README to reflect current assumptions
* Rename and briefly document the indent.sh script
* Fix the ignore to ignore the right Makefile
* Rename the test_harness script to make it clear it is a shell script
* Provide a master lint make target and add a shell script lint tool
* Elminate stray tabs
* Drop include/auth.h from linter - there are inconsistant results with function definitions when using the current uncrustify rules
* Provide a minimal reimplementation of our autoconf, to try windows builds
* Try building with windows
* Fix thinko in spelling
* Ensure shell script runs inside a shell
* Add a hack to aid include discovery
* Just keep adding tech debt...
* Assume that we will have slashes in some of the replacement strings and avoid that char with sed
* Restore one slash
* Hack around the tools makefile interdependancy bug
* A correct cflags include hack for each compile dir
* Ensure we link against winsock (note, even though this says 32bit, it should link the 64bit library ... I think)
* Bad link ordering if we dont use LDLIBS
* Remove unused make variable
* Remove makefile duplication using inheritance (this does mean you can no longer cd tools; make, but must do make tools)
* Add missing library for win32
* Show OS variable
* Make hack autoconf more robust for tests on non gitlab runners
* Remove no longer used substitutions from hack autoconf
* Add missing include path to tools under win32
* Build the win32 subdir when the compiler is Msys
* The different subdirs have different dependancies
* Ensure we can find the include files
* Fix library link ordering
* Ensure the tools dir can find the special win32 lib
* Deal with the differing basic type sizes on both linux/64bit and windows/64bit
* Document the steps to mimic the github windows/mingw build locally - to allow for simpler debugging
* Ensure branch name in instructions matches my test branch name
* Clarify the shell needed to build with mingw
* Since the makefile depends on knowing the OS, raise a fatal error if we cannot determine this
* Handling different compile environments is hard.
- Linux: sane and reasonable results for both uname -s (=Linux) and
uname -o (=GNU/Linux)
- Windows/Mingw: insane results for uname -s
(=MSYS_NT-$MAJOR.$MINOR-$BUILDNR) but sane results for uname -o (Msys)
- Macos: sane results for uname -s (=Darwin) but does not support
uname -o at all
* Revamp the way that Mingw is detected
* Avoid attempting to generate gcovr report when running under windows
* Whoops, isolate the right step
* Fix spelling mistake
* win32/Makefile: Remove unused setting and add comment
* ensure that all win32 includes use the same expected path
* Allow simpler cross compilation by letting configure pass the CC and AR environment through
* Avoid multiple '_CRT_SECURE_NO_WARNINGS redefined' warnings
* Convert to a consolidated CONFIG_TARGET variable to select any different compile options
* Use the more generic printf defines to avoid warnings on mingw
* Update mingw build docs
* English better for reader happy make
* Address a number of mingw compiler warnings
* Fix Visual C compile
* Be sure to document some of the hacky nature of the mingw build
* Add a simple test framework
* Add a code coverage report example oneliner
* Move the coverage report into a separate directory
* Add a github action to run tests and publish a branch with the coverage report
* Fix: Missing job separator
* Fix: remember to actually run configure
* Fix: Gotta autogen before I configure
* Dont try to upload coverage report unless this is a push
* Clearly show the git ref tested in the coverage report
* Add a test for the various transforms
* Add tests for the elliptic curve and pearson hash
* Ensure we ignore new generated output
* Remove unneeded boilerplate from the compression tests
* Add an example of a test of the encoded wire packets
* Ensure that correctly testable data is output even when zstd is not compiled
* Factor test runner out into its own script and attempt to add it to the cmake file
* Tell cmake about a new object file
* Stop trying to make Cmake work...
* Stop trying to make cmake work, round 2
* In the middle of a thousand lines of cmake output was one important one - windows could not find assert() - try again
* Try again to plumb the tests into cmake
* Add missing library to our superset install line
* Fix build error when libcap-dev is installed
* Switch to using artifact uploads instead of pages to store/show the coverage report
* Fix artifact upload yaml
* Upload coverage report to codecov
* Fix codecov - clearly it doesnt do a recursive search for coverage files
* Fix codecov - my hopeful use of a list of directories didnt work
* Fix codecov - unfortunately, it doesnt just consume the coverage data and needs us to generate the gcov output
* Fix codecov - nope, it still doesnt recursively search
* Fix codecov - it really helps if I run the gcov data generator
* Add a simple matrix build
* Fix older ubuntu versions of gcovr that do not support the '--html-title' option
* Ensure we use gcover options that are identical on older ubuntu
* Improve coverage generation and required build packages
* Add new file 'network_traffic_filter.c/.h"
* Add feature to drop or accept specific packet transmit over edge network interface by rules.
* fix CMakeLists.txt typo
* Update Rule String Format
* replace -F (filter) with -R (rule) for traffic restrictions.
* Update edge help (-h) message. Update documents.