The command processes list of transactions from file
(one StdTx each line), generate signed transactions
or signatures and print their JSON encoding, delimited
by '\n'. As the signatures are generated, the command
increments the sequence number automatically.
Author: @jgimeno
Reviewed-by: @alessio
* change abci file to use BinaryBare
* change all calls to EncodeLengthPrefixed to BinaryBare in distribution keeper store.
* change all calls to EncodeLengthPrefixed to BinaryBare in mint keeper store.
* change all calls to EncodeLengthPrefixed to BinaryBare in auth keeper store.
* change all calls to EncodeLengthPrefixed to BinaryBare in distribution keeper store.
* change all calls to EncodeLengthPrefixed to BinaryBare in staking keeper store.
* change all calls to EncodeLengthPrefixed to BinaryBare in staking keeper store.
* change all calls to EncodeLengthPrefixed to BinaryBare in gov keeper store.
* change all calls to EncodeLengthPrefixed to BinaryBare in slashing keeper store.
* update decoder test
* migrate decoder
* migrate gov simulation decoder
* migrate baseapp_test
* refactor QuerySubspace
* refactor coedc std codec
* migrate keybase
* migrate iavl store
* migrate root multi
* migrate ante basic
* migrate tx type to bare
* migrate auth client
* update auth types
* update decoder
* migrate supply decoder
* migrate stake encoding
* migrate staking simulation
* migrate genutil
* migrate simapp test helpers
* migrate docs
* upgrade changelog
* Update CHANGELOG.md
Co-Authored-By: Alexander Bezobchuk <alexanderbez@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Alexander Bezobchuk <alexanderbez@users.noreply.github.com>
Packages named utils, common, or misc provide clients with no
sense of what the package contains. This makes it harder for
clients to use the package and makes it harder for maintainers
to keep the package focused. Over time, they accumulate dependencies
that can make compilation significantly and unnecessarily slower,
especially in large programs. And since such package names are
generic, they are more likely to collide with other packages
imported by client code, forcing clients to invent names to
distinguish them.
cit. https://blog.golang.org/package-names