Fetch params from ipfs if possible
This patch allows fetch-params to download the params from [ipfs], if it's installed. This reduces the need for a central server and ensures the params are available if the official server ceases to exist.
For now, the default is still wget. If wget exits with an error, the script automatically tries ipfs. To use ipfs instead of wget:
ZC_DISABLE_WGET=1 ./zcutil/fetch-params.sh
[ipfs]: https://github.com/ipfs/go-ipfs
Fixes for gcc 7
This fixes a few issues when using a newer compiler (in my case gcc 7.1.1) available in for example Arch Linux.
Solves for example this issue: https://github.com/zcash/zcash/issues/2304
The first thing is an error when checking for boost_system and is solved by disabling that warning (wich is treated as an error and, hence, stops the build):
```
configure:22242: checking for exit in -lboost_system-mt
configure:22267: g++ -m64 -o conftest -std=c++11 -pipe -fPIC -O1 -fwrapv -fno-strict-aliasing -Werror -g -Wformat -Wformat-security -Wstack-protector -fstack-protector-all -fPIE ..<snip>... /x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/share/../lib conftest.cpp -lboost_system-mt -lanl >&5
conftest.cpp:70:6: error: declaration of 'char exit()' conflicts with built-in declaration 'void exit(int)' [-Werror=builtin-declaration-mismatch]
char exit ();
^~~~
cc1plus: all warnings being treated as errors
```
The second thing was to clean some code that is deprecated in C++11 which also lead to a warning treated as error. It could also be fixed with `-Wno-deprecated` but better to fix the issue in my opinion.
--nocleanup is sufficient to leave the data directories behind. --noshutdown is
only useful if you want to inspect the nodes afterwards, and you'd need to
manually shut down both nodes before copying the data directories.
Fix deprecation policy comment.
Thanks to @daira for spotting this and suggesting the correct policy.
Feel free to adjust wording, this is primarily to track the issue and suggest a potential fix.
Ansible works with Python 2.6 and 2.7, but Buildbot requires 2.7. Both have
at least preliminary Python 3 support, but until our RPC tests are migrated to
Python 3, we need to use Python 2 for testing, and so this requirement stands.
Previously various user-facing strings have used inconsistent currency units "BTC",
"btc" and "bitcoins". This adds a single constant and uses it for each reference to
the currency unit.
Also adds a description of the unit for --maxtxfee, and adds the missing "amount"
field description to the (deprecated) move RPC command.