This adds a new makefile command, which is used in CI linting, `make check_dep`.
This ensures the toml is in sync with the lock, and that were not pinning to a
branch in any repository.
This also adapts `make get_vendor_deps` to check the lock, in addition to
populating the vendor directory. This removes the need for `make ensure_deps`.
This makes `make get_vendor_deps` consistent between tendermint and the sdk.
Currently the top level directory contains basically all of the code
for the crypto package. This PR moves the crypto code into submodules
in a similar manner to what `golang/x/crypto` does. This improves code
organization.
Ref discussion: https://github.com/tendermint/tendermint/pull/1966Closes#1956
* tools: Remove redundant grep -v vendors/
This was used in conjunction with `go list <path>`, however `go list`
already ignores the vendor directory. This made this `grep -v` redundant.
* Missed an apostrophe
* Switch ports 466xx to be 266xx
This is done so the default ports aren't in the linux kernel's default ephemeral port range.
* Update ABCI import
* Bump cache on circleci
* Get more verbose output for debugging
* Bump abci dependency
* Fix accidental change of a block header's hash
* pin abci release
* generate RPC docs using Slate (#691)
* update changelog
* skip if branch not develop
* slate: only build if rpc/core has changes
* fetch develop to compare against
* slate: build on master only
* [rpc/core] use original repo, not fork in README
Reasons:
1) all deps we're using should be passing tests (including external)
2) deps can require complicated setup for testing
3) the person responsible for releasing Tendermint should be cautious
when updating a dep
To achieve faster feedback cycles for our feature PRs this change
reduces the average buildtime from 35 to ~6min by utilising their new
2.0 offering based on docker and nomad. We make use of parallel build
steps wherever possible so that the duration is determined by the
slowest test suite (p2p).
This is an intermediate step until we move our CI/CD completely
on-premise for more control and added security.