Whenever ecdsa_sig_sign is called, in the case that r == 0 or r overflows,
we want to retry with a different nonce rather than fail signing entirely.
Because of this, we always check the nonce conditions before calling
sig_sign, so these checks should always pass (and in particular, they
are inaccessible through the API and appear as uncovered code in test
coverage).
The side-effects make review somewhat harder because 99.9% of the
time the macro usage has no sideeffects, so they're easily ignored.
The main motivation for avoiding the side effects is so that the
macro can be completely stubbed out for branch coverage analysis
otherwise all the unreachable verify code gets counted against
coverage.
There are now 2 encoding formats supported: 64-byte "compact" and DER.
The latter is strict: the data has to be exact DER, though the values
inside don't need to be valid.
Unbraced statements spanning multiple lines has been shown in many
projects to contribute to the introduction of bugs and a failure
to catch them in review, especially for maintenance on infrequently
modified code.
Most, but not all, of the existing practice in the codebase were not
cases that I would have expected to eventually result in bugs but
applying it as a rule makes it easier for other people to safely
contribute.
I'm not aware of any such evidence for the case with the statement
on a single line, but some people strongly prefer to never do that
and the opposite rule of "_always_ use a single line for single
statement blocks" isn't a reasonable rule for formatting reasons.
Might as well brace all these too, since that's more universally
acceptable.
[In any case, I seem to have introduced the vast majority of the
single-line form (as they're my preference where they fit).]
This also removes a broken test which is no longer needed.
This makes a basic effort and has not been audited.
Doesn't appear to have a measurable performance impact on bench.
It also adds a secp256k1_num_free to secp256k1_ecdsa_pubkey_create.
- secp256k1_fe_sqrt now checks that the value it calculated is actually a square root.
- Add return values to secp256k1_fe_sqrt and secp256k1_ge_set_xo.
- Callers of secp256k1_ge_set_xo can use return value instead of explicit validity checks
- Add random value tests for secp256k1_fe_sqrt