Thanks to elichai2 who noted that the literal '1' is a signed integer, and that shifting a signed 32-bit integer by 31 bits causes an overflow and yields undefined behaviour.
While 'scalar_low_impl''s 'secp256k1_scalar_cadd_bit' is only used for testing purposes and currently the 'bit' parameter is only 0 or 1, it is better to avoid undefined behaviour in case the used domain of 'secp256k1_scalar_cadd_bit' expands.
Identifiers starting with an underscore and followed immediately by a capital letter are reserved by the C++ standard.
The only header guards not fixed are those in the headers auto-generated from java.
If you compile without ./configure --enable-exhaustive-tests=no,
this will create a binary ./exhaustive_tests which will execute
every function possible on a group of small order obtained by
moving to a twist of our curve and locating a generator of small
order.
Currently defaults to order 13, though by changing some #ifdefs
you can get a couple other ones. (Currently 199, which will take
forever to run, and 14, which won't work because it's composite.)
TODO exhaustive tests for the various modules