As we moved most of the creation of a BufferPool to be via the
Streaming::pool() method, which uses a thread-local, it makes sense
to start cleaning up the design and make it more modern C++.
The above mentioned method would return a reference and you'd see
loads of places use `auto &pool =` which is less than ideal.
As the number of places where we actually instantiate a BufferPool
goes down, the usage of some sort of smart pointer makes more sense.
This now makes all APIs use BufferPool be wrapped in a shared_ptr.
The test starts to become long to run and using the one main.cpp
hack we had removes our ability to select one test to run, so lets
go back to one executable per class.
The usage of a ripe160 for bitcoin addresses in the API and in the
Indexer loses some info, specifically what kind of script it is.
Additionally not all types of scripts fit this mold. At best that means
its not future-proof.
This adds a method to the API in order to select from a Tx the hashed
outscript (thats singlehashed sha256) and refactor the address indexer
to use that instead of the ripe160 address.
The API enums broke a little, so I used the opportunity to break it a
lot and clean up the enums in order to make them more future-proof.
But, yeah, software from before this commit is protocol incompatible
with software after this commit.
This also includes a little blockchain of 114 blocks (the first 100 just
coinbase to reach coin-maturity) with transactions generated by the
txVulcano. So lots of outputs.
I adjusted the BlackBoxTest to load this data into any hub with ease.