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trezor-firmware/common/tools/README.md

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# Common Tools
This directory contains mostly tools that can manipulate definitions in [defs/](../defs).
Tools are written with [Click](http://click.pocoo.org/6/), so you always get a help text
if you use the `--help` option.
All tools require Python 3.6 or higher and a bunch of dependencies, listed in `requirements.txt`.
You can install them all with `pip3 install -r requirements.txt`.
## Tools overview
### `cointool.py`
This is a general-purpose tool to examine coin definitions. Currently it implements
the following commands:
* **`render`**: generate code based on a [Mako](http://docs.makotemplates.org/en/latest/index.html)
template. By default, `cointool.py render foo.bar.mako` will put its result into
file `foo.bar` in the same directory. See [usage in `trezor-core`](https://github.com/trezor/trezor-core/commit/348b99b8dc5bcfc4ab85e1e7faad3fb4ef3e8763).
* **`check`**: check validity of json definitions and associated data. Used in CI.
* **`dump`**: dump coin information, including support status, in JSON format. Various
filtering options are available, check help for details.
* **`coindefs`**: generate signed protobuf descriptions of coins. This is for future use
and could allow us to not need to store coin data in Trezor itself.
Use `cointool.py command --help` to get more information on each command.
### `support.py`
Used to query and manage info in `support.json`. This mainly supports the release flow.
The following commands are available:
* **`check`**: check validity of json data. Used in CI.
* **`fix`**: fix expected problems: prune keys without associated coins and ensure
that ERC20 tokens are correctly entered as duplicate.
* **`show`**: keyword-search for a coin and show its support status for each device.
* **`set`**: set support data.
* **`release`**: perform the [release workflow](#release-workflow).
Use `support.py command --help` to get more information on each command.
### `coins_details.py`
Generates `coins_details.json`, source file for https://trezor.io/coins.
Collects data on coins, downloads market caps and puts everything into a single file.
Caches market cap data so you don't have to download it every time.
### `diffize_coins_details.py`
Compares generated `coins_details.json` to the released version currently served
on https://trezor.io/coins, in a format that is nicely readable to humans and
hard(er) to mess up by diff.
### `coin_info.py`
In case where code generation with `cointool.py render` is impractical or not sufficient,
you can query the data directly through Python. Short usage example:
```python
import coin_info
defs = coin_info.coin_info()
list_of_all_coins = defs.as_list()
dict_by_coin_key = defs.as_dict()
for token in defs.erc20:
print(token["key"], token["name"], token["shortcut"])
support_info = coin_info.support_info(defs.misc)
for key, support in support_info.values():
t2_support = support["trezor2"]
coin_name = dict_by_coin_key[key]
if t2_support:
print(coin_name, "is supported since version", t2_support)
else:
print(coin_name, "is not supported")
```
See docstrings for the most important functions: `coin_info()` and `support_info()`.
The file `coindef.py` is a protobuf definition for passing coin data to Trezor
from the outside.
### `marketcap.py`
Module for obtaining market cap and price data used by `coins_details.py` and `maxfee.py`.
### `maxfee.py`
Updates the `maxfee_kb` coin property based on a specified maximum per-transaction fee. The command
fetches current price data from https://coinmarketcap.com/ to convert from fiat-denominated maximum
fee.
# Release Workflow
This entails collecting information on coins whose support status is unknown and
including new Ethereum chains and ERC20 tokens.
## Maintaining Support Status
When a new coin definition is added, its support status is _unknown_. It is excluded
from code generation by default. If you want to include a coin in a firmware build,
you need to switch it to supported in a particular version first. You can set multiple
support statuses at the same time:
```
$ ./support.py show Ontology
misc:ONT - Ontology (ONT)
* connect : NO
* trezor1 : support info missing
* trezor2 : support info missing
* suite : NO
$ ./support.py set misc:ONT trezor1=no -r "not planned on T1" trezor2=2.4.7
misc:ONT - Ontology (ONT)
* connect : NO
* trezor1 : NO (reason: not planned on T1)
* trezor2 : 2.4.7
* suite : NO
```
Afterwards, review and commit changes to `defs/support.json`, and update the `trezor-common`
submodule in your target firmware.
ERC20 tokens in _unknown_ state are considered _soon_ as well, unless their symbols
are duplicates. Use `support.py fix` to synchronize duplicate status in `support.json` file.
Or mark them as unsupported explicitly.
## Releasing a new firmware
#### **Step 1:** update the tokens repo
```sh
pushd defs/ethereum/tokens
git checkout master
git pull
popd
git add defs/ethereum/tokens
```
#### **Step 2:** run the release flow
```sh
./tools/support.py release 2
```
The number `2` indicates that you are releasing Trezor 2. The version will be
automatically determined, based on currently released firmwares. Or you can explicitly
specify the version with `-r 2.1.0`.
All currently known unreleased ERC20 tokens are automatically set to the given version.
All coins marked _soon_ are set to the current version. This is automatic - coins that
were marked _soon_ were used in code generation and so should be released. If you want
to avoid this, you will have to manually revert each coin to _soon_ status, either with
`support.py set`, or by manually editing `support.json`.
Coins in state _unknown_, i.e., coins that are known in the definitions but not listed
in support files, will be also added. But you will be interactively asked to confirm
each one. Use `-y` or `--add-all` to auto-add all of them.
Use `-n` or `--dry-run` to see changes without writing them to `support.json`. Use
`-v` or `--verbose` to also show ERC20 tokens which are processed silently by default.
Use `-g` or `--git-tag` to automatically tag the current `HEAD` with a version, e.g.,
`trezor2-2.1.0`. This might become default in the future.
XXX this should also commit the changes though, otherwise the tag will apply to the wrong
commit.
#### **Step 3:** review and commit your changes
Use `git diff` to review changes made, commit and push. If you tagged the commit in the
previous step, don't forget to `git push --tags` too.
#### **Step 4:** update submodule in your target repository
Go to `trezor-core` or `trezor-mcu` checkout and update the submodule. Checkout the
appropriate tag if you created it. If you're in `trezor-core`, run `make templates`
to update source files.