We had trie operations independently implemented in +de in arvo,
+an:cloy in zuse, +zu in clay, lib/trie, and app/spider. This unifies
them all into +de in arvo, aggregating the used operations.
Intended use is for transitory moons to be able to breach themselves on
startup.
If you run a moon without persistence, then every time the program is
restarted, it must be breached. This lets the moon breach itself
instead of requiring direct interaction with the planet. The moon
should reserve the first bone for this purpose, and then every time it
starts up, it should send [%helm-moon-breach ~moon-name] to hood on the
planet.
Small touch-ups to simulation behavior and ph tests. Most of them pass
now, even if they're still really slow at times.
The breach ones don't pass, but also complain of dangling bone, so might
work once the fix for that is in.
No mark files exist for any of the drum marks, so trying to poke remote drums
would fail anyway, but relying on the mark system in that way seems a bit
fragile, so we add an explicit permission check.
No mark files exist for any of the helm marks (except `%helm-hi`), so trying to
poke remote helms would fail anyway, but relying on the mark system in that way
seems a bit fragile, so we add an explicit permission check.
Conflicts:
pkg/arvo/lib/azimuth.hoon
This file was turned into a symlink to pkg/base-dev/lib/azimuth.hoon on
one side of the fork, and meanwhile edited on the other side of the fork
(to update ecliptic to the new address for the WSTR fix.)
The two sides of the fork both had different outdated addresses in
base-dev's azimuth.hoon file, and Git's UI helpfully refilled the
contents of arvo's azimuth.hoon so that it showed a merge conflict with
an empty diff.
Resolved by reading out HEAD:pkg/arvo/lib/azimuth.hoon into
pkg/base-dev/lib/azimuth.hoon and manually recreating the symlink.
When we receive a commit that we can apply from the source, we throw
away any skipped pending commits. This lets us receive updates at the
current kelvin even if we heard pending commits for later kelvins.