Commit graph

156 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
David Hill
1b23410214 btcd: sendheaders server support (#671)
This adds support for serving headers instead of inventory messages in
accordance with BIP0130.  btcd itself does not yet make use of the
feature when receiving data.
2016-04-26 13:24:03 -05:00
David Hill
a1bb291b28 mempool: Have ProcessTransaction return accepted transactions. (#547)
It is not the responsibility of mempool to relay transactions, so
return a slice of transactions accepted to the mempool due to the
passed transaction to the caller.
2016-04-14 12:58:09 -05:00
Tadge Dryja
432ad76952 fix memory allignment for 32-bit architectures (#668)
having 3 int32s above the uint64s in the struct
will cause misalignment for some 32-bit architectures.
see https://golang.org/pkg/sync/atomic/#pkg-note-BUG
This aligns bytesReceived and bytesSent.
2016-04-13 22:51:02 -05:00
Dave Collins
b580cdb7d3 database: Replace with new version.
This commit removes the old database package, moves the new package into
its place, and updates all imports accordingly.
2016-04-12 14:55:15 -05:00
Dave Collins
7c174620f7 indexers: Implement optional tx/address indexes.
This introduces a new indexing infrastructure for supporting optional
indexes using the new database and blockchain infrastructure along with
two concrete indexer implementations which provide both a
transaction-by-hash and a transaction-by-address index.

The new infrastructure is mostly separated into a package named indexers
which is housed under the blockchain package.  In order to support this,
a new interface named IndexManager has been introduced in the blockchain
package which provides methods to be notified when the chain has been
initialized and when blocks are connected and disconnected from the main
chain.  A concrete implementation of an index manager is provided by the
new indexers package.

The new indexers package also provides a new interface named Indexer
which allows the index manager to manage concrete index implementations
which conform to the interface.

The following is high level overview of the main index infrastructure
changes:

- Define a new IndexManager interface in the blockchain package and
  modify the package to make use of the interface when specified
- Create a new indexers package
  - Provides an Index interface which allows concrete indexes to plugin
    to an index manager
  - Provides a concrete IndexManager implementation
    - Handles the lifecycle of all indexes it manages
    - Tracks the index tips
    - Handles catching up disabled indexes that have been reenabled
    - Handles reorgs while the index was disabled
    - Invokes the appropriate methods for all managed indexes to allow
      them to index and deindex the blocks and transactions
  - Implement a transaction-by-hash index
    - Makes use of internal block IDs to save a significant amount of
      space and indexing costs over the old transaction index format
  - Implement a transaction-by-address index
    - Makes use of a leveling scheme in order to provide a good tradeoff
      between space required and indexing costs
- Supports enabling and disabling indexes at will
- Support the ability to drop indexes if they are no longer desired

The following is an overview of the btcd changes:

- Add a new index logging subsystem
- Add new options --txindex and --addrindex in order to enable the
  optional indexes
  - NOTE: The transaction index will automatically be enabled when the
    address index is enabled because it depends on it
- Add new options --droptxindex and --dropaddrindex to allow the indexes
  to be removed
  - NOTE: The address index will also be removed when the transaction
    index is dropped because it depends on it
- Update getrawtransactions RPC to make use of the transaction index
- Reimplement the searchrawtransaction RPC that makes use of the address
  index
- Update sample-btcd.conf to include sample usage for the new optional
  index flags
2016-04-11 17:16:42 -05:00
Dave Collins
491acd4ca6 blockchain: Rework to use new db interface.
This commit is the first stage of several that are planned to convert
the blockchain package into a concurrent safe package that will
ultimately allow support for multi-peer download and concurrent chain
processing.  The goal is to update btcd proper after each step so it can
take advantage of the enhancements as they are developed.

In addition to the aforementioned benefit, this staged approach has been
chosen since it is absolutely critical to maintain consensus.
Separating the changes into several stages makes it easier for reviewers
to logically follow what is happening and therefore helps prevent
consensus bugs.  Naturally there are significant automated tests to help
prevent consensus issues as well.

The main focus of this stage is to convert the blockchain package to use
the new database interface and implement the chain-related functionality
which it no longer handles.  It also aims to improve efficiency in
various areas by making use of the new database and chain capabilities.

The following is an overview of the chain changes:

- Update to use the new database interface
- Add chain-related functionality that the old database used to handle
  - Main chain structure and state
  - Transaction spend tracking
- Implement a new pruned unspent transaction output (utxo) set
  - Provides efficient direct access to the unspent transaction outputs
  - Uses a domain specific compression algorithm that understands the
    standard transaction scripts in order to significantly compress them
  - Removes reliance on the transaction index and paves the way toward
    eventually enabling block pruning
- Modify the New function to accept a Config struct instead of
  inidividual parameters
- Replace the old TxStore type with a new UtxoViewpoint type that makes
  use of the new pruned utxo set
- Convert code to treat the new UtxoViewpoint as a rolling view that is
  used between connects and disconnects to improve efficiency
- Make best chain state always set when the chain instance is created
  - Remove now unnecessary logic for dealing with unset best state
- Make all exported functions concurrent safe
  - Currently using a single chain state lock as it provides a straight
    forward and easy to review path forward however this can be improved
    with more fine grained locking
- Optimize various cases where full blocks were being loaded when only
  the header is needed to help reduce the I/O load
- Add the ability for callers to get a snapshot of the current best
  chain stats in a concurrent safe fashion
  - Does not block callers while new blocks are being processed
- Make error messages that reference transaction outputs consistently
  use <transaction hash>:<output index>
- Introduce a new AssertError type an convert internal consistency
  checks to use it
- Update tests and examples to reflect the changes
- Add a full suite of tests to ensure correct functionality of the new
  code

The following is an overview of the btcd changes:

- Update to use the new database and chain interfaces
- Temporarily remove all code related to the transaction index
- Temporarily remove all code related to the address index
- Convert all code that uses transaction stores to use the new utxo
  view
- Rework several calls that required the block manager for safe
  concurrency to use the chain package directly now that it is
  concurrent safe
- Change all calls to obtain the best hash to use the new best state
  snapshot capability from the chain package
- Remove workaround for limits on fetching height ranges since the new
  database interface no longer imposes them
- Correct the gettxout RPC handler to return the best chain hash as
  opposed the hash the txout was found in
- Optimize various RPC handlers:
  - Change several of the RPC handlers to use the new chain snapshot
    capability to avoid needlessly loading data
  - Update several handlers to use new functionality to avoid accessing
    the block manager so they are able to return the data without
    blocking when the server is busy processing blocks
  - Update non-verbose getblock to avoid deserialization and
    serialization overhead
  - Update getblockheader to request the block height directly from
    chain and only load the header
  - Update getdifficulty to use the new cached data from chain
  - Update getmininginfo to use the new cached data from chain
  - Update non-verbose getrawtransaction to avoid deserialization and
    serialization overhead
  - Update gettxout to use the new utxo store versus loading
    full transactions using the transaction index

The following is an overview of the utility changes:
- Update addblock to use the new database and chain interfaces
- Update findcheckpoint to use the new database and chain interfaces
- Remove the dropafter utility which is no longer supported

NOTE: The transaction index and address index will be reimplemented in
another commit.
2016-04-11 16:47:27 -05:00
David Hill
123ff368f4 mempool: Create and use mempoolPolicy. (#571)
mempoolPolicy contains the values that configure the mempool policy.
This decouples the values from the internals of btcd to move closer
to a mempool package.
2016-04-11 16:37:52 -05:00
David Hill
d1e493f4ee config: New option --blocksonly (#553)
The --blocksonly configuration option disables accepting transactions
from remote peers.  It will still accept, relay, and rebroadcast
valid transactions sent via RPC or websockets.
2016-04-07 18:16:46 -05:00
David Hill
7b31349023 Cleanup and optimize handleBroadcastMsg 2016-04-07 14:50:42 -04:00
David Hill
8a58f8cf3a peer: Implement sendheaders support (BIP0130).
This modifies the peer package to add support for the sendheaders
protocol message introduced by BIP0030.

NOTE: This does not add support to btcd itself. That requires the server
and sync code to make use of the new functionality exposed by these
changes.  As a result, btcd will still be using protocol version 70011.
2016-04-06 16:56:48 -05:00
David Hill
c1861bc8fa peer: declare QueueMessage()'s doneChan as send only.
This ensures the channel passed to QueueMessage is writable and that
QueueMessage will not read from the channel (write-only).

This change is merely a safety change.  If a user of the API passes
a read-only channel to QueueMessage, it will now be caught at compile
time instead of panicking during runtime.

Also update internal functions.
2016-04-06 13:50:27 -05:00
Jonathan Gillham
391d5e4a01 server: Stop main loop from blocking when RPC server is not running.
When the RPC server is not running a buffered transaction notification

channel fills and eventually blocks.  This commit ensures that the

channel continues to be drained irrespective of the RPC server status.
2016-04-06 13:20:01 -05:00
Jonathan Gillham
5c59b685e6 server: Appropriately name inbound peers map in peerState. 2016-02-27 15:52:40 +00:00
Dave Collins
eb882f39f8 multi: Fix several misspellings in the comments.
This commit corrects several typos in the comments found by misspell.
2016-02-25 11:17:12 -06:00
Tibor Bősze
c75fea9c94 Implement banning based on dynamic ban scores
Dynamic ban scores consist of a persistent and a decaying component. The
persistent score can be used to create simple additive banning policies
simlar to those found in other bitcoin node implementations. The
decaying score enables the creation of evasive logic which handles
misbehaving peers (especially application layer DoS attacks) gracefully
by disconnecting and banning peers attempting various kinds of flooding.
Dynamic ban scores allow these two approaches to be used in tandem.

This pull request includes the following:

 - Dynamic ban score type & functions, with tests for core functionality
 - Ban score of connected peers can be queried via rpc (getpeerinfo)
 - Example policy with decaying score increments on mempool and getdata
 - Logging of misbehavior once half of the ban threshold is reached
 - Banning logic can be disabled via configuration (enabled by default)
 - User defined ban threshold can be set via configuration
2016-02-16 10:10:29 +01:00
Dave Collins
d127ad4083 server: Make consistent use of svr peer stringer.
This updates a couple of logging statements to use the serverPeer
instance instead of the embedded peer.Peer so they are consistent with
all of the other log statements.
2016-02-10 22:29:30 -06:00
Jonathan Gillham
73d353247c peer: Consolidate Connect, Disconnect, Start, Shutdown public methods.
This commit does not change functionality. It makes the creation of inbound and outbound peers more homogeneous. As a result the Start method of peer was removed as it was found not to be necessary. This is the first of several pull requests/commits designed to make the peer public API and internals less complex.
2016-02-06 11:11:15 +00:00
David Hill
383ed041ec Use atomic operations instead of mutexes. 2016-02-04 15:20:04 -05:00
Mawuli Adzoe
1944637333 Bump copyright date to reflect fixes since the beginning of this year. 2016-01-06 15:29:58 -07:00
Javed Khan
7996eb1f9d peer: drain chans before exiting peerHandler
Also disconnect the failed peer to allow the peerDoneHandler goroutine
to exit, instead of hanging around. Fixes #583.
2016-01-06 20:59:43 +05:30
Dario Nieuwenhuis
d0cdd53720 server: Fix persistent peers not being removed properly
When a persistent peer is disconnected (for example due to a
network timeout), a connection retry is issued. The logic for
doing so failed to remove the peer from the peerState, causing
dead peer connections to fill the peerState. Since connections
in the peerState are counted towards the maxPeers limit, this
would cause btcd to eventually stop retrying connection.

This commit fixes the issue by properly removing the peer from
the peerState.
2015-12-28 01:23:10 +01:00
Dave Collins
2f6aeacfab server: Correct mempool/CPU miner initialize order.
The CPU miner relies on the mempool, so the mempool has to be created
before calling the function to create the CPU miner.  When PR #568
introduced the mempool config struct, it moved the mempool creation
after the miner creation, which leads to the CPU miner crashing due to
trying to access a nil mempool.

This move the CPU miner creation after the mempool creation
appropriately.
2015-12-08 02:01:53 -06:00
David Hill
2a7f41cddb peer: Add DisableRelayTx to config.
DisableRelayTx sets the DisableRelayTx value in the version
message which informs the remote peer on whether to send
inv messages for transactions.
2015-12-03 10:29:06 -05:00
Dave Collins
ce981f45c2 mining: Create skeleton package.
This creates a skeleton mining package that simply contains a few of the
definitions used by the mining and mempool code.

This is a step towards decoupling the mining code from the internals of
btcd and ultimately will house all of the code related to creating block
templates and CPU mining.

The main reason a skeleton package is being created before the full
blown package is ready is to avoid blocking mempool separation which
relies on these type definitions.
2015-11-30 12:23:50 -06:00
David Hill
83bcfea271 mempool: Introduce mempoolConfig.
This is in preparation of moving mempool to its own subpackage.  No
functional change.
2015-11-27 18:34:27 -05:00
Dave Collins
f41ff545be server: Improve the persistent peer retry logic.
This fixes an issue introduced during the peer refactor where persistent
peers that failed the initial connection are not retried as intended.

It also improves the retry logic as follows:

- Make the retry handler goroutine simply use a for loop instead of
  launching a new goroutine for each backoff attempt.  Even though
  goroutines are fairly cheap to create, it is much more efficient to
  simply loop
- Change the retry handler to accept a flag if it is the initial attempt
- Rather than dividing the const interval by 2 everywhere and passing
  the retry duration in, just half the constant and set the initial
  duration to it in the retry handler

Finally, include the address of the peer in the error message when a new
outbound peer can't be created.
2015-11-24 16:25:32 -06:00
Dave Collins
a4aa131dd5 mining: Refactor policy into its own struct.
This introduces the concept of a mining policy struct which is used to
control block template generation instead of directly accessing the
config struct.  This is a step toward decoupling the mining code from
the internals of btcd.  Ultimately the intent is to create a separate
mining package.
2015-11-23 22:02:14 -06:00
Dave Collins
d0f0a2ac02 server: Improve handling of disconnected peers.
When the peer code was refactored, the lists of peers were converted to
maps however the code which runs when a peer disconnects still iterates
them like a slice.  This is no longer necessary since they are maps
which means the peer can simply be looked up by its ID.

Also, the old code was comparing the map entry and the peer being
removed by their pointers which could lead to potentially not properly
finding the peer.  This issue is also resolved by this change since it
looks up the peer by its ID.
2015-11-23 11:03:42 -06:00
David Hill
5016675d40 Move comment to where it belongs. 2015-11-10 13:20:29 -05:00
David Hill
cb71f278ec chaincfg: Move DNS Seeds to chaincfg.
This allows API users access to the DNS Seeds for use with SPV
clients, seeders, etc.
2015-11-09 17:21:16 -05:00
Dave Collins
aa0efa1f3e server: Allow IPv6 addresses with zone id.
This modifies the IP parsing code to work with IPv6 zone ids.  This is
needed since the net.ParseIP function does not allow zone ids even
though net.Listen does.
2015-11-09 10:39:30 -06:00
Javed Khan
00bddf7540 peer: Refactor peer code into its own package.
This commit introduces package peer which contains peer related features
refactored from peer.go.

The following is an overview of the features the package provides:

- Provides a basic concurrent safe bitcoin peer for handling bitcoin
  communications via the peer-to-peer protocol
- Full duplex reading and writing of bitcoin protocol messages
- Automatic handling of the initial handshake process including protocol
  version negotiation
- Automatic periodic keep-alive pinging and pong responses
- Asynchronous message queueing of outbound messages with optional
  channel for notification when the message is actually sent
- Inventory message batching and send trickling with known inventory
  detection and avoidance
- Ability to wait for shutdown/disconnect
- Flexible peer configuration
  - Caller is responsible for creating outgoing connections and listening
    for incoming connections so they have flexibility to establish
    connections as they see fit (proxies, etc.)
  - User agent name and version
  - Bitcoin network
  - Service support signalling (full nodes, bloom filters, etc.)
  - Maximum supported protocol version
  - Ability to register callbacks for handling bitcoin protocol messages
- Proper handling of bloom filter related commands when the caller does
  not specify the related flag to signal support
  - Disconnects the peer when the protocol version is high enough
  - Does not invoke the related callbacks for older protocol versions
- Snapshottable peer statistics such as the total number of bytes read
  and written, the remote address, user agent, and negotiated protocol
  version
- Helper functions for pushing addresses, getblocks, getheaders, and
  reject messages
  - These could all be sent manually via the standard message output
    function, but the helpers provide additional nice functionality such
    as duplicate filtering and address randomization
- Full documentation with example usage
- Test coverage

In addition to the addition of the new package, btcd has been refactored
to make use of the new package by extending the basic peer it provides to
work with the blockmanager and server to act as a full node.  The
following is a broad overview of the changes to integrate the package:

- The server is responsible for all connection management including
  persistent peers and banning
- Callbacks for all messages that are required to implement a full node
  are registered
- Logic necessary to serve data and behave as a full node is now in the
  callback registered with the peer

Finally, the following peer-related things have been improved as a part
of this refactor:

- Don't log or send reject message due to peer disconnects
- Remove trace logs that aren't particularly helpful
- Finish an old TODO to switch the queue WaitGroup over to a channel
- Improve various comments and fix some code consistency cases
- Improve a few logging bits
- Implement a most-recently-used nonce tracking for detecting self
  connections and generate a unique nonce for each peer
2015-10-23 06:17:29 +05:30
Dave Collins
5a9bac9668 Correct a few style related issues found by golint.
Also, update TravisCI goclean script to remove the special casing which
ignored 'Id' from the lint output since that exception is no longer
needed.  It was previously required due to the old version of btcjson,
but that is no longer in the repo.
2015-10-20 10:34:14 -05:00
Olaoluwa Osuntokun
0029905d43 Integrate a valid ECDSA signature cache into btcd
Introduce an ECDSA signature verification into btcd in order to
mitigate a certain DoS attack and as a performance optimization.

The benefits of SigCache are two fold. Firstly, usage of SigCache
mitigates a DoS attack wherein an attacker causes a victim's client to
hang due to worst-case behavior triggered while processing attacker
crafted invalid transactions. A detailed description of the mitigated
DoS attack can be found here: https://bitslog.wordpress.com/2013/01/23/fixed-bitcoin-vulnerability-explanation-why-the-signature-cache-is-a-dos-protection/
Secondly, usage of the SigCache introduces a signature verification
optimization which speeds up the validation of transactions within a
block, if they've already been seen and verified within the mempool.

The server itself manages the sigCache instance. The blockManager and
txMempool respectively now receive pointers to the created sigCache
instance. All read (sig triplet existence) operations on the sigCache
will not block unless a separate goroutine is adding an entry (writing)
to the sigCache. GetBlockTemplate generation now also utilizes the
sigCache in order to avoid unnecessarily double checking signatures
when generating a template after previously accepting a txn to the
mempool. Consequently, the CPU miner now also employs the same
optimization.

The maximum number of entries for the sigCache has been introduced as a
config parameter in order to allow users to configure the amount of
memory consumed by this new additional caching.
2015-10-08 17:31:42 -07:00
David Hill
c9ee3d9c5e wire: Implement SFNodeBloom (BIP0111).
SFNodeBloom is a new service flag that a node is required to use to
indicate that it supports bloom filtering.  This includes a protocol
version bump to 70011 and a wire version bump to 0.3.0.

btcd:
The SFNodeBloom flag is set by default.  A new configuration option
--nopeerbloomfilters has been added to to disable bloom filtering.

Any node advertising a version greater than or equal to 70011 that
attempts to use bloom filtering will be disconnected if bloom
filtering is disabled.

This mimics Bitcoin Core commit afb0ccaf9c9e4e8fac7db3564c4e19c9218c6b03
2015-09-28 16:25:44 -04:00
Daniel Krawisz
2dc8687728 Fix incorrect ip connection attempt logic.
The comment says "only allow recent nodes (10mins) after we failed 30 times",
but the server actually did the opposite and allowed only recent nodes before
30 failed connection attempts. This corrects the server's behavior.
2015-07-30 08:30:31 -05:00
Dave Collins
1ddf8e8edf Correct reconnect handling for persistent peers.
This commit correctly replaces persistent peers that are being retried in
the list of persistent peers so it will continue to be retried as
intended.

Also, limit the maximum retry interval for persistent peers to 5 minutes.

Fixes #463.
2015-07-20 12:35:44 -05:00
David Hill
9d6d0e4006 Keep track of peers with maps instead of lists. 2015-05-21 11:10:00 -04:00
Dave Collins
6e402deb35 Relicense to the btcsuite developers.
This commit relicenses all code in this repository to the btcsuite
developers.
2015-05-01 12:00:56 -05:00
Dave Collins
d8a4423b90 btcjson: Replace btcjson with version 2.
This commit removes the old and deprecated btcjsonv1 package, moves the
new version 2 package into its place, and updates all imports accordingly.
2015-05-01 00:43:09 -05:00
Olaoluwa Osuntokun
ab2ed710cb Fix 'add/delnode' type switch evaluation in server
* The cases for the 'addnode' command were previously
  stacked on top the new cases for the 'node' command.
  The intended behavior was to create a fall through and
  handle both commands. However, trying to use this
  syntax with a type switch caused the first case to be
  ignored.
* addnode' specific functions and structs in the server
  have been removed. Instead, the 'add' and 'del' subcommands
  are now proxied to the matching 'node' cmd functions.
2015-04-24 13:53:34 -07:00
Olaoluwa Osuntokun
65b044eea2 Fix #79 by adding a new node JSON-RPC command
* Gives node operators full control of peer connectivity
* RPC adds ability to disconnect all matching non-persistent peers,
  remove persistent peers, and connect to peers making them either
  temporary or persistent.
2015-04-14 23:07:51 -07:00
David Hill
0eef96e1c8 addrmgr: Always use a 50% chance between tried and new entries.
This change was suggested as Countermeasure 2 in
Eclipse Attacks on Bitcoin's Peer-to-Peer Network, Ethan
Heilman, Alison Kendler, Aviv Zohar, Sharon Goldberg. ePrint Archive
Report 2015/263. March 2015.

This mimics Bitcoin Core commit c6a63ceeb4956933588995bcf01dc3095aaeb1fc
2015-04-14 12:28:45 -04:00
Dave Collins
f5cdf2d6a8 Minor hashing-related optimizations.
This commit contains three classes of optimizations:
 - Reducing the number of unnecessary hash copies
 - Improve the performance of the DoubleSha256 function
 - A couple of minor optimizations of the ShaHash functions

The first class is a result of the Bytes function on a ShaHash making a
copy of the bytes before returning them.  It really should have been named
CloneBytes, but that would break the API now.

To address this, a comment has been added to the function which explicitly
calls out the copy behavior.  In addition, all call sites of .Bytes on a
ShaHash in the code base have been updated to simply slice the array when
a copy is not needed.  This saves a significant amount of data copying.

The second optimization modifies the DoubleSha256 function to directly use
fastsha256.Sum256 instead of the hasher interface.  This reduces the
number of allocations needed.  A benchmark for the function has been added
as well.

old: BenchmarkDoubleSha256  500000   3691 ns/op   192 B/op   3 allocs/op
new: BenchmarkDoubleSha256  500000   3081 ns/op    32 B/op   1 allocs/op

The final optimizations are for the ShaHash IsEqual and SetBytes functions
which have been modified to make use of the fact the type is an array and
remove an unneeded subslice.
2015-04-06 11:33:58 -05:00
Olaoluwa Osuntokun
1bf564d963 Fix #138 by dynamically updating heights of peers
In order to avoid prior situations of stalled syncs due to
outdated peer height data, we now update block heights up peers in
real-time as we learn of their announced
blocks.

Updates happen when:
   * A peer sends us an orphan block. We update based on
     the height embedded in the scriptSig for the coinbase tx
   * When a peer sends us an inv for a block we already know
     of
   * When peers announce new blocks. Subsequent
     announcements that lost the announcement race are
     recognized and peer heights are updated accordingly

Additionally, the `getpeerinfo` command has been modified
to include both the starting height, and current height of
connected peers.

Docs have been updated with `getpeerinfo` extension.
2015-04-01 17:22:45 -07:00
David Hill
db8fa6f850 Add id and timeoffset to getpeerinfo. 2015-03-09 23:27:53 -04:00
Dave Collins
637fbcadec rpcserver: Convert to make use of new btcjson.
This commit converts the RPC server over to use the new features available
in the latest version of btcjson and improve a few things along the way.
This following summarizes the changes:

- All btcjson imports have been updated to the latest package version
- The help has been significantly improved
  - Invoking help with no command specified now provides an alphabetized
    list of all supported commands along with one-line usage
  - The help for each command is automatically generated and provides much
    more explicit information such as the type of each parameter, whether
    or not it's optional or required, etc
  - The websocket-specific commands are now provided when accessing the
    help when connected via websockets
  - Help has been added for all websocket-specific commands and is only
    accessible when connected via websockets
- The error returns and handling of both the standard and websocket
  handlers has been made consistent
- All RPC errors have been converted to the new RPCError type
- Various variables have been renamed for consistency
- Several RPC errors have been improved
- The commands that are marked as unimplemented have been moved into the
  separate map where they belong
- Several comments have been improved
- An unnecessary check has been removed from the createrawtransaction
  handler
- The command parsing has been restructured a bit to pave the way for
  JSON-RPC 2.0 batching support
2015-02-24 23:46:51 -06:00
Dave Collins
6d289f602a Update btcjson path import paths to new location. 2015-02-19 11:55:22 -06:00
Dave Collins
c6bc8ac1eb Update btcnet path import paths to new location. 2015-02-05 23:24:53 -06:00
Olaoluwa Osuntokun
ecdffda748 Add support for an optional address-based transaction index.
* Address index is built up concurrently with the `--addrindex` flag.
* Entire index can be deleted with `--dropaddrindex`.
* New RPC call: `searchrawtransaction`
  * Returns all transacitons related to a particular address
  * Includes mempool transactions
  * Requires `--addrindex` to be activated and fully caught up.
* New `blockLogger` struct has been added to factor our common logging
  code
* Wiki and docs updated with new features.
2015-02-05 14:48:19 -08:00