Fixed up bad function comment headers
Added a small set of tests for the ScriptToAddrHashes function to test
functionality of a couple real multisig cases as well as error checking
The name handlers for a package level is a bit too generic and could
easily cause a name collision. Even though the compiler would catch it,
use something a bit more descriptive.
Since the command to handler mappings are the most often modified and
referenced code in rpcserver.go and rpcwebsocket.go, move them near the
top of their respective files.
This commit cleans up the standard RPC command hanlding a bit by removing
the websocket specific notification channel from the handlers. This was
previously required because the sendrawtransaction, when called from a
websocket enabled connection, needs to add a notification for when the
transaction is mined.
This commit modifies that to instead implement a websocket extended
version of sendrawtransaction which invokes the standard handler and adds
the notification. In addition, the main send was modified to first look
if the command has a websocket specific handler first, and then falls back
to standard commands, rather than the previous approach of first checking
for a standard command and falling through to websocket commands. This
essentially allows websockets connections to extend commands with the same
name with additional functionality such as what was done in this commit.
The rpcserver.go file is starting to get a bit unwieldy. This commit
moves the separable websocket specific bits into a separate file named
rpcwebsocket.go.
Added MarshalJSON method to Vin which properly omits the Vout field
from coinbase Vin's by using anonymous structs with the proper
subsets of fields outputted by bitcoind
Changed Vout.ScriptPubKey to add omitempty for ReqSigs and Addresses:
both fields are not shown when there is an error identifying to
scriptType or parsing addresses in bitcoind
Added error checking for script disassembley
Changed vout to handle errors in processing the way bitcoind does: the
type displayed is "nonstandard" when the calculated type is nonstandard
or nulltype and also when there is an error getting the address.
Still doesn't properly support multisig addresses, but now it should
return "nonstandard" since since address lookup fails for those cases.
Since the decoderawtransaction result makes use of the same vin and vout
lists, this commit also factors the logic for those out into separate
functions.
The fields of the PeerInfo should not have been marked omit as the only
ones that should be omitted to for compatibility are the SyncNode and
BanScore fields.
In order to match the Satohsi client, the return is supposed to be an
8-digit string representation of the services instead of the actual
services numeric value.
The ScriptSig field of the Vin type for TxRawResult is now a pointer in
btcjson so it can be properly omitted. This commit updates the code to
create the new ScriptSig object as needed.
The previous commit modified the Vin ScriptSig field to be a pointer to an
anonymous struct so it could be properly omitted. However, the callers
need to be able to create a new object to assign to the field, so this
commit makes the previous anonymous struct an exported type named
ScriptSig.
In order for a field which is a struct to be omitted from JSON
marshal/unmarshal, it must be a pointer so the json package can tell when
it's empty (when it's nil).
The getrawtransaction RPC call should return a hex-encoded string of the
transaction when verbose is false instead of a TxRawResult object with the
Hex field set to be compatible with the Sathoshi client. This commit,
along with a recent commit to btcjson corrects this.
Also, while here, do a bit of cleanup, finish a TODO to check for an
invalid hash, and optimize the handling of non-verbose slightly.
The getrawtransaction command has recently added a verbose flag which
alters the output. The previous code made use of the "Hex" field of the
TxRawResult to return the information, but this is not consistent with the
original getrawtransaction RPC call which returns a string when verbose is
false and the TxRawResult JSON object when it is true.
This commit corrects that by allowing the result for getrawtransaction to
be either form.
The getblock RPC call should return a hex-encoded string of the block when
verbose is false instead of a BlockResult object with a Hex field set to
be compatible with the Sathoshi client. This commit, along with a recent
commit to btcjson corrects this.
Also, while here, move code which only applies to verbose mode after the
call which handles the non-verbose logic. This saves a few cycles since
the non-verbose logic doesn't need the extra information.
The getblock command has recently added a verbose flag which alters the
output. The previous code added a new field "Hex" to the BlockResult, but
this is not consistent with the origin getblock RPC call which returns a
string when verbose is false and the BlockResult JSON object when it is
true.
This commit corrects that by first removing the Hex field from the
BlockResult and second allowing the result for getblock to be either form.
This commit adds a new function to btcctl that shows the results as
properly indented JSON instead of relying on spew and changes all of the
commands that used spew to the new function. The output of btcctl
should be more user-facing than developer-facing.
This commit modifies btcctl to show float values with %f instead of the
default %v. This means the values will show similar to 1180923195.260000
instead of 1.18092319526e+09 (scientific notation).
The fee field of the getrawmempool RPC JSON response should be in Bitcoins
instead of Satoshi. This commit corrects that issue.
Also, add a couple of comments and fix a comment typo while here.
Since there is already a variable for the current block height in addition
to the next block height, use the existing curHeight variable instead
doing nextBlockHeight-1 in mempool add.
This commit does some housekeeping on peer.go to make the code more
consistent, correct a few comments, and add new comments to explain the
peer data flow. A couple of examples are variables not using the standard
Go style (camelCase) and comments that don't match the style of other
comments.