This changes notifications to JSON-RPC Requests, rather than
Responses, that also satisify the btcjson.Cmd interface and are
registered with btcjson's parser. This prevents issues where JSON-RPC
Response IDs clash due to a client using the same ID as what an old
notification used.
As this changes the API, and thus, requires notification handlers to
be modified, the remaining missing notifications used by btcwallet
have been implemented. Applications parsing these notifications, such
as btcgui, can now use a common handler function signature for all
notifications.
Test coverage for all notifications has been added (excluding testing
for badly-marshaled notifications with wrong numbers of parameters, or
wrong types).
Fixes#2.
The regression test does not work properly with the new headers-first
download approach, so force the old inv-based block download for
regression test mode.
It is not necessary to do all of the transaction validation on
blocks if they have been confirmed to be in the block chain leading
up to the final checkpoint in a given blockschain.
This algorithm fetches block headers from the peer, then once it has
established the full blockchain connection, it requests blocks.
Any blocks before the final checkpoint pass true for fastAdd on
btcchain operation, which causes it to do less valiation on the block.
It is not necessary to do all of the transaction validation on
blocks if they have been confirmed to be in the block chain leading
up to the final checkpoint in a given blockschain.
This algorithm fetches block headers from the peer, then once it has
established the full blockchain connection, it requests blocks.
Any blocks before the final checkpoint pass true for fastAdd on
btcchain operation, which causes it to do less valiation on the block.
The allows the tests to run without showing warning for malformed bits
(which are intentionally malformed for testing purposes). Also, the
tests would not compile since the new btclog backend was switched out.
This commit resolves that.
since we don't wait for peers, this largely just waits for the server procs
themselves to die. Unless the entire server is wedged (which is what kill -9 is
for) this should always shut down fairly swiftly.
This should mean we sync addrmanager and disestablish upnp correctly on
interrupt.
Discussed with davec.
This code borrows and fixes up a chunk of code to handle upnp from
Taipei-Torrent (https://github.com/jackpal/Taipei-Torrent), under
current versions of go none of the xml parsing was working correctly.
This fixes that and also refactors the SOAP code to be a little nicer by
stripping off the soap containers. It is still rather rough but seems to
correctly redirect ports and advertise the correct address.
Upnp is not run by default. --upnp will enable it, but it will still not
run if we are not listening or if --externalip is in use.
Closes#51
The you address is the one we already set up fo the user, so either waht
we connected to (this will work with tor, etc), or the ip the user
connect to us from otherwise. We must however check to see if it is the address
of the proxy and strip it.
The me addesss, we use the same address selection for local addresses as
always
This should mean that we pass our tor address out in the version message
and thus the peers should add us to their addressmanager.
This implements only the bare bones of external ip address selection
using very similar algorithms and selection methods to bitcoind. Every
address we bind to, and if we bind to the wildcard, every listening
address is recorded, and one for the appropriate address type of the
peer is selected.
Support for fetching addresses via upnp, external services, or via the
command line are not yet implemented.
Closes#35
Perform the requisite processing on .onion addresses to turn them into the tor
reserved ipv6 region (the same as bitcoind and onioncat). Furthermore,
when printing an ip address, reverse the conversion so we print it
nicely. base32 as standard is uppercase, but tor and bitcoind seem to
use lowercase so we first must for we force .onion addrs to uppercase
(and to lowercase on the reverse).
As a side effect we now should handle dns names on the command line (via tor if
required) and add them to the addressmanger as necessary.
The code to send an address messages in batches was previously clearing
all addresses from the existing message after queueing it to be sent.
Since the message is a pointer, this means it was removing the addresses
from the same message which might not have already been sent yet (from
another goroutine) which led to a race.
This commit modifies the code to create a new address message for each
batch as intended.
Fixes#58.
Updated handleGetRawTransaction to populate all the fields required to
match bitcoind. It still doesn't handle MULTISIG addresses correctly.
Changed handleGetBlock to implement new optional verbose (default true)
flag and also added a verboseTx flag to return TxRawDefault instead of
Txid. When verbose=false, GetBlock returns hex-encoded wire bytes for
the block.
Changed TxRawResult to omitempty block info for mempool tx as well as
moved Txid to Vin.TxId from Vin.ScriptSig.Txid (both match bitcoind
output)
Added support for new bitcoind [verbose=true] and added non-standard
optional verboseTx to return TxRawResults intead Txids
The vout field (as part of the getrawtransaction JSON reply) should be
set to the input's previous outpoint's index, not the current input
index.
Found by flam and reported on IRC. Thanks!