10542e0573
Since we already have the specific username and password we want to strip from errors, use a specific search string rather than a generic regular expression. This is quite a bit more efficient than using regular expressions and also has the benefit of being more accurate. Also, rather than using the added overhead of fmt to convert the error to a string, just call Error() directly on it to get the string. Finally, instead of just stripping it, replace it with the literal string "<username>:<password>" to avoid any possible confusion in the error messages where it might otherwise appear the url was being constructed incorrectly. ok jcv@ |
||
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.gitignore | ||
cov_report.sh | ||
doc.go | ||
internal_test.go | ||
jsonapi.go | ||
jsonapi_test.go | ||
jsonfxns.go | ||
jsonfxns_test.go | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
test_coverage.txt |
btcjson
Package btcjson implements the bitcoin JSON-RPC API. There is a test
suite which is aiming to reach 100% code coverage. See
test_coverage.txt
for the current coverage (using gocov). On a
UNIX-like OS, the script cov_report.sh
can be used to generate the
report. Package btcjson is licensed under the liberal ISC license.
This package is one of the core packages from btcd, an alternative full-node implementation of bitcoin which is under active development by Conformal. Although it was primarily written for btcd, this package has intentionally been designed so it can be used as a standalone package for any projects needing to communicate with a bitcoin client using the json rpc interface. BlockSafari is one such program that uses btcjson to communicate with btcd (or bitcoind to help test btcd).
JSON RPC
Bitcoin provides an extensive API call list to control bitcoind or bitcoin-qt through json-rpc. These can be used to get information from the client or to cause the client to perform some action.
The general form of the commands are:
{"jsonrpc": "1.0", "id":"test", "method": "getinfo", "params": []}
btcjson provides code to easily create these commands from go (as some of the commands can be fairly complex), to send the commands to a running bitcoin rpc server, and to handle the replies (putting them in useful Go data structures).
Sample Use
msg, err := btcjson.CreateMessage("getinfo")
reply, err := btcjson.RpcCommand(user, password, server, msg)
Documentation
Full go doc
style documentation for the project can be viewed online without
installing this package by using the GoDoc site
here.
You can also view the documentation locally once the package is installed with
the godoc
tool by running godoc -http=":6060"
and pointing your browser to
http://localhost:6060/pkg/github.com/conformal/btcjson
Installation
$ go get github.com/conformal/btcjson
TODO
- Add data structures for remaining commands.
- Increase test coverage to 100%
GPG Verification Key
All official release tags are signed by Conformal so users can ensure the code has not been tampered with and is coming from Conformal. To verify the signature perform the following:
-
Download the public key from the Conformal website at https://opensource.conformal.com/GIT-GPG-KEY-conformal.txt
-
Import the public key into your GPG keyring:
gpg --import GIT-GPG-KEY-conformal.txt
-
Verify the release tag with the following command where
TAG_NAME
is a placeholder for the specific tag:git tag -v TAG_NAME
License
Package btcjson is licensed under the liberal ISC License.