lbcutil/block.go
Dave Collins 22c91fa80a Update for recent chainhash-related API changes. (#78)
This updates all code in the main package and subpackages to make use of
the new chainhash package since the old wire.ShaHash type and functions
have been removed in favor of the abstracted package.

Also, since this required API changes anyways and the hash algorithm is
no longer tied specifically to SHA, all other functions throughout the
code base which had "Sha" in their name have been changed to Hash so
they are not incorrectly implying the hash algorithm.

The following is an overview of the changes:

- Update all references to wire.ShaHash to the new chainhash.Hash type
- Rename the following functions and update all references:
  - Block.Sha -> Hash
  - Block.TxSha -> TxHash
  - Tx.Sha -> Hash
  - bloom.Filter.AddShaHash -> AddHash
- Rename all variables that included sha in their name to include hash
  instead
- Add license headers to coinset package files
2016-08-08 12:38:16 -05:00

244 lines
7.7 KiB
Go

// Copyright (c) 2013-2016 The btcsuite developers
// Use of this source code is governed by an ISC
// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
package btcutil
import (
"bytes"
"fmt"
"io"
"github.com/btcsuite/btcd/chaincfg/chainhash"
"github.com/btcsuite/btcd/wire"
)
// OutOfRangeError describes an error due to accessing an element that is out
// of range.
type OutOfRangeError string
// BlockHeightUnknown is the value returned for a block height that is unknown.
// This is typically because the block has not been inserted into the main chain
// yet.
const BlockHeightUnknown = int32(-1)
// Error satisfies the error interface and prints human-readable errors.
func (e OutOfRangeError) Error() string {
return string(e)
}
// Block defines a bitcoin block that provides easier and more efficient
// manipulation of raw blocks. It also memoizes hashes for the block and its
// transactions on their first access so subsequent accesses don't have to
// repeat the relatively expensive hashing operations.
type Block struct {
msgBlock *wire.MsgBlock // Underlying MsgBlock
serializedBlock []byte // Serialized bytes for the block
blockHash *chainhash.Hash // Cached block hash
blockHeight int32 // Height in the main block chain
transactions []*Tx // Transactions
txnsGenerated bool // ALL wrapped transactions generated
}
// MsgBlock returns the underlying wire.MsgBlock for the Block.
func (b *Block) MsgBlock() *wire.MsgBlock {
// Return the cached block.
return b.msgBlock
}
// Bytes returns the serialized bytes for the Block. This is equivalent to
// calling Serialize on the underlying wire.MsgBlock, however it caches the
// result so subsequent calls are more efficient.
func (b *Block) Bytes() ([]byte, error) {
// Return the cached serialized bytes if it has already been generated.
if len(b.serializedBlock) != 0 {
return b.serializedBlock, nil
}
// Serialize the MsgBlock.
var w bytes.Buffer
err := b.msgBlock.Serialize(&w)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
serializedBlock := w.Bytes()
// Cache the serialized bytes and return them.
b.serializedBlock = serializedBlock
return serializedBlock, nil
}
// Hash returns the block identifier hash for the Block. This is equivalent to
// calling BlockHash on the underlying wire.MsgBlock, however it caches the
// result so subsequent calls are more efficient.
func (b *Block) Hash() *chainhash.Hash {
// Return the cached block hash if it has already been generated.
if b.blockHash != nil {
return b.blockHash
}
// Cache the block hash and return it.
hash := b.msgBlock.BlockHash()
b.blockHash = &hash
return &hash
}
// Tx returns a wrapped transaction (btcutil.Tx) for the transaction at the
// specified index in the Block. The supplied index is 0 based. That is to
// say, the first transaction in the block is txNum 0. This is nearly
// equivalent to accessing the raw transaction (wire.MsgTx) from the
// underlying wire.MsgBlock, however the wrapped transaction has some helpful
// properties such as caching the hash so subsequent calls are more efficient.
func (b *Block) Tx(txNum int) (*Tx, error) {
// Ensure the requested transaction is in range.
numTx := uint64(len(b.msgBlock.Transactions))
if txNum < 0 || uint64(txNum) > numTx {
str := fmt.Sprintf("transaction index %d is out of range - max %d",
txNum, numTx-1)
return nil, OutOfRangeError(str)
}
// Generate slice to hold all of the wrapped transactions if needed.
if len(b.transactions) == 0 {
b.transactions = make([]*Tx, numTx)
}
// Return the wrapped transaction if it has already been generated.
if b.transactions[txNum] != nil {
return b.transactions[txNum], nil
}
// Generate and cache the wrapped transaction and return it.
newTx := NewTx(b.msgBlock.Transactions[txNum])
newTx.SetIndex(txNum)
b.transactions[txNum] = newTx
return newTx, nil
}
// Transactions returns a slice of wrapped transactions (btcutil.Tx) for all
// transactions in the Block. This is nearly equivalent to accessing the raw
// transactions (wire.MsgTx) in the underlying wire.MsgBlock, however it
// instead provides easy access to wrapped versions (btcutil.Tx) of them.
func (b *Block) Transactions() []*Tx {
// Return transactions if they have ALL already been generated. This
// flag is necessary because the wrapped transactions are lazily
// generated in a sparse fashion.
if b.txnsGenerated {
return b.transactions
}
// Generate slice to hold all of the wrapped transactions if needed.
if len(b.transactions) == 0 {
b.transactions = make([]*Tx, len(b.msgBlock.Transactions))
}
// Generate and cache the wrapped transactions for all that haven't
// already been done.
for i, tx := range b.transactions {
if tx == nil {
newTx := NewTx(b.msgBlock.Transactions[i])
newTx.SetIndex(i)
b.transactions[i] = newTx
}
}
b.txnsGenerated = true
return b.transactions
}
// TxHash returns the hash for the requested transaction number in the Block.
// The supplied index is 0 based. That is to say, the first transaction in the
// block is txNum 0. This is equivalent to calling TxHash on the underlying
// wire.MsgTx, however it caches the result so subsequent calls are more
// efficient.
func (b *Block) TxHash(txNum int) (*chainhash.Hash, error) {
// Attempt to get a wrapped transaction for the specified index. It
// will be created lazily if needed or simply return the cached version
// if it has already been generated.
tx, err := b.Tx(txNum)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
// Defer to the wrapped transaction which will return the cached hash if
// it has already been generated.
return tx.Hash(), nil
}
// TxLoc returns the offsets and lengths of each transaction in a raw block.
// It is used to allow fast indexing into transactions within the raw byte
// stream.
func (b *Block) TxLoc() ([]wire.TxLoc, error) {
rawMsg, err := b.Bytes()
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
rbuf := bytes.NewBuffer(rawMsg)
var mblock wire.MsgBlock
txLocs, err := mblock.DeserializeTxLoc(rbuf)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return txLocs, err
}
// Height returns the saved height of the block in the block chain. This value
// will be BlockHeightUnknown if it hasn't already explicitly been set.
func (b *Block) Height() int32 {
return b.blockHeight
}
// SetHeight sets the height of the block in the block chain.
func (b *Block) SetHeight(height int32) {
b.blockHeight = height
}
// NewBlock returns a new instance of a bitcoin block given an underlying
// wire.MsgBlock. See Block.
func NewBlock(msgBlock *wire.MsgBlock) *Block {
return &Block{
msgBlock: msgBlock,
blockHeight: BlockHeightUnknown,
}
}
// NewBlockFromBytes returns a new instance of a bitcoin block given the
// serialized bytes. See Block.
func NewBlockFromBytes(serializedBlock []byte) (*Block, error) {
br := bytes.NewReader(serializedBlock)
b, err := NewBlockFromReader(br)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
b.serializedBlock = serializedBlock
return b, nil
}
// NewBlockFromReader returns a new instance of a bitcoin block given a
// Reader to deserialize the block. See Block.
func NewBlockFromReader(r io.Reader) (*Block, error) {
// Deserialize the bytes into a MsgBlock.
var msgBlock wire.MsgBlock
err := msgBlock.Deserialize(r)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
b := Block{
msgBlock: &msgBlock,
blockHeight: BlockHeightUnknown,
}
return &b, nil
}
// NewBlockFromBlockAndBytes returns a new instance of a bitcoin block given
// an underlying wire.MsgBlock and the serialized bytes for it. See Block.
func NewBlockFromBlockAndBytes(msgBlock *wire.MsgBlock, serializedBlock []byte) *Block {
return &Block{
msgBlock: msgBlock,
serializedBlock: serializedBlock,
blockHeight: BlockHeightUnknown,
}
}