lbcutil/coinset
2014-03-24 22:04:02 -04:00
..
coins.go Added CoinSelector interface and a few simple algos as a sub-package 2014-03-22 23:25:33 -04:00
coins_test.go Added CoinSelector interface and a few simple algos as a sub-package 2014-03-22 23:25:33 -04:00
cov_report.sh Added CoinSelector interface and a few simple algos as a sub-package 2014-03-22 23:25:33 -04:00
README.md whitespace 2014-03-24 22:04:02 -04:00
test_coverage.txt Added CoinSelector interface and a few simple algos as a sub-package 2014-03-22 23:25:33 -04:00

coinset

Package coinset provides bitcoin-specific convenience functions for selecting from and managing sets of unspent transaction outpoints (UTXOs).

A comprehensive suite of tests is provided to ensure proper functionality. See test_coverage.txt for the gocov coverage report. Alternatively, if you are running a POSIX OS, you can run the cov_report.sh script for a real-time report. Package coinset is licensed under the liberal ISC license.

Documentation

Full go doc style documentation for the project can be viewed online without installing this package by using the GoDoc site here: http://godoc.org/github.com/conformal/btcutil/coinset

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/btcutil/coinset

Installation

$ go get github.com/conformal/btcutil/coinset

Usage

Each unspent transaction outpoint is represented by the Coin interface. An example of a concrete type that implements Coin is coinset.SimpleCoin.

The typical use case for this library is for creating raw bitcoin transactions given a set of Coins that may be spent by the user, for example as below:

var unspentCoins = []coinset.Coin{ ... }

When the user needs to spend a certain amount, they will need to select a subset of these coins which contain at least that value. CoinSelector is an interface that represents types that implement coin selection algos, subject to various criteria. There are a few examples of CoinSelector's:

  • MinIndexCoinSelector

  • MinNumberCoinSelector

  • MaxValueAgeCoinSelector

  • MinPriorityCoinSelector

For example, if the user wishes to maximize the probability that their transaction is mined quickly, they could use the MaxValueAgeCoinSelector to select high priority coins, then also attach a relatively high fee.

selector := &coinset.MaxValueAgeCoinSelector{
    MaxInputs: 10,
    MinAmountChange: 10000,
}
selectedCoins, err := selector.CoinSelect(targetAmount + bigFee, unspentCoins)
if err != nil {
	return err
}
msgTx := coinset.NewMsgTxWithInputCoins(selectedCoins)
...

The user can then create the msgTx.TxOut's as required, then sign the transaction and transmit it to the network.

License

Package coinset is licensed under the liberal ISC License.