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@bdeco/node-bdeco

v0.0.1

Published

BdcashProtocol Ecosystem RPC Node Client

Downloads

2

Readme

A Node.js BDCash Client!

node-bdeco is a bdeco client for Node.js. It is a fork of the excellent Kapitalize Bitcoin Client (now removed from GitHub) intended for use with most bdcashs. The purpose of this repository is:

  • Provide a one-stop resource for the Node.js developer to get started with bdeco integration.
  • Promote Node.js development of bdeco web apps.
  • Identify and address any incompatibilities with the bdcashs and Bitcoin APIs that exist now and/or in the future.

Dependencies

You'll need a running instance of a BDCash Daemon to connect with.

Then, install the node-bdeco NPM package.

npm install node-bdeco

or

npm install git://github.com/BdcashProtocol/node-bdeco/

Examples

Some code examples follow below.

var bdeco = require('node-bdeco()

bdeco.auth('myusername', 'mypassword')

bdeco.getDifficulty(function() {
    console.log(arguments);
})

Chaining

Pretty much everything is chainable.

var bdeco = require('node-bdeco')()

bdeco
.auth('MyUserName', 'mypassword')
.getNewAddress()
.getBalance()

Methods

The Litecoin API is supported as direct methods. Use either camelcase or lowercase.

bdeco.getNewAddress(function(err, address) {
    this.validateaddress(address, function(err, info) {

    })
})

.exec(command [string], ...arguments..., callback [function])

Executes the given command with optional arguments. Function callback defaults to console.log. All of the API commands are supported in lowercase or camelcase. Or uppercase. Anycase!

bdeco.exec('getNewAddress')

bdeco.exec('getbalance', function(err, balance) {

})

.set(key [string, object], value [optional])

Accepts either key & value strings or an Object containing settings, returns this for chainability.

bdeco.set('host', '127.0.0.1')

.get(key [string])

Returns the specified option's value

bdeco.get('user')

.auth(user [string], pass [string])

Generates authorization header, returns this for chainability

Commands

All Litecoin API commands are supported, in lowercase or camelcase form.

Generation is limited to [genproclimit] processors, -1 is unlimited.

Options

You may pass options to the initialization function or to the set method.


var bdeco = require('bdeco')({
    user:'user'
})

bdeco.set('pass', 'somn')
bdeco.set({port:7142})

Available options and default values:

  • host localhost
  • port 7142
  • user
  • pass
  • passphrasecallback
  • https
  • ca

Passphrase Callback

With an encryped wallet, any operation that accesses private keys requires a wallet unlock. A wallet is unlocked using the walletpassphrase <passphrase> <timeout> JSON-RPC method: the wallet will relock after timeout seconds.

You may pass an optional function passphrasecallback to the node-bdeco initialization function to manage wallet unlocks. passphrasecallback should be a function accepting three arguments:

function(command, args, callback) {}
  • command is the command that failed due to a locked wallet.
  • args is the arguments for the failed command.
  • callback is a typical node-style continuation callback of the form function(err, passphrase, timeout) {}. Call callback with the wallet passphrase and desired timeout from within your passphrasecallback to unlock the wallet.

You may hard code your passphrase (not recommended) as follows:

var bdeco = require('node-bdeco')({
    passphrasecallback: function(command, args, callback) {
        callback(null, 'passphrase', 30);
    }
})

Because passphrasecallback is a continuation, you can retrieve the passphrase in an asynchronous manner. For example, by prompting the user:

var readline = require('readline')

var rl = readline.createInterface({
  input: process.stdin,
  output: process.stdout
})

var bdeco = require('node-bdeco')({
  passphrasecallback: function(command, args, callback) {
    rl.question('Enter passphrase for "' + command + '" operation: ', function(passphrase) {
      if (passphrase) {
        callback(null, passphrase, 1)
      } else {
        callback(new Error('no passphrase entered'))
      }
    })
  }
})

Secure RPC with SSL

By default bdcashd exposes its JSON-RPC interface via HTTP; that is, all RPC commands are transmitted in plain text across the network! To secure the JSON-RPC channel you can supply bdcashd with a self-signed SSL certificate and an associated private key to enable HTTPS. For example, in your bdeco.conf:

rpcssl=1
rpcsslcertificatechainfile=/etc/ssl/certs/bdcashd.crt
rpcsslprivatekeyfile=/etc/ssl/private/bdcashd.pem

In order to securely access an SSL encrypted JSON-RPC interface you need a copy of the self-signed certificate from the server: in this case bdcashd.crt. Pass your self-signed certificate in the ca option and set https: true and node-bdeco is secured!

var fs = require('fs')

var ca = fs.readFileSync('bdcashd.crt')

var bdeco = require('node-bdeco')({
  user: 'rpcusername',
  pass: 'rpcpassword',
  https: true,
  ca: ca
})