Skip to main content

The Swiss Army Knife of the Bitcoin protocol.

Project description

# python-bitcoinlib

This Python2/3 library provides an easy interface to the bitcoin data
structures and protocol. The approach is low-level and "ground up", with a
focus on providing tools to manipulate the internals of how Bitcoin works.

"The Swiss Army Knife of the Bitcoin protocol." - Wladimir J. van der Laan


## Requirements

sudo apt-get install libssl-dev

The RPC interface, bitcoin.rpc, is designed to work with Bitcoin Core v0.11.0
Older versions mostly work but there do exist some incompatibilities.


## Structure

Everything consensus critical is found in the modules under bitcoin.core. This
rule is followed pretty strictly, for instance chain parameters are split into
consensus critical and non-consensus-critical.

bitcoin.core - Basic core definitions, datastructures, and
(context-independent) validation
bitcoin.core.key - ECC pubkeys
bitcoin.core.script - Scripts and opcodes
bitcoin.core.scripteval - Script evaluation/verification
bitcoin.core.serialize - Serialization

In the future the bitcoin.core may use the Satoshi sourcecode directly as a
library. Non-consensus critical modules include the following:

bitcoin - Chain selection
bitcoin.base58 - Base58 encoding
bitcoin.bloom - Bloom filters (incomplete)
bitcoin.net - Network communication (in flux)
bitcoin.messages - Network messages (in flux)
bitcoin.rpc - Bitcoin Core RPC interface support
bitcoin.wallet - Wallet-related code, currently Bitcoin address and
private key support

Effort has been made to follow the Satoshi source relatively closely, for
instance Python code and classes that duplicate the functionality of
corresponding Satoshi C++ code uses the same naming conventions: CTransaction,
CBlockHeader, nValue etc. Otherwise Python naming conventions are followed.


## Mutable vs. Immutable objects

Like the Bitcoin Core codebase CTransaction is immutable and
CMutableTransaction is mutable; unlike the Bitcoin Core codebase this
distinction also applies to COutPoint, CTxIn, CTxOut, and CBlock.


## Endianness Gotchas

Rather confusingly Bitcoin Core shows transaction and block hashes as
little-endian hex rather than the big-endian the rest of the world uses for
SHA256. python-bitcoinlib provides the convenience functions x() and lx() in
bitcoin.core to convert from big-endian and little-endian hex to raw bytes to
accomodate this. In addition see b2x() and b2lx() for conversion from bytes to
big/little-endian hex.


## Module import style

While not always good style, it's often convenient for quick scripts if
import * can be used. To support that all the modules have \__all__ defined
appropriately.


# Example Code

See examples/ directory. For instance this example creates a transaction
spending a pay-to-script-hash transaction output:

$ PYTHONPATH=. examples/spend-pay-to-script-hash-txout.py
<hex-encoded transaction>

Also see dust-b-gone for a simple example of Bitcoin Core wallet interaction
through the RPC interface: https://github.com/petertodd/dust-b-gone


## Selecting the chain to use

Do the following:

import bitcoin
bitcoin.SelectParams(NAME)

Where NAME is one of 'testnet', 'mainnet', or 'regtest'. The chain currently
selected is a global variable that changes behavior everywhere, just like in
the Satoshi codebase.


## Unit tests

Under bitcoin/tests using test data from Bitcoin Core. To run them:

python -m unittest discover && python3 -m unittest discover

Please run the tests on both Python2 and Python3 for your pull-reqs!

Alternately, if Tox (see https://tox.readthedocs.org/) is available on your
system, you can run unit tests for multiple Python versions:

./runtests.sh

Currently, the following implementations are tried (any not installed are
skipped):

* CPython 2.7
* CPython 3.3
* CPython 3.4
* CPython 3.5
* PyPy
* PyPy3

HTML coverage reports can then be found in the htmlcov/ subdirectory.

## Documentation

Sphinx documentation is in the "doc" subdirectory. Run "make help" from there
to see how to build. You will need the Python "sphinx" package installed.

Currently this is just API documentation generated from the code and
docstrings. Higher level written docs would be useful, perhaps starting with
much of this README. Pages are written in reStructuredText and linked from
index.rst.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

python-bitcoinlib-0.6.1.tar.gz (65.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

python_bitcoinlib-0.6.1-py3-none-any.whl (80.7 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file python-bitcoinlib-0.6.1.tar.gz.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for python-bitcoinlib-0.6.1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 80a8db0538a94c02cb45b1939842df7017888fd5b565c74904051c0c83e76943
MD5 5e04762ea7b526779c2f395bae5e5a83
BLAKE2b-256 d7ceb99370038d379d5b8e9b7483bd7ea59f76592c28088635e65c746a1f20ef

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file python_bitcoinlib-0.6.1-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for python_bitcoinlib-0.6.1-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 ea8c192ba1e9bcaa516fc6ae2289e9ecbeaa12b5d73368d560c2d3a333d4ea04
MD5 aa0cbba523028cd3fc93158b6dbf7f50
BLAKE2b-256 cc207759018c6853b2c9e610ae757d4c8e573ab879b1ccf4dc9854c4ee16a492

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page