3
0
mirror of https://github.com/Qortal/altcoinj.git synced 2025-01-31 07:12:17 +00:00
Java library for adding altcoin support to bitcoinj
Go to file
2012-01-09 10:46:40 -08:00
src/com/google/bitcoin First cut at transaction confidence levels. Expose a TransactionConfidence object that is updated by peers and wallets, which tracks how many peers have announced the transaction and the height of the transaction in the best chain (if any). Unit tests that check it does the right thing with re-orgs. Various small cleanups and simplifications in the tests. 2012-01-09 10:46:40 -08:00
tests/com/google/bitcoin First cut at transaction confidence levels. Expose a TransactionConfidence object that is updated by peers and wallets, which tracks how many peers have announced the transaction and the height of the transaction in the best chain (if any). Unit tests that check it does the right thing with re-orgs. Various small cleanups and simplifications in the tests. 2012-01-09 10:46:40 -08:00
AUTHORS Add HeadersMessage and parsing support for it. Patch from Roman Mandeleil. 2011-12-05 18:35:10 +01:00
COPYING Initial checkin of BitCoinJ 2011-03-07 10:17:10 +00:00
pom.xml Prepare Derby for merging 2012-01-05 16:04:37 -08:00
README Update README. 2011-09-10 09:53:41 +00:00
TODO Update TODO file. 2011-12-29 20:27:45 +00:00

To get started, ensure you have the latest JDK installed, and download Maven from:

  http://maven.apache.org/

Then run "mvn clean package" to compile the software. You can also run "mvn site:site" to generate a website with
useful information like JavaDocs. The outputs are under the target/ directory.

Now ensure you're running a BitCoin node locally and run the example app:

  mvn exec:java -Dexec.mainClass=com.google.bitcoin.examples.PingService

It will download the block chain and eventually print a BitCoin address. If you send coins to it,
you should get them back a few minutes later when a block is solved.

Note that if you connect to a node that is itself downloading the block chain, you will see very slow progress (1
block per second or less). Find a node that isn't heavily loaded to connect to.

If you get a SocketDisconnectedException, the node you've connected to has its max send buffer set to low
(unfortunately the default is too low). Connect to a node that has a bigger send buffer,
settable by passing -maxsendbuffer=25600 to the Bitcoin C++ software.

For the convenience of Eclipse users, you can copy dependency jars to target/dependency using:

    mvn dependency:copy-dependencies