This ensures that the temporary files are being kept with the rest of the data, rather than somewhere inappropriate such as on flash storage. It also allows the user to locate them somewhere else, such as on a dedicated drive.
This adds support for the PATCH method in addition to the existing PUT method.
Currently, a patch includes only files that have been added or modified, as well as placeholder files to indicate those that have been removed.
This is not production ready, as I am hoping to create patches on a more granular level - i.e. just the modified bytes of each file. It would also make sense to track deletions using a metadata/manifest file in a hidden folder.
It also adds early support of accessing files using a name rather than a signature or hash.
Now only skipping the HTLC redemption if the AT is finished and the balance has been redeemed by the buyer. This allows HTLCs to be refunded for ATs that have been refunded or cancelled.
Previously, if an error was returned from an Electrum server (such as "server busy") it would throw a NetworkException that would be caught outside of the server loop and cause the entire request to fail.
Instead of throwing an exception, I am now logging the error and returning null, in the same way we do for IOException and NoSuchElementException further up in the same method.
This allows the caller - most likely connectedRpc() - to move on to the next server in the list and try again.
This should fix an issue seen where a "server busy" response from a single server was essentially breaking our implementation, as we would give up altogether instead of trying another server.
This is a workaround for an UnsupportedOperationException thrown when using X2Go, due to PERPIXEL_TRANSLUCENT translucency being unsupported in splashDialog.setBackground(). We could choose to use a different version of the splash screen with an opaque background in these cases, but it is low priority.
Updated the "localeLang" files with new keys and removed old unused keys for English, German, Dutch, Italian, Finnish, Hungarian, Russian and Chinese translations
These are the same as the /lists/blacklist/address/{address} endpoints but allow a JSON array of addresses to be specified in the request body. They currently return true if
The ResourceList class creates or updates a list for the purpose of tracking resources on the Qortal network. This can be used for local blocking, or even for curating and sharing content lists. Lists are backed off to JSON files (in the lists folder) to ease sharing between nodes and users.
This first implementation allows access to an address blacklist only, but has been written in such a way that other lists can be easily added. This might be needed in the future, e.g. to blacklist a group, a poll, or some hosted data. It could also be used by community members to curate lists of favourite or problematic content, which could then be shared or even subscribed to on the chain by other users.
The inputs and outputs contain a simpler version than the ones in the raw transaction, consisting of `address`, `amount`, and `addressInWallet`. The latter of the three is to know whether the address is one that is derived from the supplied xpub master public key.