9.2 KiB
12.2: Accessing Bitcoind with C
NOTE: This is a draft in progress, so that I can get some feedback from early reviewers. It is not yet ready for learning.
Though command-line curl
is the easiest way to access the bitcoind
directly, there are many other options for doing so and most of them support more fully featured programming languages. The best package for doing so in C is currently libbitcoinrpc. It uses a curl
library for accessing the data and it uses the somewhat clunky jansson
library for decoding the JSON.
Set Up libbitcoinrpc
To use libbitcoinrpc
, you need to install a basic C setup and the dependent packages, libcurl
, libjansson
, and libuuid
. The following will do so on a Ubuntu system:
$ sudo apt-get install make gcc libcurl4-openssl-dev libjansson-dev uuid-dev
You can then download libbitcoinrpc from Github. Clone it or grab a zip file, as you prefer.
$ sudo apt-get unzip
$ unzip libbitcoinrpc-master.zip
$ cd libbitcoinrpc-master/
Compile libbitcoinrpc
Before you can compile and install the package, you'll probably need to adjust your $PATH
, so that you can access /sbin/ldconfig
:
$ PATH="/sbin:$PATH"
For a Ubunto system, you'll also want to adjust the INSTALL_LIBPATH
in the libbitcoinrpc
Makefile
to install to /usr/lib
instead of /usr/local/lib
:
INSTALL_LIBPATH := $(INSTALL_PREFIX)/usr/lib
(If you prefer not to sully your /usr/lib
, the alternative is to change your etc/ld.so.conf
or its dependent files appropriately ... but for a test setup on a test machine, this is probably fine.)
Then you can compile:
$ make
If that works, you can install the package:
$ sudo make install
Write Code in C
libbitcoinrpc
has well-structured and simple methods for connecting to your bitcoind
, executing RPC calls, and decoding the response.
Setup Your Code
To use libbitcoinrpc
, make sure that your code files include the appropriate headers:
#include <jansson.h>
#include <bitcoinrpc.h>
You'll also need to link in the appropriate libraries whenever you compile:
$ cc mybitcoinclient.c -lbitcoinrpc -ljansson -o rpcclient
Build Your Connection
Building the connection to your bitcoind
server takes a few simple steps.
First, initialize the library:
bitcoinrpc_global_init();
Then connect to your bitcoind
. The four arguments for bitcoinrpc_cl_init_params
are username, password, IP address, and port. As usual, you should extract the user and password from ~/.bitcoin/bitcoin.conf
, while IP address 127.0.0.1 and port 18332 should be correct for the standard testnet setup described in this documents.
bitcoinrpc_cl_t *rpc_client;
rpc_client = bitcoinrpc_cl_init_params ("bitcoinrpc", "d8340efbcd34e312044c8431c59c792c", "127.0.0.1", 18332);
MAINNET VS TESTNET: The port would be 8332 for a mainnet setup.
If rpc_client
is successful, then you can go.
Later, when you're all done with your bitcoind
connection, you should close it:
bitcoinrpc_global_cleanup();
Appendix I shows the complete code for a test of a bitcoind
connection.
Make an RPC Call
In order to use an RPC method in bitcoinrpc
, you must initialize a variable of type bitcoinrpc_method_t
. You do so with the appropriate value for the method you want to use, all of which are listed in the bitcoinrpc Reference.
bitcoinrpc_method_t *getmininginfo = NULL;
getmininginfo = bitcoinrpc_method_init(BITCOINRPC_METHOD_GETMININGINFO);
Usually you would set parameters here, but getmininginfo
requires no parameters, so you can skip that for now.
Two more objects are required, a "response object" and an "error object". They're created via standard bitcoinrpc
function calls:
bitcoinrpc_resp_t *btcresponse = NULL;
btcresponse = bitcoinrpc_resp_init();
bitcoinrpc_err_t btcerror;
And now you can put it all together to make a getmininginfo
RPC call:
bitcoinrpc_call (rpc_client, getmininginfo, btcresponse, &btcerror);
Output Your Response
Retrieve the output of your call as a JSON object with bitcoinrpc_resp_get
.
json_t *jsonresponse = NULL;
jsonresponse = bitcoinrpc_resp_get (btcresponse);
If you want to output the complete JSON results of the RPC call, you can do so with a simple invocation of json_dumps
, from the jansson
library:
printf ("%s\n", json_dumps (j, JSON_INDENT(2)));
However since your now writing complete programs, you're probably going to want to do more subtle work, such as pulling out individual JSON values for specific usage. The jansson Reference details how to do so.
You can drill down to the result
JSON object:
json_t *jsonresult = NULL;
jsonresult = json_object_get(jsonresponse,"result");
printf ("%s\n", json_dumps (jsonresult, JSON_INDENT(2)));
Alternatively, you can drill down to an individual item like blocks
:
json_t *jsonblocks = NULL;
jsonblocks = json_object_get(jsonresult,"blocks");
int blocks;
blocks = json_integer_value(jsonblocks);
printf("Block Count: %d\n",blocks);
Appendix II has an example of this complete code.
Summary: Accessing Bitcoind with C
By linking to the bitcoinrpc
and jansson
libraries, you can easily access bitcoind
via RPC calls from a C library. To do so, you create an RPC connection, then make individual RPC calls. jansson
then allows you to decode the JSON responses.
What is the power of C? C allows you to take the next step beyond shell-scripting, permitting the creation of more comprehensive and robust programs. A more comprehensive example will appear in the next chapter.
Appendix I: Testing a Bitcoind Connection
Here's the complete code for a test of the connection to bitcoind
.
file: testbitcoin.c
#include <jansson.h>
#include <bitcoinrpc.h>
int main(void) {
bitcoinrpc_global_init();
bitcoinrpc_cl_t *rpc_client;
rpc_client = bitcoinrpc_cl_init_params ("bitcoinrpc", "d8340efbcd34e312044c8431c59c792c", "127.0.0.1", 18332);
if (rpc_client) {
printf("Successfully connected to server!\n");
} else {
printf("Failed to connect to server!\n");
}
bitcoinrpc_global_cleanup();
}
You can compile and run this as follows:
$ cc testbitcoin.c -lbitcoinrpc -ljansson -o testbitcoin
$ ./testbitcoin
Successfully connected to server!
Appendix II: Getting Mining Info
Here's the complete code for the getmininginfo
command, with organized variable initiatialization, error checking, and variable cleanup.
file: getmininginfo.c
#include <jansson.h>
#include <bitcoinrpc.h>
int main(void) {
bitcoinrpc_cl_t *rpc_client;
bitcoinrpc_method_t *getmininginfo = NULL;
bitcoinrpc_resp_t *btcresponse = NULL;
bitcoinrpc_err_t btcerror;
json_t *jsonresponse = NULL;
json_t *jsonresult = NULL;
json_t *jsonblocks = NULL;
int blocks;
bitcoinrpc_global_init();
rpc_client = bitcoinrpc_cl_init_params ("bitcoinrpc", "73bd45ba60ab8f9ff9846b6404769487", "127.0.0.1", 18332);
if (rpc_client) {
getmininginfo = bitcoinrpc_method_init(BITCOINRPC_METHOD_GETMININGINFO);
if (!getmininginfo) {
printf("ERROR: Unable to initialize getmininginfo method!\n");
exit(-1);
}
btcresponse = bitcoinrpc_resp_init();
if (!btcresponse) {
printf("Error: Cannot initialize response object!\n");
exit(-1);
}
bitcoinrpc_call(rpc_client, getmininginfo, btcresponse, &btcerror);
if (btcerror.code != BITCOINRPCE_OK) {
printf("Error: getmininginfo error code %d [%s]\n", btcerror.code,btcerror.msg);
exit(-1);
}
printf("Full Response: ");
jsonresponse = bitcoinrpc_resp_get (btcresponse);
printf ("%s\n", json_dumps (jsonresponse, JSON_INDENT(2)));
printf("\nJust the Result: ");
jsonresult = json_object_get(jsonresponse,"result");
printf ("%s\n", json_dumps (jsonresult, JSON_INDENT(2)));
jsonblocks = json_object_get(jsonresult,"blocks");
blocks = json_integer_value(jsonblocks);
printf("\nBlock Count: %d\n",blocks);
json_decref(jsonblocks);
json_decref(jsonresult);
json_decref(jsonresponse);
} else {
printf("ERROR: Failed to connect to server!\n");
}
bitcoinrpc_cl_free(rpc_client);
bitcoinrpc_global_cleanup();
}
As usual, you can compile and run as follows:
$ cc getmininginfo.c -lbitcoinrpc -ljansson -o getmininginfo
$ ./getmininginfo
Full Response: {
"id": "03406237-cd8f-466d-ac31-86711ea9d1db",
"result": {
"blocks": 1147154,
"errors": "Warning: unknown new rules activated (versionbit 28)",
"pooledtx": 0,
"currentblocksize": 0,
"currentblockweight": 0,
"currentblocktx": 0,
"difficulty": 313525.08513550513,
"networkhashps": 3958339463617.417,
"chain": "test"
},
"error": null
}
Just the Result: {
"blocks": 1147154,
"errors": "Warning: unknown new rules activated (versionbit 28)",
"pooledtx": 0,
"currentblocksize": 0,
"currentblockweight": 0,
"currentblocktx": 0,
"difficulty": 313525.08513550513,
"networkhashps": 3958339463617.417,
"chain": "test"
}
Block Count: 1147154