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			155 lines
		
	
	
		
			6.1 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
| # 12.7: Accessing Bitcoind with Java
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| 
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| > **NOTE:** This is a draft in progress, so that I can get some feedback from early reviewers. It is not yet ready for learning.
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| 
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| Interacting with the `bitcoind` directly and using command-line `curl` can get simple if you understand how it works, but there's a project [JavaBitcoindRpcClient](https://github.com/Polve/JavaBitcoindRpcClient) that provides the functionality in a Java-API level, making it even easier to interact with your Bitcoin Server.
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| 
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| 
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| ## Setup Java
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| 
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| To install Java on the VPS Server, you are able to use the `apt-get` command. We will also use [Apache Maven](http://maven.apache.org/) to manage the dependencies, so we will install it together.
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| 
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| ```
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| $ apt-get install openjdk-9-jre-headless maven
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| ```
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| 
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| You can verify your Java installation:
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| ```
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| $ java -version
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| openjdk version "9-internal"
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| OpenJDK Runtime Environment (build 9-internal+0-2016-04-14-195246.buildd.src)
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| OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM (build 9-internal+0-2016-04-14-195246.buildd.src, mixed mode)
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| ```
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| 
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| ## Setup Dependency
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| 
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| If you use Maven in your Java project, you can include the dependency:
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| ```xml
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| <dependency>
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|   <groupId>wf.bitcoin</groupId>
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|   <artifactId>JavaBitcoindRpcClient</artifactId>
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|   <version>0.9.13</version>
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| </dependency>
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| ```
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| 
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| Or if you use Gradle:
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| ```groovy
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| compile 'wf.bitcoin:JavaBitcoindRpcClient:0.9.13'
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| ```
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| 
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| If you want a sample project and some instructions on how to run it on the server that we just created, you can refer to the [Bitcoind Java Sample Project](https://github.com/brunocvcunha/bitcoind-java-client-sample/).
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| 
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| ### Build Your Connection
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| 
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| To use `JavaBitcoindRpcClient`, you need to create a `BitcoindRpcClient` instance. The arguments in the URL are username, password, IP address and port. You should know this information from your work with `curl` . As you'll recall, the IP address 127.0.0.1 and port 18332 should be correct for the standard testnet setup described in this documents, while you can extract the user and password from `~/.bitcoin/bitcoin.conf`.
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| 
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| ```java
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|   BitcoindRpcClient rpcClient = new BitcoinJSONRPCClient("http://bitcoinrpc:d8340efbcd34e312044c8431c59c792c@127.0.0.1:18332");
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| ```
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| 
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| > **MAINNET VS TESTNET:** The port would be 8332 for a mainnet setup.
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| 
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| If `rpcClient` is successfully initialized, you'll be able to send off RPC commands.
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| 
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| Later, when you're all done with your `bitcoind` connection, you should close it:
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| ```
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| rpcClient.stop();
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| ```
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| 
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| ### Making your first RPC Call
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| 
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| In order to use an RPC method using `JavaBitcoindRpcClient`, you'll find that the `BitcoindRpcClient` provides most of the functionality that can be accessed through `bitcoin-cli` or `curl`, using the same method names. For more details about the commands that you are able to execute and what to expect back, you should refer to [3.2: Knowing Your Bitcoin Setup](03_2_Knowing_Your_Bitcoin_Setup.md).
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| 
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| For example, to execute the `getmininginfo` command to get the block information and the difficulty on the network, you should use the `getMiningInfo()` method:
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| ```java
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| MiningInfo info = rpcClient.getMiningInfo();
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| System.out.println("Mining Information");
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| System.out.println("------------------");
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| System.out.println("Chain......: " + info.chain());
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| System.out.println("Blocks.....: " + info.blocks());
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| System.out.println("Difficulty.: " + info.difficulty());
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| System.out.println("Hash Power.: " + new BigDecimal(info.networkHashps()).toPlainString());
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| ```
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| The output for this line should be similar to this:
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| ```
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| Mining Information
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| ------------------
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| Chain......: test
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| Blocks.....: 1254920
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| Difficulty.: 1.0
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| Hash Power.: 6585163152453.466796875
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| ```
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| 
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| ### Creating an Address
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| 
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| You can create a new address on your wallet attaching a specific label to it, as well as dump the private key for a specific address.
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| For more information about the wallet setup, you can check [3.3: Setting Up Your Wallet](03_3_Setting_Up_Your_Wallet.md).
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| 
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| ```java
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|   String address = rpcClient.getNewAddress("Learning-Bitcoin-from-the-Command-Line");
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|   System.out.println("New Address: " + address);
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| 
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|   String privKey = rpcClient.dumpPrivKey(address);
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|   System.out.println("Priv Key: " + privKey);
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| ```
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| Output:
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| ```
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| New Address: mpsFtZ8qTJPRGZy1gaaUw37fHeUSPLkzzs
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| Priv Key: cTy2AnmAALsHokYzJzTdsUBSqBtypmWfmSNYgG6qQH43euUZgqic
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| ```
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| 
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| 
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| 
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| ### Sending Transactions
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| 
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| You can easily send a transaction using the method `sendToAddress()`.
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| For more information about sending transactions, you can check [4: Sending Bitcoin Transactions](04_0_Sending_Bitcoin_Transactions.md).
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| 
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| 
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| ```java
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| String sendToAddress = rpcClient.sendToAddress("mgnNsZj6tPzpd7JwTTidUKnGoDTkcucLT5", 1);
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| System.out.println("Send: " + sendToAddress);
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| ```
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| This program will output a transaction id, for example:
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| ```
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| a2d2f629d6666ca6e440169a322850cd9d133f637f7a02a02a0a7477bc5687d4
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| ```
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| 
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| In case you want to adjust the transaction fee, you can use the `setTxFee` method before sending the output:
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| 
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| ```java
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| rpcClient.setTxFee(new BigDecimal(0.001).setScale(3, BigDecimal.ROUND_DOWN));
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| ```
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| 
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| 
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| ### Listening to Transactions or Blocks
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| 
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| You may want to write applications that keep listening the Blockchain, and execute a specific code when something happens, such as a transaction that involves an address in your wallet, or even the generation of a new block in the network.
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| To do that, `JavaBitcoindRpcClient` provides support to `BitcoinAcceptor`, where you can attach listeners in the network.
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| 
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| Example:
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| ```java
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|   BitcoinAcceptor acceptor = new BitcoinAcceptor(rpcClient, blockHash, 6, new BitcoinPaymentListener() {
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| 
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|       @Override
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|       public void transaction(Transaction tx) {
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|           System.out.println("Transaction: " + tx);
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| 
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|       }
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| 
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|       @Override
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|       public void block(String block) {
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|           System.out.println("Block: " + block);
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| 
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|       }
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|   });
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|   acceptor.run();
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| ```
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| 
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| Every time some transaction is sent, or a new block is generated, you should see a similar output in your console:
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| ```
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| Transaction: {account=Tests, address=mhopuJzgmTwhGfpNLCJ9CRknugY691oXp1, category=receive, amount=5.0E-4, label=Tests, vout=1, confirmations=0, trusted=false, txid=361e8fcff243b74ebf396e595a007636654f67c3c7b55fd2860a3d37772155eb, walletconflicts=[], time=1513132887, timereceived=1513132887, bip125-replaceable=unknown}
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| 
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| Block: 000000004564adfee3738314549f7ca35d96c4da0afc6b232183917086b6d971
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| ```
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