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147 lines
6.4 KiB
147 lines
6.4 KiB
9 years ago
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// Copyright (c) 2015 The btcsuite developers
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// Use of this source code is governed by an ISC
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// license that can be found in the LICENSE file.
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/*
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Package btcjson provides primitives for working with the bitcoin JSON-RPC API.
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Overview
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When communicating via the JSON-RPC protocol, all of the commands need to be
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marshalled to and from the the wire in the appropriate format. This package
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provides data structures and primitives to ease this process.
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In addition, it also provides some additional features such as custom command
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registration, command categorization, and reflection-based help generation.
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JSON-RPC Protocol Overview
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This information is not necessary in order to use this package, but it does
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provide some intuition into what the marshalling and unmarshalling that is
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discussed below is doing under the hood.
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As defined by the JSON-RPC spec, there are effectively two forms of messages on
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the wire:
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- Request Objects
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{"jsonrpc":"1.0","id":"SOMEID","method":"SOMEMETHOD","params":[SOMEPARAMS]}
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NOTE: Notifications are the same format except the id field is null.
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- Response Objects
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{"result":SOMETHING,"error":null,"id":"SOMEID"}
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{"result":null,"error":{"code":SOMEINT,"message":SOMESTRING},"id":"SOMEID"}
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For requests, the params field can vary in what it contains depending on the
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method (a.k.a. command) being sent. Each parameter can be as simple as an int
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or a complex structure containing many nested fields. The id field is used to
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identify a request and will be included in the associated response.
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When working with asynchronous transports, such as websockets, spontaneous
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notifications are also possible. As indicated, they are the same as a request
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object, except they have the id field set to null. Therefore, servers will
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ignore requests with the id field set to null, while clients can choose to
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consume or ignore them.
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Unfortunately, the original Bitcoin JSON-RPC API (and hence anything compatible
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with it) doesn't always follow the spec and will sometimes return an error
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string in the result field with a null error for certain commands. However,
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for the most part, the error field will be set as described on failure.
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Marshalling and Unmarshalling
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Based upon the discussion above, it should be easy to see how the types of this
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package map into the required parts of the protocol
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- Request Objects (type Request)
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- Commands (type <Foo>Cmd)
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- Notifications (type <Foo>Ntfn)
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- Response Objects (type Response)
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- Result (type <Foo>Result)
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To simplify the marshalling of the requests and responses, the MarshalCmd and
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MarshalResponse functions are provided. They return the raw bytes ready to be
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sent across the wire.
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Unmarshalling a received Request object is a two step process:
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1) Unmarshal the raw bytes into a Request struct instance via json.Unmarshal
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2) Use UnmarshalCmd on the Result field of the unmarshalled Request to create
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a concrete command or notification instance with all struct fields set
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accordingly
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This approach is used since it provides the caller with access to the additional
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fields in the request that are not part of the command such as the ID.
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Unmarshalling a received Response object is also a two step process:
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1) Unmarhsal the raw bytes into a Response struct instance via json.Unmarshal
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2) Depending on the ID, unmarshal the Result field of the unmarshalled
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Response to create a concrete type instance
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As above, this approach is used since it provides the caller with access to the
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fields in the response such as the ID and Error.
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Command Creation
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This package provides two approaches for creating a new command. This first,
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and preferred, method is to use one of the New<Foo>Cmd functions. This allows
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static compile-time checking to help ensure the parameters stay in sync with
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the struct definitions.
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The second approach is the NewCmd function which takes a method (command) name
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and variable arguments. The function includes full checking to ensure the
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parameters are accurate according to provided method, however these checks are,
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obviously, run-time which means any mistakes won't be found until the code is
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actually executed. However, it is quite useful for user-supplied commands
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that are intentionally dynamic.
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Custom Command Registration
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The command handling of this package is built around the concept of registered
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commands. This is true for the wide variety of commands already provided by the
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package, but it also means caller can easily provide custom commands with all
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of the same functionality as the built-in commands. Use the RegisterCmd
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function for this purpose.
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A list of all registered methods can be obtained with the RegisteredCmdMethods
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function.
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Command Inspection
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All registered commands are registered with flags that identify information such
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as whether the command applies to a chain server, wallet server, or is a
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notification along with the method name to use. These flags can be obtained
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with the MethodUsageFlags flags, and the method can be obtained with the
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CmdMethod function.
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Help Generation
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To facilitate providing consistent help to users of the RPC server, this package
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exposes the GenerateHelp and function which uses reflection on registered
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commands or notifications, as well as the provided expected result types, to
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generate the final help text.
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In addition, the MethodUsageText function is provided to generate consistent
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one-line usage for registered commands and notifications using reflection.
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Errors
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There are 2 distinct type of errors supported by this package:
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- General errors related to marshalling or unmarshalling or improper use of
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the package (type Error)
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- RPC errors which are intended to be returned across the wire as a part of
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the JSON-RPC response (type RPCError)
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The first category of errors (type Error) typically indicates a programmer error
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and can be avoided by properly using the API. Errors of this type will be
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returned from the various functions available in this package. They identify
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issues such as unsupported field types, attempts to register malformed commands,
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and attempting to create a new command with an improper number of parameters.
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The specific reason for the error can be detected by type asserting it to a
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*btcjson.Error and accessing the ErrorCode field.
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The second category of errors (type RPCError), on the other hand, are useful for
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returning errors to RPC clients. Consequently, they are used in the previously
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described Response type.
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*/
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package btcjson
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