bitcoin/src/interfaces
fanquake 143ace65db
Merge bitcoin/bitcoin#28890: rpc: Remove deprecated -rpcserialversion
fa46cc22bc696e6845915ae91d6b68e36bf4c242 Remove deprecated -rpcserialversion (MarcoFalke)

Pull request description:

  The flag is problematic for many reasons:

  * It is deprecated
  * It is a global flag, requiring a restart to change, as opposed to a flag that can be set on each RPC invocation
  * It may be hidden in config files by accident, hard to debug, causing LND crashes and bugs, see https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues/28730#issuecomment-1780940868
  * It makes performance improvements harder to implement: https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/pull/17529#issuecomment-556082818

  Fix all issues by removing it.

  If there is a use-case, likely a per-RPC flag can be added, if needed.

ACKs for top commit:
  ajtowns:
    crACK fa46cc22bc696e6845915ae91d6b68e36bf4c242
  TheCharlatan:
    lgtm ACK fa46cc22bc696e6845915ae91d6b68e36bf4c242

Tree-SHA512: 96ba1c60356ce93954fe5c2a59045771c6d1516ad0d9dc436ef1800a1f1b0153f0d5fb78ca99d53ad54ba25fbce36962bdf1d4325aceedfc8154a61347a6a915
2024-01-05 10:42:10 +00:00
..
2022-12-24 23:49:50 +00:00

Internal c++ interfaces

The following interfaces are defined here:

  • Chain — used by wallet to access blockchain and mempool state. Added in #14437, #14711, #15288, and #10973.

  • ChainClient — used by node to start & stop Chain clients. Added in #14437.

  • Node — used by GUI to start & stop bitcoin node. Added in #10244.

  • Wallet — used by GUI to access wallets. Added in #10244.

  • Handler — returned by handleEvent methods on interfaces above and used to manage lifetimes of event handlers.

  • Init — used by multiprocess code to access interfaces above on startup. Added in #19160.

  • Ipc — used by multiprocess code to access Init interface across processes. Added in #19160.

The interfaces above define boundaries between major components of bitcoin code (node, wallet, and gui), making it possible for them to run in different processes, and be tested, developed, and understood independently. These interfaces are not currently designed to be stable or to be used externally.