C FFI for Bitcoin Wallet Tracker, a lightweight personal indexer for bitcoin wallets.
libbwt
allows to programmatically manage bwt's Electrum RPC and HTTP API servers.
It can be used as a compatibility layer for easily upgrading Electrum-backed wallets to support a
Bitcoin Core full node backend (by running the Electrum server in the wallet),
or for shipping software that integrates bwt's HTTP API
as an all-in-one package.
Support development: ⛓️ on-chain or ⚡ lightning via BTCPay
Also see: bwt, libbwt-jni and libbwt-nodejs.
The interface exposes two functions, for starting and stopping the bwt daemon. Everything else is done through the Electrum/HTTP APIs.
typedef void (*bwt_init_cb)(void* shutdown_ptr);
typedef void (*bwt_notify_cb)(const char* msg_type, float progress,
uint32_t detail_n, const char* detail_s);
int32_t bwt_start(const char* json_config,
bwt_init_cb init_cb,
bwt_notify_cb notify_cb);
int32_t bwt_shutdown(void* shutdown_ptr);
Both functions return 0
on success or -1
on failure.
Start the configured server(s).
This will initialize the daemon and start the sync loop, blocking the current thread.
json_config
should be provided as a JSON-encoded string. The list of options is available below.
Example minimal configuration:
{
"bitcoind_dir": "/home/satoshi/.bitcoin",
"descriptors": [ "wpkh(xpub66../0/*)" ],
"electrum_addr": "127.0.0.1:0"
}
You can configure
electrum_addr
/http_addr
to127.0.0.1:0
to bind on any available port. The assigned port will be reported back via theready:X
notifications (see below).
The function accepts two callbacks: init_cb
and notify_cb
.
init_cb(shutdown_ptr)
will be called with the shutdown pointer (see bwt_shutdown()
)
right before bwt is started up, after the configuration is validated.
The notify_cb(msg_type, progress, detail_n, detail_s)
callback will be called with error messages,
information about the running services and progress updates, with the progress
argument indicating the
current progress as a float from 0 to 1.
The meaning of the detail_{n,s}
field varies for the different msg_type
s, which are:
progress:sync
- Progress updates for bitcoind's initial block download.detail_n
contains the unix timestamp of the current chain tip.progress:scan
- Progress updates for historical transactions rescanning.detail_n
contains the estimated remaining time in seconds.access_token
- Whenauth_ephemeral
is enabled (see below),detail_s
contains the randomly generated access token.ready:electrum
- The Electrum server is ready.detail_s
contains the address the server is bound on, as an<ip>:<port>
string (useful for ephemeral binding on port 0).ready:http
- The HTTP server is ready.detail_s
contains the address the server is bound on.ready
- Everything is ready.error
- An error occurred during the initial start-up.detail_s
contains the error message.
The
detail_s
argument will be deallocated after calling the callback. If you need to keep it around, make a copy of it.Note that
progress:X
notifications will be sent from a different thread.
This function does not return until the daemon is stopped.
Shutdown the bwt daemon.
Should be called with the shutdown pointer passed to init_cb()
.
If this is called while bitcoind is importing/rescanning addresses, the daemon will not stop immediately but will be marked for later termination.
Pre-built signed & deterministic libbwt
library
files are available for download from the releases page
for Linux, Mac, Windows and ARMv7/8.
⚠️ The pre-built libraries are meant to make it easier to get started. If you're integrating bwt into real-world software, building from source is highly recommended.
The pre-built libraries are also available for download as an electrum_only
variant,
which doesn't include the HTTP API server. It is roughly 33% smaller and comes with less dependencies.
The releases are signed by Nadav Ivgi (@shesek). The public key can be verified on the PGP WoT, github, twitter, keybase, hacker news and this video presentation (bottom of slide).
# Download (change x86_64-linux to your platform)
$ wget https://github.com/bwt-dev/libbwt/releases/download/v0.2.4/libbwt-0.2.4-x86_64-linux.tar.gz
# Fetch public key
$ gpg --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv-keys FCF19B67866562F08A43AAD681F6104CD0F150FC
# Verify signature
$ wget -qO - https://github.com/bwt-dev/libbwt/releases/download/v0.2.4/SHA256SUMS.asc \
| gpg --decrypt - | grep x86_64-linux.tar.gz | sha256sum -c -
The signature verification should show Good signature from "Nadav Ivgi <[email protected]>" ... Primary key fingerprint: FCF1 9B67 ...
and libbwt-0.2.4-x86_64-linux.tar.gz: OK
.
All options are optional, except for descriptors
/xpubs
/addresses
(of which there must be at least one).
To start the API servers, set electrum_addr
/http_addr
.
network
- one ofbitcoin
,testnet
,signet
orregtest
(defaults tobitcoin
)bitcoind_url
- bitcoind url (defaults tohttp://localhost:<network-rpc-port>/
)bitcoind_auth
- authentication in<user>:<pass>
format (defaults to reading from the cookie file)bitcoind_dir
- bitcoind data directory (defaults to~/.bitcoin
on Linux,~/Library/Application Support/Bitcoin
on Mac, or%APPDATA%\Bitcoin
on Windows)bitcoind_cookie
- path to cookie file (defaults to.cookie
in the datadir)bitcoind_wallet
- bitcoind wallet to use (for use with multi-wallet)create_wallet_if_missing
- create the bitcoind wallet if it's missing (defaults to false)
If bitcoind is running locally on the default port, at the default datadir location and with cookie auth enabled (the default), connecting to it should Just Work™, no configuration needed.
descriptors
- an array of descriptors to trackxpubs
- an array of xpubs to track (SLIP32 ypubs/zpubs are supported too)addresses
- an array of addresses to trackaddresses_file
- path to file with addresses (one per line)rescan_since
- the unix timestamp to begin rescanning from, or 'now' to track new transactions only (the default)gap_limit
- the gap limit for address import (defaults to 20)initial_import_size
- the chunk size to use during the initial import (defaults to 350)force_rescan
- force rescanning for historical transactions, even if the addresses were already previously imported (defaults to false)no_wait_sync
- don't wait for bitcoind to finish syncing up before importing addresses (useful with pruning for scanning during IBD, off by default)
The API servers are unauthenticated by default. To enable authentication, set one of the following options:
auth_cookie
- set to a file path to enable cookie file based authenticationauth_token
- enable authentication with a specified access tokenauth_ephemeral
- set totrue
to generate a random ephemeral token and report it back via thetoken
notification
See auth.md
for more information about authentication.
poll_interval
- interval for polling new blocks/transactions from bitcoind in seconds (defaults to 5)tx_broadcast_cmd
- custom command for broadcasting transactionsverbose
- verbosity level for stderr log messages (0-4, defaults to 0)require_addresses
- when disabled, the daemon will start even without any configured wallet addresses (defaults to true)setup_logger
- enable stderr logging (defaults to true)prune_until
- prune blocks before the given height or unix timestamp (off by default, requires bitcoind to be configured withprune=1
)
electrum_addr
- bind address for electrum server (off by default)electrum_skip_merkle
- skip generating merkle proofs (off by default)
http_addr
- bind address for http server (off by default)http_cors
- allowed cross-origins for http server (none by default)
webhooks_urls
- array of urls to notify with index updates
unix_listener_path
- path to bind the sync notification unix socket (off by default)
Manually build the C FFI library for a single platform (requires Rust):
$ git clone https://github.com/bwt-dev/libbwt && cd libbwt
$ git checkout <tag>
$ git verify-commit HEAD
$ git submodule update --init
$ cargo build --release --target <platform>
The library file will be available in target/<platform>/release
, named
libbwt.so
for Linux/Android/ARM, libbwt.dylib
for OSX, or bwt.dll
for Windows.
To build the electrum_only
variant, set --no-default-features --features electrum
.
The library files for all supported platforms can be reproduced in a Docker container environment as follows:
$ git clone https://github.com/bwt-dev/libbwt && cd libbwt
$ git checkout <tag>
$ git verify-commit HEAD
$ git submodule update --init
# Linux, Windows, ARMv7 and ARMv8
$ docker build -t bwt-builder - < bwt/scripts/builder.Dockerfile
$ docker run -it --rm -u `id -u` -v `pwd`:/usr/src/libbwt -w /usr/src/libbwt \
--entrypoint scripts/build.sh bwt-builder
# Mac OSX (cross-compiled via osxcross)
$ docker build -t bwt-builder-osx - < bwt/scripts/builder-osx.Dockerfile
$ docker run -it --rm -u `id -u` -v `pwd`:/usr/src/libbwt -w /usr/src/libbwt \
--entrypoint scripts/build.sh bwt-builder-osx
$ sha256sum dist/*.tar.gz
You may set -e TARGETS=...
to a comma separated list of the platforms to build.
The available platforms are: x86_64-linux
, x86_64-osx
, x86_64-windows
, arm32v7-linux
and arm64v8-linux
.
Both variants will be built by default. To build the electrum_only
variant only, set -e ELECTRUM_ONLY_ONLY=1
.
The builds are reproduced on Travis CI using the code from GitHub. The SHA256 checksums are available under the "Reproducible builds" stage.
MIT