├── .gitignore
├── LICENSE
└── README.md
/.gitignore:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | # Build and Release Folders
2 | bin-debug/
3 | bin-release/
4 | [Oo]bj/
5 | [Bb]in/
6 |
7 | # Other files and folders
8 | .settings/
9 |
10 | # Executables
11 | *.swf
12 | *.air
13 | *.ipa
14 | *.apk
15 |
16 | # Project files, i.e. `.project`, `.actionScriptProperties` and `.flexProperties`
17 | # should NOT be excluded as they contain compiler settings and other important
18 | # information for Eclipse / Flash Builder.
19 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/LICENSE:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | GNU GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE
2 | Version 3, 29 June 2007
3 |
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570 | Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the
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572 | Public License "or any later version" applies to it, you have the
573 | option of following the terms and conditions either of that numbered
574 | version or of any later version published by the Free Software
575 | Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of the
576 | GNU General Public License, you may choose any version ever published
577 | by the Free Software Foundation.
578 |
579 | If the Program specifies that a proxy can decide which future
580 | versions of the GNU General Public License can be used, that proxy's
581 | public statement of acceptance of a version permanently authorizes you
582 | to choose that version for the Program.
583 |
584 | Later license versions may give you additional or different
585 | permissions. However, no additional obligations are imposed on any
586 | author or copyright holder as a result of your choosing to follow a
587 | later version.
588 |
589 | 15. Disclaimer of Warranty.
590 |
591 | THERE IS NO WARRANTY FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY
592 | APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT
593 | HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES PROVIDE THE PROGRAM "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY
594 | OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
595 | THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
596 | PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM
597 | IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF
598 | ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR OR CORRECTION.
599 |
600 | 16. Limitation of Liability.
601 |
602 | IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING
603 | WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MODIFIES AND/OR CONVEYS
604 | THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING ANY
605 | GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE
606 | USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE PROGRAM (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF
607 | DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD
608 | PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER PROGRAMS),
609 | EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
610 | SUCH DAMAGES.
611 |
612 | 17. Interpretation of Sections 15 and 16.
613 |
614 | If the disclaimer of warranty and limitation of liability provided
615 | above cannot be given local legal effect according to their terms,
616 | reviewing courts shall apply local law that most closely approximates
617 | an absolute waiver of all civil liability in connection with the
618 | Program, unless a warranty or assumption of liability accompanies a
619 | copy of the Program in return for a fee.
620 |
621 | END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
622 |
623 | How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
624 |
625 | If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
626 | possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it
627 | free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.
628 |
629 | To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest
630 | to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively
631 | state the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least
632 | the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
633 |
634 |
635 | Copyright (C)
636 |
637 | This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
638 | it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
639 | the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
640 | (at your option) any later version.
641 |
642 | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
643 | but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
644 | MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
645 | GNU General Public License for more details.
646 |
647 | You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
648 | along with this program. If not, see .
649 |
650 | Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
651 |
652 | If the program does terminal interaction, make it output a short
653 | notice like this when it starts in an interactive mode:
654 |
655 | Copyright (C)
656 | This program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'.
657 | This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
658 | under certain conditions; type `show c' for details.
659 |
660 | The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate
661 | parts of the General Public License. Of course, your program's commands
662 | might be different; for a GUI interface, you would use an "about box".
663 |
664 | You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or school,
665 | if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if necessary.
666 | For more information on this, and how to apply and follow the GNU GPL, see
667 | .
668 |
669 | The GNU General Public License does not permit incorporating your program
670 | into proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you
671 | may consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with
672 | the library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Lesser General
673 | Public License instead of this License. But first, please read
674 | .
675 |
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
/README.md:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | -?
2 | Print this help message and exit
3 |
4 | -alertnotify=
5 | Execute command when a relevant alert is received or we see a really
6 | long fork (%s in cmd is replaced by message)
7 |
8 | -assumevalid=
9 | If this block is in the chain assume that it and its ancestors are valid
10 | and potentially skip their script verification (0 to verify all,
11 | default:
12 | 0000000000000000000b9d2ec5a352ecba0592946514a92f14319dc2b367fc72,
13 | testnet:
14 | 000000000000006433d1efec504c53ca332b64963c425395515b01977bd7b3b0,
15 | signet:
16 | 0000002a1de0f46379358c1fd09906f7ac59adf3712323ed90eb59e4c183c020)
17 |
18 | -blockfilterindex=
19 | Maintain an index of compact filters by block (default: 0, values:
20 | basic). If is not supplied or if = 1, indexes for
21 | all known types are enabled.
22 |
23 | -blocknotify=
24 | Execute command when the best block changes (%s in cmd is replaced by
25 | block hash)
26 |
27 | -blockreconstructionextratxn=
28 | Extra transactions to keep in memory for compact block reconstructions
29 | (default: 100)
30 |
31 | -blocksdir=
32 | Specify directory to hold blocks subdirectory for *.dat files (default:
33 | )
34 |
35 | -blocksonly
36 | Whether to reject transactions from network peers. Automatic broadcast
37 | and rebroadcast of any transactions from inbound peers is
38 | disabled, unless the peer has the 'forcerelay' permission. RPC
39 | transactions are not affected. (default: 0)
40 |
41 | -conf=
42 | Specify path to read-only configuration file. Relative paths will be
43 | prefixed by datadir location. (default: bitcoin.conf)
44 |
45 | -daemon
46 | Run in the background as a daemon and accept commands
47 |
48 | -datadir=
49 | Specify data directory
50 |
51 | -dbcache=
52 | Maximum database cache size MiB (4 to 16384, default: 450). In
53 | addition, unused mempool memory is shared for this cache (see
54 | -maxmempool).
55 |
56 | -debuglogfile=
57 | Specify location of debug log file. Relative paths will be prefixed by a
58 | net-specific datadir location. (-nodebuglogfile to disable;
59 | default: debug.log)
60 |
61 | -includeconf=
62 | Specify additional configuration file, relative to the -datadir path
63 | (only useable from configuration file, not command line)
64 |
65 | -loadblock=
66 | Imports blocks from external file on startup
67 |
68 | -maxmempool=
69 | Keep the transaction memory pool below megabytes (default: 300)
70 |
71 | -maxorphantx=
72 | Keep at most unconnectable transactions in memory (default: 100)
73 |
74 | -mempoolexpiry=
75 | Do not keep transactions in the mempool longer than hours (default:
76 | 336)
77 |
78 | -par=
79 | Set the number of script verification threads (-8 to 15, 0 = auto, <0 =
80 | leave that many cores free, default: 0)
81 |
82 | -persistmempool
83 | Whether to save the mempool on shutdown and load on restart (default: 1)
84 |
85 | -pid=
86 | Specify pid file. Relative paths will be prefixed by a net-specific
87 | datadir location. (default: bitcoind.pid)
88 |
89 | -prune=
90 | Reduce storage requirements by enabling pruning (deleting) of old
91 | blocks. This allows the pruneblockchain RPC to be called to
92 | delete specific blocks, and enables automatic pruning of old
93 | blocks if a target size in MiB is provided. This mode is
94 | incompatible with -txindex and -rescan. Warning: Reverting this
95 | setting requires re-downloading the entire blockchain. (default:
96 | 0 = disable pruning blocks, 1 = allow manual pruning via RPC,
97 | >=550 = automatically prune block files to stay under the
98 | specified target size in MiB)
99 |
100 | -reindex
101 | Rebuild chain state and block index from the blk*.dat files on disk
102 |
103 | -reindex-chainstate
104 | Rebuild chain state from the currently indexed blocks. When in pruning
105 | mode or if blocks on disk might be corrupted, use full -reindex
106 | instead.
107 |
108 | -settings=
109 | Specify path to dynamic settings data file. Can be disabled with
110 | -nosettings. File is written at runtime and not meant to be
111 | edited by users (use bitcoin.conf instead for custom settings).
112 | Relative paths will be prefixed by datadir location. (default:
113 | settings.json)
114 |
115 | -startupnotify=
116 | Execute command on startup.
117 |
118 | -sysperms
119 | Create new files with system default permissions, instead of umask 077
120 | (only effective with disabled wallet functionality)
121 |
122 | -txindex
123 | Maintain a full transaction index, used by the getrawtransaction rpc
124 | call (default: 0)
125 |
126 | -version
127 | Print version and exit
128 |
129 | Connection options:
130 |
131 | -addnode=
132 | Add a node to connect to and attempt to keep the connection open (see
133 | the `addnode` RPC command help for more info). This option can be
134 | specified multiple times to add multiple nodes.
135 |
136 | -asmap=
137 | Specify asn mapping used for bucketing of the peers (default:
138 | ip_asn.map). Relative paths will be prefixed by the net-specific
139 | datadir location.
140 |
141 | -bantime=
142 | Default duration (in seconds) of manually configured bans (default:
143 | 86400)
144 |
145 | -bind=[:][=onion]
146 | Bind to given address and always listen on it (default: 0.0.0.0). Use
147 | [host]:port notation for IPv6. Append =onion to tag any incoming
148 | connections to that address and port as incoming Tor connections
149 | (default: 127.0.0.1:8334=onion, testnet: 127.0.0.1:18334=onion,
150 | signet: 127.0.0.1:38334=onion, regtest: 127.0.0.1:18445=onion)
151 |
152 | -connect=
153 | Connect only to the specified node; -noconnect disables automatic
154 | connections (the rules for this peer are the same as for
155 | -addnode). This option can be specified multiple times to connect
156 | to multiple nodes.
157 |
158 | -discover
159 | Discover own IP addresses (default: 1 when listening and no -externalip
160 | or -proxy)
161 |
162 | -dns
163 | Allow DNS lookups for -addnode, -seednode and -connect (default: 1)
164 |
165 | -dnsseed
166 | Query for peer addresses via DNS lookup, if low on addresses (default: 1
167 | unless -connect used)
168 |
169 | -externalip=
170 | Specify your own public address
171 |
172 | -forcednsseed
173 | Always query for peer addresses via DNS lookup (default: 0)
174 |
175 | -listen
176 | Accept connections from outside (default: 1 if no -proxy or -connect)
177 |
178 | -listenonion
179 | Automatically create Tor onion service (default: 1)
180 |
181 | -maxconnections=
182 | Maintain at most connections to peers (default: 125)
183 |
184 | -maxreceivebuffer=
185 | Maximum per-connection receive buffer, *1000 bytes (default: 5000)
186 |
187 | -maxsendbuffer=
188 | Maximum per-connection send buffer, *1000 bytes (default: 1000)
189 |
190 | -maxtimeadjustment
191 | Maximum allowed median peer time offset adjustment. Local perspective of
192 | time may be influenced by peers forward or backward by this
193 | amount. (default: 4200 seconds)
194 |
195 | -maxuploadtarget=
196 | Tries to keep outbound traffic under the given target (in MiB per 24h).
197 | Limit does not apply to peers with 'download' permission. 0 = no
198 | limit (default: 0)
199 |
200 | -networkactive
201 | Enable all P2P network activity (default: 1). Can be changed by the
202 | setnetworkactive RPC command
203 |
204 | -onion=
205 | Use separate SOCKS5 proxy to reach peers via Tor onion services, set
206 | -noonion to disable (default: -proxy)
207 |
208 | -onlynet=
209 | Make outgoing connections only through network (ipv4, ipv6 or
210 | onion). Incoming connections are not affected by this option.
211 | This option can be specified multiple times to allow multiple
212 | networks.
213 |
214 | -peerblockfilters
215 | Serve compact block filters to peers per BIP 157 (default: 0)
216 |
217 | -peerbloomfilters
218 | Support filtering of blocks and transaction with bloom filters (default:
219 | 0)
220 |
221 | -permitbaremultisig
222 | Relay non-P2SH multisig (default: 1)
223 |
224 | -port=
225 | Listen for connections on . Nodes not using the default ports
226 | (default: 8333, testnet: 18333, signet: 38333, regtest: 18444)
227 | are unlikely to get incoming connections.
228 |
229 | -proxy=
230 | Connect through SOCKS5 proxy, set -noproxy to disable (default:
231 | disabled)
232 |
233 | -proxyrandomize
234 | Randomize credentials for every proxy connection. This enables Tor
235 | stream isolation (default: 1)
236 |
237 | -seednode=
238 | Connect to a node to retrieve peer addresses, and disconnect. This
239 | option can be specified multiple times to connect to multiple
240 | nodes.
241 |
242 | -timeout=
243 | Specify connection timeout in milliseconds (minimum: 1, default: 5000)
244 |
245 | -torcontrol=:
246 | Tor control port to use if onion listening enabled (default:
247 | 127.0.0.1:9051)
248 |
249 | -torpassword=
250 | Tor control port password (default: empty)
251 |
252 | -upnp
253 | Use UPnP to map the listening port (default: 0)
254 |
255 | -whitebind=<[permissions@]addr>
256 | Bind to the given address and add permission flags to the peers
257 | connecting to it. Use [host]:port notation for IPv6. Allowed
258 | permissions: bloomfilter (allow requesting BIP37 filtered blocks
259 | and transactions), noban (do not ban for misbehavior; implies
260 | download), forcerelay (relay transactions that are already in the
261 | mempool; implies relay), relay (relay even in -blocksonly mode,
262 | and unlimited transaction announcements), mempool (allow
263 | requesting BIP35 mempool contents), download (allow getheaders
264 | during IBD, no disconnect after maxuploadtarget limit), addr
265 | (responses to GETADDR avoid hitting the cache and contain random
266 | records with the most up-to-date info). Specify multiple
267 | permissions separated by commas (default:
268 | download,noban,mempool,relay). Can be specified multiple times.
269 |
270 | -whitelist=<[permissions@]IP address or network>
271 | Add permission flags to the peers connecting from the given IP address
272 | (e.g. 1.2.3.4) or CIDR-notated network (e.g. 1.2.3.0/24). Uses
273 | the same permissions as -whitebind. Can be specified multiple
274 | times.
275 |
276 | Wallet options:
277 |
278 | -addresstype
279 | What type of addresses to use ("legacy", "p2sh-segwit", or "bech32",
280 | default: "bech32")
281 |
282 | -avoidpartialspends
283 | Group outputs by address, selecting all or none, instead of selecting on
284 | a per-output basis. Privacy is improved as an address is only
285 | used once (unless someone sends to it after spending from it),
286 | but may result in slightly higher fees as suboptimal coin
287 | selection may result due to the added limitation (default: 0
288 | (always enabled for wallets with "avoid_reuse" enabled))
289 |
290 | -changetype
291 | What type of change to use ("legacy", "p2sh-segwit", or "bech32").
292 | Default is same as -addresstype, except when
293 | -addresstype=p2sh-segwit a native segwit output is used when
294 | sending to a native segwit address)
295 |
296 | -disablewallet
297 | Do not load the wallet and disable wallet RPC calls
298 |
299 | -discardfee=
300 | The fee rate (in BTC/kB) that indicates your tolerance for discarding
301 | change by adding it to the fee (default: 0.0001). Note: An output
302 | is discarded if it is dust at this rate, but we will always
303 | discard up to the dust relay fee and a discard fee above that is
304 | limited by the fee estimate for the longest target
305 |
306 | -fallbackfee=
307 | A fee rate (in BTC/kB) that will be used when fee estimation has
308 | insufficient data. 0 to entirely disable the fallbackfee feature.
309 | (default: 0.00)
310 |
311 | -keypool=
312 | Set key pool size to (default: 1000). Warning: Smaller sizes may
313 | increase the risk of losing funds when restoring from an old
314 | backup, if none of the addresses in the original keypool have
315 | been used.
316 |
317 | -maxapsfee=
318 | Spend up to this amount in additional (absolute) fees (in BTC) if it
319 | allows the use of partial spend avoidance (default: 0.00)
320 |
321 | -mintxfee=
322 | Fees (in BTC/kB) smaller than this are considered zero fee for
323 | transaction creation (default: 0.00001)
324 |
325 | -paytxfee=
326 | Fee (in BTC/kB) to add to transactions you send (default: 0.00)
327 |
328 | -rescan
329 | Rescan the block chain for missing wallet transactions on startup
330 |
331 | -spendzeroconfchange
332 | Spend unconfirmed change when sending transactions (default: 1)
333 |
334 | -txconfirmtarget=
335 | If paytxfee is not set, include enough fee so transactions begin
336 | confirmation on average within n blocks (default: 6)
337 |
338 | -wallet=
339 | Specify wallet path to load at startup. Can be used multiple times to
340 | load multiple wallets. Path is to a directory containing wallet
341 | data and log files. If the path is not absolute, it is
342 | interpreted relative to . This only loads existing
343 | wallets and does not create new ones. For backwards compatibility
344 | this also accepts names of existing top-level data files in
345 | .
346 |
347 | -walletbroadcast
348 | Make the wallet broadcast transactions (default: 1)
349 |
350 | -walletdir=
351 | Specify directory to hold wallets (default: /wallets if it
352 | exists, otherwise )
353 |
354 | -walletnotify=
355 | Execute command when a wallet transaction changes. %s in cmd is replaced
356 | by TxID and %w is replaced by wallet name. %w is not currently
357 | implemented on windows. On systems where %w is supported, it
358 | should NOT be quoted because this would break shell escaping used
359 | to invoke the command.
360 |
361 | -walletrbf
362 | Send transactions with full-RBF opt-in enabled (RPC only, default: 0)
363 |
364 | ZeroMQ notification options:
365 |
366 | -zmqpubhashblock=
367 | Enable publish hash block in
368 |
369 | -zmqpubhashblockhwm=
370 | Set publish hash block outbound message high water mark (default: 1000)
371 |
372 | -zmqpubhashtx=
373 | Enable publish hash transaction in
374 |
375 | -zmqpubhashtxhwm=
376 | Set publish hash transaction outbound message high water mark (default:
377 | 1000)
378 |
379 | -zmqpubrawblock=
380 | Enable publish raw block in
381 |
382 | -zmqpubrawblockhwm=
383 | Set publish raw block outbound message high water mark (default: 1000)
384 |
385 | -zmqpubrawtx=
386 | Enable publish raw transaction in
387 |
388 | -zmqpubrawtxhwm=
389 | Set publish raw transaction outbound message high water mark (default:
390 | 1000)
391 |
392 | -zmqpubsequence=
393 | Enable publish hash block and tx sequence in
394 |
395 | -zmqpubsequencehwm=
396 | Set publish hash sequence message high water mark (default: 1000)
397 |
398 | Debugging/Testing options:
399 |
400 | -debug=
401 | Output debugging information (default: -nodebug, supplying is
402 | optional). If is not supplied or if = 1,
403 | output all debugging information. can be: net, tor,
404 | mempool, http, bench, zmq, walletdb, rpc, estimatefee, addrman,
405 | selectcoins, reindex, cmpctblock, rand, prune, proxy, mempoolrej,
406 | libevent, coindb, qt, leveldb, validation.
407 |
408 | -debugexclude=
409 | Exclude debugging information for a category. Can be used in conjunction
410 | with -debug=1 to output debug logs for all categories except one
411 | or more specified categories.
412 |
413 | -help-debug
414 | Print help message with debugging options and exit
415 |
416 | -logips
417 | Include IP addresses in debug output (default: 0)
418 |
419 | -logthreadnames
420 | Prepend debug output with name of the originating thread (only available
421 | on platforms supporting thread_local) (default: 0)
422 |
423 | -logtimestamps
424 | Prepend debug output with timestamp (default: 1)
425 |
426 | -maxtxfee=
427 | Maximum total fees (in BTC) to use in a single wallet transaction;
428 | setting this too low may abort large transactions (default: 0.10)
429 |
430 | -printtoconsole
431 | Send trace/debug info to console (default: 1 when no -daemon. To disable
432 | logging to file, set -nodebuglogfile)
433 |
434 | -shrinkdebugfile
435 | Shrink debug.log file on client startup (default: 1 when no -debug)
436 |
437 | -uacomment=
438 | Append comment to the user agent string
439 |
440 | Chain selection options:
441 |
442 | -chain=
443 | Use the chain (default: main). Allowed values: main, test,
444 | signet, regtest
445 |
446 | -signet
447 | Use the signet chain. Equivalent to -chain=signet. Note that the network
448 | is defined by the -signetchallenge parameter
449 |
450 | -signetchallenge
451 | Blocks must satisfy the given script to be considered valid (only for
452 | signet networks; defaults to the global default signet test
453 | network challenge)
454 |
455 | -signetseednode
456 | Specify a seed node for the signet network, in the hostname[:port]
457 | format, e.g. sig.net:1234 (may be used multiple times to specify
458 | multiple seed nodes; defaults to the global default signet test
459 | network seed node(s))
460 |
461 | -testnet
462 | Use the test chain. Equivalent to -chain=test.
463 |
464 | Node relay options:
465 |
466 | -bytespersigop
467 | Equivalent bytes per sigop in transactions for relay and mining
468 | (default: 20)
469 |
470 | -datacarrier
471 | Relay and mine data carrier transactions (default: 1)
472 |
473 | -datacarriersize
474 | Maximum size of data in data carrier transactions we relay and mine
475 | (default: 83)
476 |
477 | -minrelaytxfee=
478 | Fees (in BTC/kB) smaller than this are considered zero fee for relaying,
479 | mining and transaction creation (default: 0.00001)
480 |
481 | -whitelistforcerelay
482 | Add 'forcerelay' permission to whitelisted inbound peers with default
483 | permissions. This will relay transactions even if the
484 | transactions were already in the mempool. (default: 0)
485 |
486 | -whitelistrelay
487 | Add 'relay' permission to whitelisted inbound peers with default
488 | permissions. This will accept relayed transactions even when not
489 | relaying transactions (default: 1)
490 |
491 | Block creation options:
492 |
493 | -blockmaxweight=
494 | Set maximum BIP141 block weight (default: 3996000)
495 |
496 | -blockmintxfee=
497 | Set lowest fee rate (in BTC/kB) for transactions to be included in block
498 | creation. (default: 0.00001)
499 |
500 | RPC server options:
501 |
502 | -rest
503 | Accept public REST requests (default: 0)
504 |
505 | -rpcallowip=
506 | Allow JSON-RPC connections from specified source. Valid for are a
507 | single IP (e.g. 1.2.3.4), a network/netmask (e.g.
508 | 1.2.3.4/255.255.255.0) or a network/CIDR (e.g. 1.2.3.4/24). This
509 | option can be specified multiple times
510 |
511 | -rpcauth=
512 | Username and HMAC-SHA-256 hashed password for JSON-RPC connections. The
513 | field comes in the format: :$. A
514 | canonical python script is included in share/rpcauth. The client
515 | then connects normally using the
516 | rpcuser=/rpcpassword= pair of arguments. This
517 | option can be specified multiple times
518 |
519 | -rpcbind=[:port]
520 | Bind to given address to listen for JSON-RPC connections. Do not expose
521 | the RPC server to untrusted networks such as the public internet!
522 | This option is ignored unless -rpcallowip is also passed. Port is
523 | optional and overrides -rpcport. Use [host]:port notation for
524 | IPv6. This option can be specified multiple times (default:
525 | 127.0.0.1 and ::1 i.e., localhost)
526 |
527 | -rpccookiefile=
528 | Location of the auth cookie. Relative paths will be prefixed by a
529 | net-specific datadir location. (default: data dir)
530 |
531 | -rpcpassword=
532 | Password for JSON-RPC connections
533 |
534 | -rpcport=
535 | Listen for JSON-RPC connections on (default: 8332, testnet:
536 | 18332, signet: 38332, regtest: 18443)
537 |
538 | -rpcserialversion
539 | Sets the serialization of raw transaction or block hex returned in
540 | non-verbose mode, non-segwit(0) or segwit(1) (default: 1)
541 |
542 | -rpcthreads=
543 | Set the number of threads to service RPC calls (default: 4)
544 |
545 | -rpcuser=
546 | Username for JSON-RPC connections
547 |
548 | -rpcwhitelist=
549 | Set a whitelist to filter incoming RPC calls for a specific user. The
550 | field comes in the format: :,,...,. If multiple whitelists are set for a given user,
552 | they are set-intersected. See -rpcwhitelistdefault documentation
553 | for information on default whitelist behavior.
554 |
555 | -rpcwhitelistdefault
556 | Sets default behavior for rpc whitelisting. Unless rpcwhitelistdefault
557 | is set to 0, if any -rpcwhitelist is set, the rpc server acts as
558 | if all rpc users are subject to empty-unless-otherwise-specified
559 | whitelists. If rpcwhitelistdefault is set to 1 and no
560 | -rpcwhitelist is set, rpc server acts as if all rpc users are
561 | subject to empty whitelists.
562 |
563 | -server
564 | Accept command line and JSON-RPC commands
565 |
566 | ~ $
567 |
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