Instead of asking for a block and reacting when we get a failure, this
just uses the current height instead.
This also makes 'flush' happen in each indexers' own thread, which should
be good for performance.
Ask the hub for the chain-length and when we processed the last block,
immediately flush the data to the SQL DB.
This makes use represent the whole world faster.
The API call for GetBlock has a filter-on-address functionality which is
now ported to no longer use ripe160 addresses but instead uses output-
script hashes.
This avoids problems for transactions not using p2pkh and generally is a
cleaner solution.
This also adds a unit test to test this feature.
The usage of a ripe160 for bitcoin addresses in the API and in the
Indexer loses some info, specifically what kind of script it is.
Additionally not all types of scripts fit this mold. At best that means
its not future-proof.
This adds a method to the API in order to select from a Tx the hashed
outscript (thats singlehashed sha256) and refactor the address indexer
to use that instead of the ripe160 address.
The API enums broke a little, so I used the opportunity to break it a
lot and clean up the enums in order to make them more future-proof.
But, yeah, software from before this commit is protocol incompatible
with software after this commit.
This explicitly detects the initial sync and refuses to create
any indexes on the SQL databases during this massive insert stage.
Some other minor issues got fixed here too.
where the UTXO allows you to find an output based on txid+output, the
spentoutput DB turns that around and allows you to find an input that
spends a certain output.
This also fits perfectly find into the UTXO database class, so this
creates a new dir "spent" which is filled as expected.
This adds all the header ints to chunked messages, solving the problem
of losing RequestId on roundtrips if the answer was too big.
Added a unit test for this "new" features.
This makes callbacks all use shared_from_this() in order to avoid
callbacks being done on deleted instances (thanks boost!).
Last, special case when the user doesn't connect but just sends messages
which caused a send of data, only to realize the connection wasn't open,
and then a connect.
This makes sure we immediately start a connect on queue of a message.
When an indexer is in-sync it will stop actively asking for
new blocks, so the block updates (Hub saying they found a new block)
will then allow the indexer to keep up-to-date
This adds lots of little things;
* Add GetTransaction API call
* I refactored the GetBlock API a little to reuse code.
* a new 'Version' API call for the hub
* API for the logging manager, so we can set a default
setup with just C++-APIs
* various (usability) fixes in the FloweeServiceApplication
* Binding to localhost attempts to bind to both IPv4 and v6
* Print the actual transaction hex from indexer-cli (which really
is just a testing app)