public class WalletProtobufSerializer extends Object
This class is used through its static methods. The most common operations are writeWallet and readWallet, which do
the obvious operations on Output/InputStreams. You can use a ByteArrayInputStream
and equivalent
ByteArrayOutputStream
if you'd like byte arrays instead. The protocol buffer can also be manipulated
in its object form if you'd like to modify the flattened data structure before serialization to binary.
You can extend the wallet format with additional fields specific to your application if you want, but make sure to either put the extra data in the provided extension areas, or select tag numbers that are unlikely to be used by anyone else.
Modifier and Type | Field and Description |
---|---|
protected Map<com.google.protobuf.ByteString,Transaction> |
txMap |
Constructor and Description |
---|
WalletProtobufSerializer() |
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
static Sha256Hash |
byteStringToHash(com.google.protobuf.ByteString bs) |
static com.google.protobuf.ByteString |
hashToByteString(Sha256Hash hash) |
static boolean |
isWallet(InputStream is)
Cheap test to see if input stream is a wallet.
|
static Protos.Wallet |
parseToProto(InputStream input)
Returns the loaded protocol buffer from the given byte stream.
|
Wallet |
readWallet(InputStream input)
Parses a wallet from the given stream, using the provided Wallet instance to load data into.
|
void |
readWallet(Protos.Wallet walletProto,
Wallet wallet)
Loads wallet data from the given protocol buffer and inserts it into the given Wallet object.
|
void |
setRequireMandatoryExtensions(boolean value)
If this property is set to false, then unknown mandatory extensions will be ignored instead of causing load
errors.
|
Protos.Wallet |
walletToProto(Wallet wallet)
Converts the given wallet to the object representation of the protocol buffers.
|
String |
walletToText(Wallet wallet)
Returns the given wallet formatted as text.
|
void |
writeWallet(Wallet wallet,
OutputStream output)
Formats the given wallet (transactions and keys) to the given output stream in protocol buffer format.
|
protected Map<com.google.protobuf.ByteString,Transaction> txMap
public void setRequireMandatoryExtensions(boolean value)
public void writeWallet(Wallet wallet, OutputStream output) throws IOException
Equivalent to walletToProto(wallet).writeTo(output);
IOException
public String walletToText(Wallet wallet)
TextFormat.merge(CharSequence, com.google.protobuf.Message.Builder)
,
it is designed more for debugging than storage. It is not well specified and wallets are largely binary data
structures anyway, consisting as they do of keys (large random numbers) and Transaction
s which also
mostly contain keys and hashes.public Protos.Wallet walletToProto(Wallet wallet)
public static com.google.protobuf.ByteString hashToByteString(Sha256Hash hash)
public static Sha256Hash byteStringToHash(com.google.protobuf.ByteString bs)
public Wallet readWallet(InputStream input) throws UnreadableWalletException
Parses a wallet from the given stream, using the provided Wallet instance to load data into. This is primarily used when you want to register extensions. Data in the proto will be added into the wallet where applicable and overwrite where not.
A wallet can be unreadable for various reasons, such as inability to open the file, corrupt data, internally
inconsistent data, a wallet extension marked as mandatory that cannot be handled and so on. You should always
handle UnreadableWalletException
and communicate failure to the user in an appropriate manner.
UnreadableWalletException
- thrown in various error conditions (see description).public void readWallet(Protos.Wallet walletProto, Wallet wallet) throws UnreadableWalletException
Loads wallet data from the given protocol buffer and inserts it into the given Wallet object. This is primarily useful when you wish to pre-register extension objects. Note that if loading fails the provided Wallet object may be in an indeterminate state and should be thrown away.
A wallet can be unreadable for various reasons, such as inability to open the file, corrupt data, internally
inconsistent data, a wallet extension marked as mandatory that cannot be handled and so on. You should always
handle UnreadableWalletException
and communicate failure to the user in an appropriate manner.
UnreadableWalletException
- thrown in various error conditions (see description).public static Protos.Wallet parseToProto(InputStream input) throws IOException
Wallet.loadFromFile(java.io.File)
instead - this method is designed for low level work involving the
wallet file format itself.IOException
public static boolean isWallet(InputStream is)
is
- input stream to testCopyright © 2014. All rights reserved.