5 releases

0.1.4 Aug 2, 2024
0.1.3 Jul 29, 2024
0.1.2 Jul 29, 2024
0.1.1 Jul 25, 2024
0.1.0 Jul 25, 2024

#24 in #indexer

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CC0 license

1.5MB
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bitomc

bitomc is an index and command-line wallet. It is experimental software with no warranty. See LICENSE for more details.

BitOMC is an experimental metaprotocol on Bitcoin that defines a dynamic sub-denomination of sats called the "util," which can adapt to changing economic conditions. The objective is to define a credibly-neutral unit of account that can provide price stability to the Bitcoin economy.

This unit of account is controlled by the open market through an interest rate, set by the relative quantity of two interconvertible assets, Tighten and Ease. Users convert between them according to a constant function conversion rule, ensuring the relative quantity reflects the relative price. Tighten and Ease are issued steadily over time, through a free mint that halves every four years.

See the whitepaper for a technical description of the protocol.

See the docs for documentation and guides.

Join the Telegram group to chat with fellow users of BitOMC.

Wallet

bitomc relies on Bitcoin Core for private key management and transaction signing. This has a number of implications that you must understand in order to use bitomc wallet commands safely:

  • Bitcoin Core is not aware of Tighten and Ease runes and does not perform sat control. Using bitcoin-cli commands and RPC calls with bitomc wallets may lead to loss of runes.

  • bitomc wallet commands automatically load the bitomc wallet given by the --name option, which defaults to 'bitomc'. Keep in mind that after running an bitomc wallet command, an bitomc wallet may be loaded.

  • Because bitomc has access to your Bitcoin Core wallets, bitomc should not be used with wallets that contain a material amount of funds. Keep runic and cardinal wallets segregated.

Installation

bitomc is written in Rust and can be built from source. Pre-built binaries are available on the releases page.

You can install the latest pre-built binary from the command line with:

curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -fsLS https://bitomc.org/install.sh | bash -s

Once bitomc is installed, you should be able to run bitomc --version on the command line.

Building

On Linux, bitomc requires libssl-dev when building from source.

On Debian-derived Linux distributions, including Ubuntu:

sudo apt-get install pkg-config libssl-dev build-essential

On Red Hat-derived Linux distributions:

yum install -y pkgconfig openssl-devel
yum groupinstall "Development Tools"

You'll also need Rust:

curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh

Clone the bitomc repo:

git clone https://github.com/BitOMC/BitOMC.git
cd bitomc

To build a specific version of bitomc, first checkout that version:

git checkout <VERSION>

And finally to actually build bitomc:

cargo build --release

Once built, the bitomc binary can be found at ./target/release/bitomc.

bitomc requires rustc version 1.76.0 or later. Run rustc --version to ensure you have this version. Run rustup update to get the latest stable release.

Docker

A Docker image can be built with:

docker build -t BitOMC/BitOMC .

Debian Package

To build a .deb package:

cargo install cargo-deb
cargo deb

Contributing

If you wish to contribute there are a couple things that are helpful to know. We put a lot of emphasis on proper testing in the code base, with three broad categories of tests: unit, integration and fuzz. Unit tests can usually be found at the bottom of a file in a mod block called tests. If you add or modify a function please also add a corresponding test. Integration tests try to test end-to-end functionality by executing a subcommand of the binary. Those can be found in the tests directory. We don't have a lot of fuzzing but the basic structure of how we do it can be found in the fuzz directory.

We strongly recommend installing just to make running the tests easier. To run our CI test suite you would do:

just ci

This corresponds to the commands:

cargo fmt -- --check
cargo test --all
cargo test --all -- --ignored

Have a look at the justfile to see some more helpful recipes (commands). Here are a couple more good ones:

just fmt
just fuzz
just doc
just watch ltest --all

If the tests are failing or hanging, you might need to increase the maximum number of open files by running ulimit -n 1024 in your shell before you run the tests, or in your shell configuration.

We also try to follow a TDD (Test-Driven-Development) approach, which means we use tests as a way to get visibility into the code. Tests have to run fast for that reason so that the feedback loop between making a change, running the test and seeing the result is small. To facilitate that we created a mocked Bitcoin Core instance in test-bitcoincore-rpc.

Syncing

bitomc requires a synced bitcoind node. bitomc communicates with bitcoind via RPC.

If bitcoind is run locally by the same user, without additional configuration, bitomc should find it automatically by reading the .cookie file from bitcoind's datadir, and connecting using the default RPC port.

If bitcoind is not on mainnet, is not run by the same user, has a non-default datadir, or a non-default port, you'll need to pass additional flags to bitomc. See bitomc --help for details.

bitcoind RPC Authentication

bitomc makes RPC calls to bitcoind, which usually requires a username and password.

By default, bitomc looks a username and password in the cookie file created by bitcoind.

The cookie file path can be configured using --cookie-file:

bitomc --cookie-file /path/to/cookie/file server

Alternatively, bitomc can be supplied with a username and password on the command line:

bitomc --bitcoin-rpc-username foo --bitcoin-rpc-password bar server

Using environment variables:

export BITOMC_BITCOIN_RPC_USERNAME=foo
export BITOMC_BITCOIN_RPC_PASSWORD=bar
bitomc server

Or in the config file:

bitcoin_rpc_username: foo
bitcoin_rpc_password: bar

Logging

bitomc uses env_logger. Set the RUST_LOG environment variable in order to turn on logging. For example, run the server and show info-level log messages and above:

$ RUST_LOG=info cargo run server

New Releases

Release commit messages use the following template:

Release x.y.z

- Bump version: x.y.z → x.y.z
- Update changelog
- Update changelog contributor credits
- Update dependencies

Dependencies

~69–105MB
~2M SLoC