to exploit new features such as prefix scanning addresses or performance
improvements (the new database changes the API) will require an upgrade
at some point.
At the moment for the server, I will go with whatever you and Eric decide.
BTW I changed my mind about the polling stuff. Pablo (caedes from DW)
told me polling is a problem because a) you don't get immediate
notification of changes and b) you continuously have to send all your
prefixes or addresses which consumes bandwidth. So therefore some state
is unavoidable in that we need a subscribe system.
What are your thoughts on this? Would you agree with that or do you see
a different way?
I'm a fan of the IDL stuff because we can easily prototype an API
together, and then once we have developed the standard we want to have
based on our consensus, I/we can go implement it.
I'm excited to finish this work, but am still a little away. I've began
integration with main blockchain. The scan history database is working
but not integrated and maybe needs more work, the stealth db needs a
review too. But the blockchain code is a lot shorter and clearer now.
On 08/30/2014 12:37 AM, William Swanson wrote:
> Hello,
> Amir an I have been having a private email conversion about the
> Obelisk server, but this information should probably go on the mailing
> list as well.
>
> My company, AirBitz is getting close to releasing our wallet to the
> general public. Once this happens, will have a huge number of clients
> expecting hard binary compatibility with the current obelisk protocol
> (as of obelisk commit 7768117901). We can't count on these clients
> upgrading, so we need to come up with a plan for future compatibility.
>
> One solution is to introduce explicit versioning into the protocol.
> When clients first connect, they send a "version" command, which the
> server replies to with a "major.minor" version number. Each time we
> add a new command, we bump the minor version, and each time we remove
> or change a command, we bump the major version number.
>
> The other solution is to freeze the obelisk protocol and never change
> it again except in backwards-compatible ways. Most internet protocols
> take this approach, which is why the internet works as well as it
> does. We have lots of old, creaky protocols like HTTP and SMTP that
> would be nice to "clean up", but the benefits of compatibility
> outweigh the costs of upgrading. To enable this approach, we should at
> least have the server return an "I don't understand that" message each
> time the client sends an unsupported request.
>
> I should also mention that there are plans floating around to replace
> "obelisk" with an entirely new "libbitcoin-server" project. This give
> us an opportunity to create a clean break with the existing protocol,
> so we don't need to get things perfect the first time. This is also an
> argument in favor of just freezing the existing protocol, and only
> making backwards-compatible additions.
>
> Whichever way we go, we need to make a decision soon (within the next
> week or so). We are about to go into feature-freeze, and this issue
> only just came up [1].
>
> -William
>
> [1] As it turns out, the current "protocol.broadcast_transaction"
> command isn't really reliable. To make it reliable, we need to change
> semantics a bit. The question is, do we stuff new behavior into the
> existing "protocol.broadcast_transaction", or do we add a new command,
> "node.push_transaction"? How we resolve the versioning issue will
> determine how we approach this problem.
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