I dont think a libconsensus would have any kind of networking layer, nor
is C++ an antique tool set (hopefully libconsensus can avoid a boost
dependency, though thats not antique either). Ideally it would have a
simple API to give it blocks and a simple API for it to inform you of
what the current chain is. If you really want to get fancy maybe it has
pluggable block storage, too, but I dont see why you couldnt use this in
~any client?
On 08/20/15 08:35, Tamas Blummer via bitcoin-dev wrote:
Every re-implementation, re-factoring even copy-paste introduces a risk of disagreement,
but also open the chance of doing the work better, in the sense of software engineering.
On Aug 20, 2015, at 10:06, Jorge Timón <jtimon@jtimon.cc> wrote:
But the goal is not reimplementing the consensus rules but rather
extract them from Bitcoin Core so that nobody needs to re-implement
them again.
My goal is different. Compatibility with Bitcoin is important as I also want to deal with Bitcoins,
but it is also imperative to be able to create and serve other block chains with other rules and for those
I do not want to carry on the legacy of an antique tool set and a spaghetti style.
Bits of Proof uses scala (akka networking), java (api service), c++ (leveledb and now libconsensus)
and I am eager to integrate secp256k1 (c) as soon as part of consensus. The choices were
made because each piece appears best in what they do.
Tamas Blummer
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