A library for working with Bitcoin
Go to file
Will Shackleton 8af0fa9884 Implemented version 2 of payment channels API
I implemented version 2 of the payment channels API using
OP_CHECKLOCKTIMEVERIFY-style payment channels.
2016-02-10 11:15:35 +01:00
core Implemented version 2 of payment channels API 2016-02-10 11:15:35 +01:00
designdocs Design doc for contexts 2015-03-21 17:23:21 +01:00
examples Implemented version 2 of payment channels API 2016-02-10 11:15:35 +01:00
misc Higher res logo PNG 2015-06-03 12:19:43 +02:00
orchid Upgrade to Guava 18.0. 2015-07-06 10:03:31 +02:00
tools Implemented version 2 of payment channels API 2016-02-10 11:15:35 +01:00
wallettemplate Split wallet events into single method interfaces 2016-02-06 20:01:38 +01:00
.gitattributes Add a logo. 2013-03-01 13:59:48 +01:00
.gitignore Don't gitignore wallet files. 2015-06-17 08:43:07 +02:00
.travis.yml Make Travis not run any tests that involve accessing the network. 2015-07-23 14:26:04 +02:00
AUTHORS Update AUTHORS from git. It has become too tedious to track this manually. 2015-07-14 16:29:57 +02:00
COPYING Initial checkin of BitCoinJ 2011-03-07 10:17:10 +00:00
pom.xml Update to maven-surefire-plugin 2.19.1. 2016-01-25 23:20:51 +01:00
README.md Better README formatting 2015-07-28 12:43:30 +02:00

Build Status Coverage Status

Visit our IRC channel

Welcome to bitcoinj

The bitcoinj library is a Java implementation of the Bitcoin protocol, which allows it to maintain a wallet and send/receive transactions without needing a local copy of Bitcoin Core. It comes with full documentation and some example apps showing how to use it.

Technologies

  • Java 6 for the core modules, Java 8 for everything else
  • Maven 3+ - for building the project
  • Orchid - for secure communications over TOR
  • Google Protocol Buffers - for use with serialization and hardware communications

Getting started

To get started, it is best to have the latest JDK and Maven installed. The HEAD of the master branch contains the latest development code and various production releases are provided on feature branches.

Building from the command line

To perform a full build use

mvn clean package

You can also run

mvn site:site

to generate a website with useful information like JavaDocs.

The outputs are under the target directory.

Building from an IDE

Alternatively, just import the project using your IDE. IntelliJ has Maven integration built-in and has a free Community Edition. Simply use File | Import Project and locate the pom.xml in the root of the cloned project source tree.

Example applications

These are found in the examples module.

Forwarding service

This will download the block chain and eventually print a Bitcoin address that it has generated.

If you send coins to that address, it will forward them on to the address you specified.

  cd examples
  mvn exec:java -Dexec.mainClass=org.bitcoinj.examples.ForwardingService -Dexec.args="<insert a bitcoin address here>"

Note that this example app does not use checkpointing, so the initial chain sync will be pretty slow. You can make an app that starts up and does the initial sync much faster by including a checkpoints file; see the documentation for more info on this technique.

Where next?

Now you are ready to follow the tutorial.