Core Lightning communicates with the Bitcoin network through a plugin. It uses the `bcli` plugin by default but you can use a custom one, multiple custom ones for different operations, or write your own for your favourite Bitcoin data source!
Communication with the plugin is done through 5 JSONRPC commands, `lightningd` can use from 1 to 5 plugin(s) registering these 5 commands for gathering Bitcoin data. Each plugin must follow the below specification for `lightningd` to operate.
Called at startup, it's used to check the network `lightningd` is operating on and to get the sync status of the backend. Optionally, the plugins can use `last_height` to make sure that the Bitcoin backend is not behind Core Lightning.
The plugin must return `feerate_floor` (e.g. 1000 if mempool is empty), and an array of 0 or more `feerates`. Each element of `feerates` is an object with `blocks` and `feerate`, in ascending-blocks order, for example:
```
{
"feerate_floor": <satperkVB>,
"feerates": {
{ "blocks": 2, "feerate": <satperkVB> },
{ "blocks": 6, "feerate": <satperkVB> },
{ "blocks": 12, "feerate": <satperkVB> }
{ "blocks": 100, "feerate": <satperkVB> }
}
}
```
lightningd will currently linearly interpolate to estimate between given blocks (it will not extrapolate, but use the min/max blocks values).
This call takes one parameter, `height`, which determines the block height of the block to fetch.
The plugin must set all fields to `null` if no block was found at the specified `height`.
The plugin must respond to `getrawblockbyheight` with the following fields:
-`blockhash` (string), the block hash as a hexadecimal string
-`block` (string), the block content as a hexadecimal string
### `getutxout`
This call takes two parameter, the `txid` (string) and the `vout` (number) identifying the UTXO we're interested in.
The plugin must set both fields to `null` if the specified TXO was spent.
The plugin must respond to `gettxout` with the following fields:
-`amount` (number), the output value in **sats**
-`script` (string), the output scriptPubKey
### `sendrawtransaction`
This call takes two parameters, a string `tx` representing a hex-encoded Bitcoin transaction,
and a boolean `allowhighfees`, which if set means suppress any high-fees check implemented in the backend, since the given transaction may have fees that are very high.
The plugin must broadcast it and respond with the following fields:
-`success` (boolean), which is `true` if the broadcast succeeded
-`errmsg` (string), if success is `false`, the reason why it failed