2021-05-05 02:20:01 +02:00
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# Bisq API Beta Testing Guide
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This guide explains how Bisq Api beta testers can quickly get a test harness running, watch a regtest trade simulation,
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and use the CLI to execute trades between Bob and Alice.
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Knowledge of Git, Java, and installing bitcoin-core is required.
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## System Requirements
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**Hardware**: A reasonably fast development machine is recommended, with at least 16 Gb RAM and 8 cores.
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None of the headless apps use a lot of RAM, but build times can be long on machines with less RAM and fewer cores.
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In addition, a slow machine may run into race conditions if asynchronous wallet changes are not persisted to disk
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fast enough. Test harness startup and shutdown times may also not happen fast enough, and require test harness
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option adjustments to compensate.
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**OS**: Linux or Mac OSX
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**Shell**: Bash
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**Java SDK**: Version 10, 11, or 12
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**Bitcoin-Core**: Version 0.19, 0.20, or 0.21
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**Git Client**
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## Clone and Build Source Code
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Beta testing can be done with no knowledge of how git works, but you need a git client to get the source code.
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Clone the Bisq master branch into a project folder of your choice. In this document, the root project folder is
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called `api-beta-test`.
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```
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$ git clone https://github.com/bisq-network/bisq.git api-beta-test
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```
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## Running Api Test Harness
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If your bitcoin-core binaries are in your system `PATH`, start bitcoind in regtest-mode, Bisq seednode and arbitration
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node daemons, plus Bob & Alice daemons in a bash terminal with the following bash command:
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```
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$ ./bisq-apitest --apiPassword=xyz \
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--supportingApps=bitcoind,seednode,arbdaemon,alicedaemon,bobdaemon \
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--shutdownAfterTests=false
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```
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If your bitcoin-core binaries are not in your system `PATH`, you can specify the bitcoin-core bin directory with the
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`-–bitcoinPath=<path>` option:
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```
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$ ./bisq-apitest --apiPassword=xyz \
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--supportingApps=bitcoind,seednode,arbdaemon,alicedaemon,bobdaemon \
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--shutdownAfterTests=false \
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--bitcoinPath=<bitcoin-core-home>/bin
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```
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If your bitcoin-core binaries are not statically linked to your BerkleyDB library, you can specify the path to it
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with the `–-berkeleyDbLibPath=<path>` option:
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```
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$ ./bisq-apitest --apiPassword=xyz \
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--supportingApps=bitcoind,seednode,arbdaemon,alicedaemon,bobdaemon \
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--shutdownAfterTests=false \
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--bitcoinPath=<bitcoin-core-home>/bin \
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--berkeleyDbLibPath=<lib-berkleydb-path>
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```
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Alternatively, you can specify any or all of these bisq-apitest options in a properties file located in
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`apitest/src/main/resources/apitest.properties`.
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In this example, a beta tester uses the `apitest.properties` below, instead of `bisq-cli` options.
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```
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supportingApps=bitcoind,seednode,arbdaemon,alicedaemon,bobdaemon
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apiPassword=xyz
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shutdownAfterTests=false
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bitcoinPath=/home/beta-tester/path-to-my-bitcoin-core/bin
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```
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Start up the test harness with without command options:
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```
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$ ./bisq-apitest
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```
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If you edit `apitest.properties`, do not forget to re-build the source. You do not need to do a full clean and
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build, or run tests. The following build command should finish quickly.
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```
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$ ./gradlew build :apitest:installDaoSetup -x test
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```
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You should see the test harness startup bitcoin-core and other Bisq daemons in your console, run a
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`bitcoin-cli getwalletinfo` command, and generate a regtest btc block.
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After the test harness tells you how to shut it down by entering `^C`, the test harness is ready to use.
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## Running Trade Simulation Script
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_Warning: again, it is assumed the beta tester has a reasonably fast machine, or the scripted wait times -- for
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the other side to perform his step in the protocol, and for btc block generation and asynchronous processing
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of new btc blocks by test daemons -- may not be long enough._
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### System Requirements
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Same as described at the top of this document, but your bitcoin-core’s `bitcoin-cli` binary must be in the system
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`PATH`. (The script generates regtest blocks with it.)
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### Description
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The regtest trade simulation script `apitest/scripts/trade-simulation.sh` is a useful introduction to the Bisq Api.
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The bash script’s output is intended to serve as a tutorial, showing how the CLI can be used to create payment
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accounts for Bob and Alice, create an offer, take the offer, and complete a trade.
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(The bash script itself is not intended to be as useful as the output.) The output is generated too quickly to
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follow in real time, so let the script complete before studying the output from start to finish.
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The script takes four options:
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```
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-d=<direction> The trade direciton, BUY or SELL.
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-c=<country> The two letter country code, US, FR, AT, RU, etc.
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-f=<fixed-price> The offer’s fixed price.
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OR (-f and -m options mutually exclusive, use one or the other)
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-m=<margin-from-price> The offer’s margin (%) from market price.
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-a=<btc-amount> The amount of btc to buy or sell.
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```
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### Examples
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This simulation creates US / USD face-to-face payment accounts for Bob and Alice. Alice (always the trade maker)
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creates a SELL / USD offer for the amount of 0.1 BTC, at a price 2% below the current market price.
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Bob (always the taker), will use his face-to-face account to take the offer, then the two sides will complete
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the trade, checking their trade status along the way, and their BTC balances when the trade is closed.
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```
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$ apitest/scripts/trade-simulation.sh -d sell -c us -m 2.00 -a 0.1
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```
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In the next example, Bob and Alice create Austrian face-to-face payment accounts. Alice creates a BUY/ EUR
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offer to buy 0.125 BTC at a fixed price of 30,800 EUR.
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```
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$ apitest/scripts/trade-simulation.sh -d buy -c at -f 30800 -a 0.125
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```
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## Manual Testing
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The test harness used by the simulation script described in the previous section can also be used for manual CLI
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testing, and you can leave it running as you try the commands described below.
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The Api’s default server listening port is `9998`, and you do not need to specify a `–port=<port>` option in a
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CLI command unless you change the server’s `–apiPort=<listening-port>`. In the test harness, Alice’s Api port is
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`9998`, Bob’s is `9999`. When you manually test the Api using the test harness, be aware of the port numbers being
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used in the CLI commands, so you know which server (Bob’s or Alice’s) the CLI is sending requests to.
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### CLI Help
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Useful information can be found using the CLI’s `--help` option.
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For list of supported CLI commands:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --help (the –password option is not needed because there is no server request)
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```
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For help with a specific CLI command:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --help getbalance
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OR
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz getbalance --help
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```
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The position of `--help` option does not matter. If a supported positional command option is present,
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method help will be returned from the server. Also note an api password is required to get help from the server.
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### Working With Encrypted Wallet
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There is no need to secure your regtest Bisq wallet with an encryption password when running these examples,
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but you should encrypt your mainnet wallet as you probably already do when using the Bisq UI to transact in
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real BTC. This section explains how to encrypt your Bisq wallet with the CLI, and unlock it before performing wallet
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related operations such as creating and taking offers, checking balances, and sending BTC to external wallets.
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Encrypt your wallet with a password:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz setwalletpassword --wallet-password=<wallet-password>
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```
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Set a new password on your already encrypted wallet:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz setwalletpassword --wallet-password=<wallet-password> \
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--new-wallet-password=<new-wallet-password>
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```
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Unlock your password encrypted wallet for N seconds before performing sensitive wallet operations:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz unlockwallet --wallet-password=<wallet-password> --timeout=<seconds>
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```
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You can override a `timeout` before it expires by calling `unlockwallet` again.
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Lock your wallet before the `unlockwallet` timeout expires:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz lockwallet
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```
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### Checking Balances
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Show Bob’s full BTC wallet balance information:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9999 getbalance --currency-code=btc
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```
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### Funding a Bisq Wallet
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#### Receiving BTC
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To receive BTC from an external wallet, find an unused BTC address (with a zero balance) to receive the BTC.
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 getfundingaddresses
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```
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You can check a block explorer for the status of a transaction, or you can check your Bisq BTC wallet address directly:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 getaddressbalance --address=<btc-address>
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```
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2021-10-19 19:45:55 +02:00
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### Sending BTC to External Wallets
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Below are commands for sending BTC to external wallets.
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Send BTC:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 sendbtc --address=<btc-address> --amount=<btc-amount>
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```
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Send BTC with a withdrawal transaction fee of 20 sats/byte:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 sendbtc --address=<btc-address> --amount=<btc-amount> --tx-fee-rate=20
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```
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### Withdrawal Transaction Fees
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If you have traded using the Bisq UI, you are probably aware of the default network bitcoin withdrawal transaction
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fee and custom withdrawal transaction fee user preference in the UI’s setting view. The Api uses these same
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withdrawal transaction fee rates, and affords a third – as mentioned in the previous section -- withdrawal
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transaction fee option in the `sendbtc` commands. The `sendbtc` commands'
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`--tx-fee-rate=<sats/byte>` options override both the default network fee rate, and your custom transaction fee
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setting for the execution of those commands.
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#### Using Default Network Transaction Fee
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If you have not set your custom withdrawal transaction fee setting, the default network transaction fee will be used
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when withdrawing funds. In either case, you can check the current (default or custom) withdrawal transaction fee rate:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz gettxfeerate
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```
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#### Setting Custom Transaction Fee Preference
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To set a custom withdrawal transaction fee rate preference of 50 sats/byte:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz settxfeerate --tx-fee-rate=50
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```
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#### Removing User’s Custom Transaction Fee Preference
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To remove a custom withdrawal transaction fee rate preference, and revert to the network fee rate:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz unsettxfeerate
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```
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### Creating Test Payment Accounts
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Creating a payment account using the Api involves three steps:
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1. Find the payment-method-id for the payment account type you wish to create. For example, if you want to
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create a face-to-face type payment account, find the face-to-face payment-method-id (`F2F`):
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 getpaymentmethods
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```
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2. Use the payment-method-id `F2F` found in the `getpaymentmethods` command output to create a blank payment account
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form:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 getpaymentacctform --payment-method-id=F2F
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```
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This `getpaymentacctform` command generates a json file (form) for creating an `F2F` payment account,
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prints the file’s contents, and tells you where it is. In this example, the sever created an `F2F` account
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form named `f2f_1612381824625.json`.
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3. Manually edit the json file, and use its path in the `createpaymentacct` command.
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 createpaymentacct \
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--payment-account-form=f2f_1612381824625.json
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```
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_Note: You can rename the file before passing it to the `createpaymentacct` command._
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The server will create and save the new payment account from details defined in the json file then
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return the new payment account to the CLI. The CLI will display the account ID with other details
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in the console, but if you ever need to find a payment account ID, use the `getpaymentaccts` command:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 getpaymentaccts
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```
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### Creating Offers
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The createoffer command is the Api's most complex command (so far), but CLI posix-style options are self-explanatory,
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and CLI `createoffer` command help gives you specific information about each option.
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 createoffer --help
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```
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#### Examples
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The `trade-simulation.sh` script described above is an easy way to figure out how to use this command.
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In a previous example, Alice created a BUY/ EUR offer to buy 0.125 BTC at a fixed price of 30,800 EUR,
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2021-10-19 19:45:55 +02:00
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and pay the Bisq maker fee in BTC. Alice had already created an EUR face-to-face payment account with id
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2021-05-05 02:20:01 +02:00
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`f3c1ec8b-9761-458d-b13d-9039c6892413`, and used this `createoffer` command:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 createoffer \
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--payment-account=f3c1ec8b-9761-458d-b13d-9039c6892413 \
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--direction=BUY \
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--currency-code=EUR \
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--amount=0.125 \
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--fixed-price=30800 \
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--security-deposit=15.0 \
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--fee-currency=BTC
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```
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If Alice was in Japan, and wanted to create an offer to sell 0.125 BTC at 0.5% above the current market JPY price,
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putting up a 15% security deposit, the `createoffer` command to do that would be:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 createoffer \
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--payment-account=f3c1ec8b-9761-458d-b13d-9039c6892413 \
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--direction=SELL \
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--currency-code=JPY \
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--amount=0.125 \
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--market-price-margin=0.5 \
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--security-deposit=15.0 \
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--fee-currency=BTC
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2021-05-05 02:20:01 +02:00
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```
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The `trade-simulation.sh` script options that would generate the previous `createoffer` example is:
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```
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$ apitest/scripts/trade-simulation.sh -d sell -c jp -m 0.5 -a 0.125
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```
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### Browsing Your Own Offers
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There are different commands to browse available offers you can take, and offers you created.
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To see all offers you created with a specific direction (BUY|SELL) and currency (CAD|EUR|USD|...):
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 getmyoffers --direction=<BUY|SELL> --currency-code=<currency-code>
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```
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To look at a specific offer you created:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 getmyoffer --offer-id=<offer-id>
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```
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### Browsing Available Offers
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To see all available offers you can take, with a specific direction (BUY|SELL) and currency (CAD|EUR|USD|...):
|
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 getoffers --direction=<BUY|SELL> --currency-code=<currency-code>
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```
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To look at a specific, available offer you could take:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 getoffer --offer-id=<offer-id>
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```
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### Removing An Offer
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To cancel one of your offers:
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```
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 canceloffer --offer-id=<offer-id>
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```
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The offer will be removed from other Bisq users' offer views, and paid transaction fees will be forfeited.
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### Editing an Existing Offer
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Editing existing offers is not yet supported. You can cancel and re-create an offer, but paid transaction fees
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for the canceled offer will be forfeited.
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### Taking Offers
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Taking an available offer involves two CLI commands: `getoffers` and `takeoffer`.
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A CLI user browses available offers with the getoffers command. For example, the user browses SELL / EUR offers:
|
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|
```
|
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$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 getoffers --direction=SELL --currency-code=EUR
|
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|
```
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And takes one of the available offers with an EUR payment account ( id `fe20cdbd-22be-4b8a-a4b6-d2608ff09d6e`)
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|
with the `takeoffer` command:
|
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|
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|
```
|
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|
$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 takeoffer \
|
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|
--offer-id=83e8b2e2-51b6-4f39-a748-3ebd29c22aea \
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|
--payment-account=fe20cdbd-22be-4b8a-a4b6-d2608ff09d6e \
|
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|
|
--fee-currency=btc
|
|
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|
|
```
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|
The taken offer will be used to create a trade contract. The next section describes how to use the Api to execute
|
|
|
|
|
the trade.
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|
### Completing Trade Protocol
|
|
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|
The first step in the Bisq trade protocol is completed when a `takeoffer` command successfully creates a new trade from
|
|
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|
|
the taken offer. After the Bisq nodes prepare the trade, its status can be viewed with the `gettrade` command:
|
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
|
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|
$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 gettrade --trade-id=<trade-id>
|
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
|
The `trade-id` is the same as the taken `offer-id`, but when viewing and interacting with trades, it is referred to as
|
|
|
|
|
the `trade-id`. Note that the `trade-id` argument is a full `offer-id`, not a truncated `short-id` as displayed in the
|
|
|
|
|
Bisq UI.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
You can also view the entire trade contract in `json` format by using the `gettrade` command's `--show-contract=true`
|
|
|
|
|
option:
|
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
|
$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 gettrade --trade-id=<trade-id> --show-contract=true
|
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The `gettrade` command’s output shows the state of the trade from initial preparation through completion and closure.
|
|
|
|
|
Output columns include:
|
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
|
Deposit Published YES if the taker fee tx deposit has been broadcast to the network.
|
|
|
|
|
Deposit Confirmed YES if the taker fee tx deposit has been confirmed by the network.
|
|
|
|
|
Fiat Sent YES if the buyer has sent a “payment started” message to seller.
|
|
|
|
|
Fiat Received YES if the seller has sent a “payment received” message to buyer.
|
|
|
|
|
Payout Published YES if the seller’s BTC payout tx has been broadcast to the network.
|
|
|
|
|
Withdrawn YES if the buyer’s BTC proceeds have been sent to an external wallet.
|
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
|
Trade status information informs both sides of a trade which steps have been completed, and which step to perform next.
|
|
|
|
|
It should be frequently checked by both sides before proceeding to the next step of the protocol.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
_Note: There is some delay after a new trade is created due to the time it takes for a taker’s trade deposit fee
|
|
|
|
|
transaction to be published and confirmed on the bitcoin network. Both sides of the trade can check the `gettrade`
|
|
|
|
|
output's `Deposit Published` and `Deposit Confirmed` columns to find out when this early phase of the trade protocol is
|
|
|
|
|
complete._
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Once the taker fee transaction has been confirmed, payment can be sent, payment receipt confirmed, and the trade
|
|
|
|
|
protocol completed. There are three CLI commands that must be performed in coordinated order by each side of the trade:
|
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
|
confirmpaymentstarted Buyer sends seller a message confirming payment has been sent.
|
|
|
|
|
confirmpaymentreceived Seller sends buyer a message confirming payment has been received.
|
|
|
|
|
keepfunds Keep trade proceeds in their Bisq wallets.
|
|
|
|
|
OR
|
|
|
|
|
withdrawfunds Send trade proceeds to an external wallet.
|
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
|
The last two mutually exclusive commands (`keepfunds` or `withdrawfunds`) may seem unnecessary, but they are critical
|
|
|
|
|
because they inform the Bisq node that a trade’s state can be set to `CLOSED`. Please close out your trades with one
|
|
|
|
|
or the other command.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Each of the CLI commands above takes one argument: `--trade-id=<trade-id>`:
|
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
|
$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 confirmpaymentstarted --trade-id=<trade-id>
|
|
|
|
|
$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9999 confirmpaymentreceived --trade-id=<trade-id>
|
|
|
|
|
$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9998 keepfunds --trade-id=<trade-id>
|
|
|
|
|
$ ./bisq-cli --password=xyz --port=9999 withdrawfunds --trade-id=<trade-id> --address=<btc-address> [--memo=<"memo">]
|
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
## Shutting Down Test Harness
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The test harness should cleanly shutdown all the background apps in proper order after entering ^C.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Once shutdown, all Bisq and bitcoin-core data files are left in the state they were in at shutdown time,
|
|
|
|
|
so they and logs can be examined after a test run. All datafiles will be refreshed the next time the test harness
|
|
|
|
|
is started, so if you want to save datafiles and logs from a test run, copy them to a safe place first.
|
|
|
|
|
They can be found in `apitest/build/resources/main`.
|
|
|
|
|
|