hive-rubyHive-ruby the Ruby API for Hive blockchain.
radiator vs. hive-rubyThe hive-ruby gem was written from the ground up by @inertia, who is also the author of radiator.
"I intend to continue work on
radiatorindefinitely. But inradiator-0.5, I intend to refactorradiatorso that is useshive-rubyas its core. This means that some features ofradiatorlike Serialization will become redundant. I think it's still useful for radiator to do its own serialization because it reduces the number of API requests." -
radiator | hive-ruby |
|---|---|
| Has internal failover logic | Can have failover delegated externally |
Passes error responses to the caller | Handles error responses and raises exceptions |
| Supports tx signing, does its own serialization | Also supports tx signing, but delegates serialization to database_api.get_transaction_hex, then deserializes to verify |
| All apis and methods are hardcoded | Asks jsonrpc what apis and methods are available from the node |
(radiator-0.4.x) Only supports AppBase but relies on condenser_api | Only supports AppBase but does not rely on condenser_api (WIP) |
| Small list of helper methods for select ops (in addition to build your own transaction) | Complete implementation of helper methods for every op (in addition to build your own transaction) |
Does not (yet) support json-rpc-batch requests | Supports json-rpc-batch requests |
The hive-ruby gem is compatible with Ruby 2.2.5 or later.
(Assuming that Ruby is installed on your computer, as well as RubyGems)
To install the gem on your computer, run in shell:
gem install hive-ruby
... then add in your code:
require 'hive'
To add the gem as a dependency to your project with Bundler, you can add this line in your Gemfile:
gem 'hive-ruby', require: 'hive'
params = {
voter: voter,
author: author,
permlink: permlink,
weight: weight
}
Hive::Broadcast.vote(wif: wif, params: params) do |result|
puts result
end
The value passed to the block is an object, with the keys: :type and :value.
stream = Hive::Stream.new
stream.operations do |op|
puts "#{op.type}: #{op.value}"
end
To start a stream from a specific block number, pass it as an argument:
stream = Hive::Stream.new
stream.operations(at_block_num: 9001) do |op|
puts "#{op.type}: #{op.value}"
end
You can also grab the related transaction id and block number for each operation:
stream = Hive::Stream.new
stream.operations do |op, trx_id, block_num|
puts "#{block_num} :: #{trx_id}"
puts "#{op.type}: #{op.value}"
end
To stream only certain operations:
stream = Hive::Stream.new
stream.operations(types: :vote_operation) do |op|
puts "#{op.type}: #{op.value}"
end
Or pass an array of certain operations:
stream = Hive::Stream.new
stream.operations(types: [:comment_operation, :vote_operation]) do |op|
puts "#{op.type}: #{op.value}"
end
Or (optionally) just pass the operation(s) you want as the only arguments. This is semantic sugar for when you want specific types and take all of the defaults.
stream = Hive::Stream.new
stream.operations(:vote_operation) do |op|
puts "#{op.type}: #{op.value}"
end
To also include virtual operations:
stream = Hive::Stream.new
stream.operations(include_virtual: true) do |op|
puts "#{op.type}: #{op.value}"
end
You can use multisignature to broadcast an operation.
params = {
voter: voter,
author: author,
permlink: permlink,
weight: weight
}
Hive::Broadcast.vote(wif: [wif1, wif2], params: params) do |result|
puts result
end
In addition to signing with multiple wif private keys, it is possible to also export a partially signed transaction to have signing completed by someone else.
builder = Hive::TransactionBuilder.new(wif: wif1)
builder.put(vote: {
voter: voter,
author: author,
permlink: permlink,
weight: weight
})
trx = builder.sign.to_json
File.open('trx.json', 'w') do |f|
f.write(trx)
end
Then send the contents of trx.json to the other signing party so they can privately sign and broadcast the transaction.
trx = open('trx.json').read
builder = Hive::TransactionBuilder.new(wif: wif2, trx: trx)
api = Hive::CondenserApi.new
trx = builder.transaction
api.broadcast_transaction_synchronous(trx)
api = Hive::DatabaseApi.new
api.find_accounts(accounts: ['hiveio', 'alice']) do |result|
puts result.accounts
end
rep = Hive::Formatter.reputation(account.reputation)
puts rep
git clone https://gitlab.syncad.com/hive/hive-ruby.gitcd hive-rubybundle exec rake teststatic tests:
bundle exec rake test:staticbroadcast tests (broadcast is simulated, only verify is actually used):
bundle exec rake test:broadcastthreads tests (which quickly verifies thread safety):
bundle exec rake test:threadstestnet tests (which does actual broadcasts)
TEST_NODE=https://testnet-api.openhive.network bundle exec rake test:testnetYou can also run other tests that are not part of the above test execution:
block_range, which streams blocks (using json-rpc-batch)
bundle exec rake stream:block_rangeIf you want to point to any node for tests, instead of letting the test suite pick the default, set the environment variable to TEST_NODE, e.g.:
$ TEST_NODE=https://testnet-api.openhive.network bundle exec rake test
Patches are welcome! Contributors are listed in the hive-ruby.gemspec file. Please run the tests (rake test) before opening a pull request and make sure that you are passing all of them. If you would like to contribute, but don't know what to work on, check the issues list.
When you find issues, please report them!
MIT