Monero daemon and wallet RPC written in asynchronous Rust 🦀.
Create the RPC client and transform it into a deamon RPC to call /get_transactions
method and print the result.
use monero_rpc::{RpcClientBuilder, JsonTransaction};
#[tokio::test]
async fn monero_daemon_transactions_test() {
let tx_id = "7c50844eced8ab78a8f26a126fbc1f731134e0ae3e6f9ba0f205f98c1426ff60".to_string();
let rpc_client = monero_rpc::RpcClientBuilder::new()
.build("http://node.monerooutreach.org:18081")
.unwrap();
let daemon_rpc_client = rpc_client.daemon_rpc();
let mut fixed_hash: [u8; 32] = [0; 32];
hex::decode_to_slice(tx_id, &mut fixed_hash).unwrap();
let tx = daemon_rpc_client
.get_transactions(vec![fixed_hash.into()], Some(true), Some(true))
.await;
println!("tx {:?}", tx);
println!(
"unlock time: {:?}",
serde_json::from_str::<JsonTransaction>(&tx.unwrap().txs_as_json.unwrap()[0])
);
}
First, you'll need docker
and docker compose
to run the RPC integration tests, which are in tests/
, in case you don't want to run monerod
and monero-wallet-rpc
on your own.
If you have the docker stack installed, go to the tests
folder and run docker compose up
. Note that the daemon will run on port 18081
and monero-wallet-rpc
will run on port 18083
.
After that, just run cargo test
as you normally would.
Also, you can run docker compose down
to stop and remove the two containers started by docker compose up
.
Important: the blockchain must be empty when running the main_functional_test
test on tests/rpc.rs
, i.e. it must have only the genesis block. In regtest
, the blockchain restarts when monerod
restarts (as a side note, if you want to keep the blockchain in regtest
between restarts, you should pass the --keep-fakechain
flag when starting monerod
).
See CHANGELOG.md and RELEASING.md.
The code in this project is licensed under the Apache-2.0