This allows appropriate action to be taken, like displaying
the reason to the user.
Do just that in simplewallet, which should help a lot in
determining why users fail to send.
Also make it so a tx which is accepted but not relayed is
seen as a success rather than a failure.
With the change in mixin rules for v2, the "annoying" outputs are
slightly changed. There is high correlation between dust and
unmixable, but no equivalence.
It takes a filename containing JSON data to generate a wallet.
The following fields are valid:
version: integer, should be 1
filename: string, path/filename for the newly created wallet
scan_from_height: 64 bit unsigned integer, optional
password: string, optional
viewkey: string, hex representation
spendkey: string, hex representation
seed: string, optional, list of words separated by spaces
Either seed or private keys should be given. If using private
keys, the spend key may be omitted (the wallet will not be
able to spend, but will see incoming transactions).
If scan_from_height is given, blocks below this height will not
be checked for transactions as an optimization.
After the fork, normal transfer functions called via RPC
use the minimum mixin 2 if 0 or 1 is requested. While the
incoming transaction may be valid (eg, it has an unmixable
and at most a mixable input), it is a simple way to make
sure RPC users can't get a seemingly random accept/reject
behavior if they don't update their requested mixin.
If it is, it points to reuse of a tx key, which isn't meant to happen.
If it does, a key image collision means that only one of those
outputs is spendable, so the wallet selects the larger amount,
unless that output was spent already.
This causes a discrepancy betewen reported received inputs and
payment total.
Since tx keys are 256 bits, this should never happen except if
done on purpose, or if a sender uses a bad PRNG.
7fc6fa3 wallet: forbid dust altogether in output selection where appropriate (moneromooo-monero)
5e1a739 blockchain: log number of outputs available for a new tx (moneromooo-monero)
The value will be different depending on whether we've reached
the first hard fork, which allows a larger size, or not.
This fixes transactions being rejected by the daemon on mainnet
where the first hard fork is not yet active.
Blockchain hashes and key images are flushed, and blocks are
pulled anew from the daemon.
The console command is shortened to match bc_height.
This should make it a lot easier on users who are currently
told to remove this particular cache file but keep the keys
one, etc, etc.