blob: 05bf8ee9c3d19c5d1d8541ed40c8e6518bb59c7b (
plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
|
+++
title = "Blocks"
description = "Block Documentation"
weight = 10
+++
> Blocks commit proposed transactions into the ledger.
> A transaction that do not appear on a valid block is not accepted by the network.
Blocks in Gradecoin are proposed to commit [Transactions](@/transaction_docs.md) that were proposed previously to the system.
`transaction_list` of the Block should be filled with valid transactions to be committed.
Blocks are valid when they are proposed with a `nonce` that produces a `hash` value with 6 zeroes (24 bits) at the left hand side.
We are _mining_ using [blake2s](https://www.blake2.net/) algorithm, which produces 256 bit hashes.
Hash/second is roughly {{ exp(num="20x10", exponent="3") }} on my machine, a new block can be mined in around 4-6 minutes.
{% tidbit() %}
We have seen blocks that came in within a minute during the testnet phase!
{% end %}
# Requests
## GET
A HTTP `GET` request to [/block](/block) endpoint will return the latest mined block.
## POST
A HTTP `POST` request with Authorization using [JWT](@/JWT.md) will allow you to propose your own blocks.
# Fields
```
transaction_list: [array of Transaction IDs]
nonce: unsigned 32-bit integer
timestamp: ISO 8601 Timestamp (<date>T<time>)
hash: String
```
# Mining
The _mining_ process for the hash involves;
- Creating a temporary JSON object with `transaction_list`, `timestamp` and `nonce` values
- Serializing it
- Calculating blake2s hash of the serialized string
If the resulting hash is valid, then you can create a `Block` JSON object with the found `nonce` and `hash`.
# Hash
`tha` field in [jwt documentation](@/JWT.md) stands for "The Hash" in the context of blocks.
Fill this with the `hash` value you found during the mining process.
# Block Rules
- Blocks should include some minimum number of transactions.
- Blocks cannot have duplicate transactions.
# References
- [ISO 8601 Reference](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601#Combined_date_and_time_representations)
|