On Tue, Oct 25, 2011 at 6:49 AM, Mike Hearn <m...@plan99.net> wrote: > scriptPubKeys that use OP_EVAL contain a hash of a script. If I > understand correctly, that means to detect a transaction in a block > that is relevant to your wallet, that means you need to pre-calculate > every possible hash that might appear.
You could do it that way... but that would be inefficient. You give the hash to whoever is paying you, and store the hash --> script mapping when you do that (assuming you're not using a deterministic wallet; if you are, you probably just increment a counter in the wallet). The only use case I can think of where you'd want to check for every possible hash is if you lose your wallet, you have a wallet backup that has your private keys in it, but DOES NOT have the hash --> script mapping(s). For use cases involving other people, that's probably not a problem-- you could ask them to tell you what public keys are involved, and then add them back in to the wallet (the RPC interface I settled on for m-of-n txns is an "addmultisigaddress" that takes the "m" and an array of "n" public keys, creates the script, adds the hash-->script mapping to the wallet, and returns the hash). For use cases where all the keys belong to you... either a good, automatic, in-the-cloud-backup or the equivalent of "-rescan" is needed to recover in case the mappings are lost. -- -- Gavin Andresen ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ The demand for IT networking professionals continues to grow, and the demand for specialized networking skills is growing even more rapidly. Take a complimentary Learning@Cisco Self-Assessment and learn about Cisco certifications, training, and career opportunities. http://p.sf.net/sfu/cisco-dev2dev _______________________________________________ Bitcoin-development mailing list Bitcoin-development@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/bitcoin-development