Testen
Test Environment
ord env <DIRECTORY>
creates a test environment in <DIRECTORY>
, spins up bitcoind
and ord server
instances, prints example commands for interacting with the test bitcoind
and ord server
instances, waits for CTRL-C
, and then shuts down bitcoind
and ord server
.
ord env
tries to use port 9000 for bitcoind
's RPC interface, and port 9001
for ord
's RPC interface, but will fall back to random unused ports.
Inside of the env directory, ord env
will write bitcoind
's configuration to bitcoin.conf
, ord
's configuration to ord.yaml
, and the env configuration to env.json
.
env.json
contains the commands needed to invoke bitcoin-cli
and ord wallet
, as well as the ports bitcoind
and ord server
are listening on.
These can be extracted into shell commands using jq
:
bitcoin=`jq -r '.bitcoin_cli_command | join(" ")' env/env.json`
$bitcoin listunspent
ord=`jq -r '.ord_wallet_command | join(" ")' env/env.json`
$ord outputs
If ord
is in the $PATH
and the env directory is env
, the bitcoin-cli
command will be:
bitcoin-cli -datadir=env
And the ord
will be:
ord --datadir env
Test Networks
Ord kann mithilfe der folgenden Flags getestet werden, um das Testnetzwerk anzugeben. Weitere Informationen zum Ausführen von Bitcoin Core zu Testzwecken finden Sie in der Entwicklerdokumentation von Bitcoin.
Most ord
commands in wallet and explorer can be run with the following network flags:
Network | Flag |
---|---|
Testnet | --testnet or -t |
Signet | --signet or -s |
Regtest | --regtest or -r |
Regtest doesn't require downloading the blockchain since you create your own private blockchain, so indexing ord
is almost instantaneous.
Beispiel
Run bitcoind
in regtest with:
bitcoind -regtest -txindex
Run ord server
in regtest with:
ord --regtest server
Erstellen Sie im Regtest ein Wallet mit:
ord --regtest wallet create
Erhalten Sie eine Regtest-Empfangsadresse mit:
ord --regtest wallet receive
Minen Sie 101 Blöcke (um die coinbase freizuschalten) mit:
bitcoin-cli -regtest generatetoaddress 101 <receive address>
Inscribe im Regtest mit:
ord --regtest wallet inscribe --fee-rate 1 --file <file>
Mine die inscription mit:
bitcoin-cli -regtest generatetoaddress 1 <receive address>
By default, browsers don't support compression over HTTP. To test compressed content over HTTP, use the --decompress
flag:
ord --regtest server --decompress
Testen der Rekursion
When testing out recursion, inscribe the dependencies first (example with p5.js):
ord --regtest wallet inscribe --fee-rate 1 --file p5.js
This will return the inscription ID of the dependency which you can then reference in your inscription.
However, inscription IDs differ between mainnet and test chains, so you must change the inscription IDs in your inscription to the mainnet inscription IDs of your dependencies before making the final inscription on mainnet.
Dann können Sie Ihre rekursive inscribe einschreiben mit:
ord --regtest wallet inscribe --fee-rate 1 --file recursive-inscription.html
Schließlich müssen Sie einige Blöcke minen und den Server starten:
bitcoin-cli generatetoaddress 6 <receive address>
Mainnet Dependencies
To avoid having to change dependency inscription IDs to mainnet inscription IDs, you may utilize a content proxy when testing. ord server
accepts a --proxy
option, which takes the URL of a another ord server
instance. When making a request to /content/<INSCRIPTION_ID>
when a content proxy is set and the inscription is not found, ord server
will forward the request to the content proxy. This allows you to run a test ord server
instance with a mainnet content proxy. You can then use mainnet inscription IDs in your test inscription, which will then return the content of the mainnet inscriptions.
ord --regtest server --proxy https://ordinals.com