How can I use Monero RPC via PythonWallet RPC API wallet creationHow To Restart New Blockchain Sync?Getting “Unauthorized Access” with RPC (using Python Requests)Is there a way to get the latest blocks from monero rpcMonero setting up a testnet wallet in terminal, can't syncUnable to get any transactions from walletd JSON RPC responseJSON-RPC Not Working as Shown in Wallet GuideHow to restore Monero RPC Wallet from seedRPC binary request with PythonGet public key of tx that currently in txpool

Why does processed meat contain preservatives, while canned fish needs not?

Minimum value of 4 digit number divided by sum of its digits

function to receive a character input and return date format (with incorrect input)

Confused by chemical notation

Why does nature favour the Laplacian?

How to pronounce 'C++' in Spanish

Are Boeing 737-800’s grounded?

How could Tony Stark make this in Endgame?

Will a top journal at least read my introduction?

Pressure to defend the relevance of one's area of mathematics

Unexpected email from Yorkshire Bank

How can I place the product on a social media post better?

What is the strongest case that can be made in favour of the UK regaining some control over fishing policy after Brexit?

Was there a shared-world project before "Thieves World"?

Disable screen dimming in Ubuntu Mate 18.04.2 LTS

Any examples of headwear for races with animal ears?

Is thermodynamics only applicable to systems in equilibrium?

How do I deal with a coworker that keeps asking to make small superficial changes to a report, and it is seriously triggering my anxiety?

How to back up a running remote server?

Alternatives to Overleaf

How would one muzzle a full grown polar bear in the 13th century?

What is the difference between `a[bc]d` (brackets) and `ab,cd` (braces)?

Killing undead fish underwater

Why was the Spitfire's elliptical wing almost uncopied by other aircraft of World War 2?



How can I use Monero RPC via Python


Wallet RPC API wallet creationHow To Restart New Blockchain Sync?Getting “Unauthorized Access” with RPC (using Python Requests)Is there a way to get the latest blocks from monero rpcMonero setting up a testnet wallet in terminal, can't syncUnable to get any transactions from walletd JSON RPC responseJSON-RPC Not Working as Shown in Wallet GuideHow to restore Monero RPC Wallet from seedRPC binary request with PythonGet public key of tx that currently in txpool













1















As documented in
https://ww.getmonero.org/resources/developer-guides/daemon-rpc.html
and
https://ww.getmonero.org/resources/developer-guides/wallet-rpc.html,
Monero can be used programmatically using daemon and wallet RPC.



If I wanted to use Python to extract data from the blockchain, for example nonce values over a block range to run statistics on, what is the best way to do it ?










share|improve this question


























    1















    As documented in
    https://ww.getmonero.org/resources/developer-guides/daemon-rpc.html
    and
    https://ww.getmonero.org/resources/developer-guides/wallet-rpc.html,
    Monero can be used programmatically using daemon and wallet RPC.



    If I wanted to use Python to extract data from the blockchain, for example nonce values over a block range to run statistics on, what is the best way to do it ?










    share|improve this question
























      1












      1








      1








      As documented in
      https://ww.getmonero.org/resources/developer-guides/daemon-rpc.html
      and
      https://ww.getmonero.org/resources/developer-guides/wallet-rpc.html,
      Monero can be used programmatically using daemon and wallet RPC.



      If I wanted to use Python to extract data from the blockchain, for example nonce values over a block range to run statistics on, what is the best way to do it ?










      share|improve this question














      As documented in
      https://ww.getmonero.org/resources/developer-guides/daemon-rpc.html
      and
      https://ww.getmonero.org/resources/developer-guides/wallet-rpc.html,
      Monero can be used programmatically using daemon and wallet RPC.



      If I wanted to use Python to extract data from the blockchain, for example nonce values over a block range to run statistics on, what is the best way to do it ?







      blockchain rpc python






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked 1 hour ago









      user36303user36303

      31.7k246108




      31.7k246108




















          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          1














          The Monero team recently added a tool that makes it easy to integrate Monero RPC with Python. It can connect to running daemon and wallet and exposes their RPC interfaces:



          The following command will connect to a monerod running on mainnet on default settings:



          utils/python-rpc/console 18081 


          You'll get this output:



          Variable 'daemon' connected to daemon RPC on 127.0.0.1:18081
          >>>


          You're now in a python interpreter, and the daemon variable is set to an object which can call daemon RPC directly, eg:



          >>> daemon.get_version()
          u'status': u'OK', u'untrusted': False, u'version': 131078
          >>>


          For the use case above (retrieving 21 nonce values from the blockchain from height 1000):



          >>> [x.nonce for x in daemon.getblockheadersrange(1000, 1020).headers]
          [3419004817, 3320605335, 295465941, 3696734864, 2221411748, 2201153093, 148086550, 524920481, 1766174771, 1831485859, 2409397405, 804573540, 535538542, 1487558207, 3340140970, 4029873826, 3890252333, 586366003, 1681558754, 1323530723, 240084243]
          >>>



          You can also connect the console to several processes, daemon and wallet, so you can interact with both from the same interpreter. The console will detect whether it's connecting to a node or a wallet, and will create the RPC proxy objects as daemon or wallet accordingly. If you connect to more than one demon or more than one wallet, the RPC objects will be daemons and/or wallets arrays instead of single variables. For instance, if you have a wallet running on port 8080:



          $ utils/python-rpc/console 18081 8080
          Variable 'daemon' connected to daemon RPC on 127.0.0.1:18081
          Variable 'wallet' connected to wallet RPC on 127.0.0.1:8080
          >>>


          The console tool accepts full URLs if the daemon/wallet does not run on 127.0.0.1.






          share|improve this answer























          • The answer shows using the new console tool, but doesn't show how to mix with other python code. Perhaps also reference: moneroexamples.github.io/python-json-rpc which shows calling the RPC interfaces directly from standalone python scripts.

            – jtgrassie
            41 mins ago











          Your Answer








          StackExchange.ready(function()
          var channelOptions =
          tags: "".split(" "),
          id: "656"
          ;
          initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

          StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
          // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
          if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
          StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
          createEditor();
          );

          else
          createEditor();

          );

          function createEditor()
          StackExchange.prepareEditor(
          heartbeatType: 'answer',
          autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
          convertImagesToLinks: false,
          noModals: true,
          showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
          reputationToPostImages: null,
          bindNavPrevention: true,
          postfix: "",
          imageUploader:
          brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
          contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
          allowUrls: true
          ,
          noCode: true, onDemand: true,
          discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
          ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
          );



          );













          draft saved

          draft discarded


















          StackExchange.ready(
          function ()
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmonero.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f11171%2fhow-can-i-use-monero-rpc-via-python%23new-answer', 'question_page');

          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown

























          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes








          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          1














          The Monero team recently added a tool that makes it easy to integrate Monero RPC with Python. It can connect to running daemon and wallet and exposes their RPC interfaces:



          The following command will connect to a monerod running on mainnet on default settings:



          utils/python-rpc/console 18081 


          You'll get this output:



          Variable 'daemon' connected to daemon RPC on 127.0.0.1:18081
          >>>


          You're now in a python interpreter, and the daemon variable is set to an object which can call daemon RPC directly, eg:



          >>> daemon.get_version()
          u'status': u'OK', u'untrusted': False, u'version': 131078
          >>>


          For the use case above (retrieving 21 nonce values from the blockchain from height 1000):



          >>> [x.nonce for x in daemon.getblockheadersrange(1000, 1020).headers]
          [3419004817, 3320605335, 295465941, 3696734864, 2221411748, 2201153093, 148086550, 524920481, 1766174771, 1831485859, 2409397405, 804573540, 535538542, 1487558207, 3340140970, 4029873826, 3890252333, 586366003, 1681558754, 1323530723, 240084243]
          >>>



          You can also connect the console to several processes, daemon and wallet, so you can interact with both from the same interpreter. The console will detect whether it's connecting to a node or a wallet, and will create the RPC proxy objects as daemon or wallet accordingly. If you connect to more than one demon or more than one wallet, the RPC objects will be daemons and/or wallets arrays instead of single variables. For instance, if you have a wallet running on port 8080:



          $ utils/python-rpc/console 18081 8080
          Variable 'daemon' connected to daemon RPC on 127.0.0.1:18081
          Variable 'wallet' connected to wallet RPC on 127.0.0.1:8080
          >>>


          The console tool accepts full URLs if the daemon/wallet does not run on 127.0.0.1.






          share|improve this answer























          • The answer shows using the new console tool, but doesn't show how to mix with other python code. Perhaps also reference: moneroexamples.github.io/python-json-rpc which shows calling the RPC interfaces directly from standalone python scripts.

            – jtgrassie
            41 mins ago















          1














          The Monero team recently added a tool that makes it easy to integrate Monero RPC with Python. It can connect to running daemon and wallet and exposes their RPC interfaces:



          The following command will connect to a monerod running on mainnet on default settings:



          utils/python-rpc/console 18081 


          You'll get this output:



          Variable 'daemon' connected to daemon RPC on 127.0.0.1:18081
          >>>


          You're now in a python interpreter, and the daemon variable is set to an object which can call daemon RPC directly, eg:



          >>> daemon.get_version()
          u'status': u'OK', u'untrusted': False, u'version': 131078
          >>>


          For the use case above (retrieving 21 nonce values from the blockchain from height 1000):



          >>> [x.nonce for x in daemon.getblockheadersrange(1000, 1020).headers]
          [3419004817, 3320605335, 295465941, 3696734864, 2221411748, 2201153093, 148086550, 524920481, 1766174771, 1831485859, 2409397405, 804573540, 535538542, 1487558207, 3340140970, 4029873826, 3890252333, 586366003, 1681558754, 1323530723, 240084243]
          >>>



          You can also connect the console to several processes, daemon and wallet, so you can interact with both from the same interpreter. The console will detect whether it's connecting to a node or a wallet, and will create the RPC proxy objects as daemon or wallet accordingly. If you connect to more than one demon or more than one wallet, the RPC objects will be daemons and/or wallets arrays instead of single variables. For instance, if you have a wallet running on port 8080:



          $ utils/python-rpc/console 18081 8080
          Variable 'daemon' connected to daemon RPC on 127.0.0.1:18081
          Variable 'wallet' connected to wallet RPC on 127.0.0.1:8080
          >>>


          The console tool accepts full URLs if the daemon/wallet does not run on 127.0.0.1.






          share|improve this answer























          • The answer shows using the new console tool, but doesn't show how to mix with other python code. Perhaps also reference: moneroexamples.github.io/python-json-rpc which shows calling the RPC interfaces directly from standalone python scripts.

            – jtgrassie
            41 mins ago













          1












          1








          1







          The Monero team recently added a tool that makes it easy to integrate Monero RPC with Python. It can connect to running daemon and wallet and exposes their RPC interfaces:



          The following command will connect to a monerod running on mainnet on default settings:



          utils/python-rpc/console 18081 


          You'll get this output:



          Variable 'daemon' connected to daemon RPC on 127.0.0.1:18081
          >>>


          You're now in a python interpreter, and the daemon variable is set to an object which can call daemon RPC directly, eg:



          >>> daemon.get_version()
          u'status': u'OK', u'untrusted': False, u'version': 131078
          >>>


          For the use case above (retrieving 21 nonce values from the blockchain from height 1000):



          >>> [x.nonce for x in daemon.getblockheadersrange(1000, 1020).headers]
          [3419004817, 3320605335, 295465941, 3696734864, 2221411748, 2201153093, 148086550, 524920481, 1766174771, 1831485859, 2409397405, 804573540, 535538542, 1487558207, 3340140970, 4029873826, 3890252333, 586366003, 1681558754, 1323530723, 240084243]
          >>>



          You can also connect the console to several processes, daemon and wallet, so you can interact with both from the same interpreter. The console will detect whether it's connecting to a node or a wallet, and will create the RPC proxy objects as daemon or wallet accordingly. If you connect to more than one demon or more than one wallet, the RPC objects will be daemons and/or wallets arrays instead of single variables. For instance, if you have a wallet running on port 8080:



          $ utils/python-rpc/console 18081 8080
          Variable 'daemon' connected to daemon RPC on 127.0.0.1:18081
          Variable 'wallet' connected to wallet RPC on 127.0.0.1:8080
          >>>


          The console tool accepts full URLs if the daemon/wallet does not run on 127.0.0.1.






          share|improve this answer













          The Monero team recently added a tool that makes it easy to integrate Monero RPC with Python. It can connect to running daemon and wallet and exposes their RPC interfaces:



          The following command will connect to a monerod running on mainnet on default settings:



          utils/python-rpc/console 18081 


          You'll get this output:



          Variable 'daemon' connected to daemon RPC on 127.0.0.1:18081
          >>>


          You're now in a python interpreter, and the daemon variable is set to an object which can call daemon RPC directly, eg:



          >>> daemon.get_version()
          u'status': u'OK', u'untrusted': False, u'version': 131078
          >>>


          For the use case above (retrieving 21 nonce values from the blockchain from height 1000):



          >>> [x.nonce for x in daemon.getblockheadersrange(1000, 1020).headers]
          [3419004817, 3320605335, 295465941, 3696734864, 2221411748, 2201153093, 148086550, 524920481, 1766174771, 1831485859, 2409397405, 804573540, 535538542, 1487558207, 3340140970, 4029873826, 3890252333, 586366003, 1681558754, 1323530723, 240084243]
          >>>



          You can also connect the console to several processes, daemon and wallet, so you can interact with both from the same interpreter. The console will detect whether it's connecting to a node or a wallet, and will create the RPC proxy objects as daemon or wallet accordingly. If you connect to more than one demon or more than one wallet, the RPC objects will be daemons and/or wallets arrays instead of single variables. For instance, if you have a wallet running on port 8080:



          $ utils/python-rpc/console 18081 8080
          Variable 'daemon' connected to daemon RPC on 127.0.0.1:18081
          Variable 'wallet' connected to wallet RPC on 127.0.0.1:8080
          >>>


          The console tool accepts full URLs if the daemon/wallet does not run on 127.0.0.1.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 1 hour ago









          user36303user36303

          31.7k246108




          31.7k246108












          • The answer shows using the new console tool, but doesn't show how to mix with other python code. Perhaps also reference: moneroexamples.github.io/python-json-rpc which shows calling the RPC interfaces directly from standalone python scripts.

            – jtgrassie
            41 mins ago

















          • The answer shows using the new console tool, but doesn't show how to mix with other python code. Perhaps also reference: moneroexamples.github.io/python-json-rpc which shows calling the RPC interfaces directly from standalone python scripts.

            – jtgrassie
            41 mins ago
















          The answer shows using the new console tool, but doesn't show how to mix with other python code. Perhaps also reference: moneroexamples.github.io/python-json-rpc which shows calling the RPC interfaces directly from standalone python scripts.

          – jtgrassie
          41 mins ago





          The answer shows using the new console tool, but doesn't show how to mix with other python code. Perhaps also reference: moneroexamples.github.io/python-json-rpc which shows calling the RPC interfaces directly from standalone python scripts.

          – jtgrassie
          41 mins ago

















          draft saved

          draft discarded
















































          Thanks for contributing an answer to Monero Stack Exchange!


          • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

          But avoid


          • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

          • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

          To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




          draft saved


          draft discarded














          StackExchange.ready(
          function ()
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fmonero.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f11171%2fhow-can-i-use-monero-rpc-via-python%23new-answer', 'question_page');

          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown





















































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown

































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown







          Popular posts from this blog

          Can not update quote_id field of “quote_item” table magento 2Magento 2.1 - We can't remove the item. (Shopping Cart doesnt allow us to remove items before becomes empty)Add value for custom quote item attribute using REST apiREST API endpoint v1/carts/cartId/items always returns error messageCorrect way to save entries to databaseHow to remove all associated quote objects of a customer completelyMagento 2 - Save value from custom input field to quote_itemGet quote_item data using quote id and product id filter in Magento 2How to set additional data to quote_item table from controller in Magento 2?What is the purpose of additional_data column in quote_item table in magento2Set Custom Price to Quote item magento2 from controller

          How to solve knockout JS error in Magento 2 Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern) Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?(Magento2) knockout.js:3012 Uncaught ReferenceError: Unable to process bindingUnable to process binding Knockout.js magento 2Cannot read property `scopeLabel` of undefined on Product Detail PageCan't get Customer Data on frontend in Magento 2Magento2 Order Summary - unable to process bindingKO templates are not loading in Magento 2.1 applicationgetting knockout js error magento 2Product grid not load -— Unable to process binding Knockout.js magento 2Product form not loaded in magento2Uncaught ReferenceError: Unable to process binding “if: function()return (isShowLegend()) ” magento 2

          Nissan Patrol Зміст Перше покоління — 4W60 (1951-1960) | Друге покоління — 60 series (1960-1980) | Третє покоління (1980–2002) | Четверте покоління — Y60 (1987–1998) | П'яте покоління — Y61 (1997–2013) | Шосте покоління — Y62 (2010- ) | Посилання | Зноски | Навігаційне менюОфіційний український сайтТест-драйв Nissan Patrol 2010 7-го поколінняNissan PatrolКак мы тестировали Nissan Patrol 2016рвиправивши або дописавши її