Our block.Block was JSONized in a bit different fashion than result.Block in
its NextConsensus and Index fields. It's not good for notifications because
third-party clients would probably expect to see the same format. Also, using
completely different Block representation is probably making our client a bit
weaker as this representation is harder to use with other neo-go components.
So use the same approach we took for Transactions and wrap block.Block which is
to be serialized in proper way.
Fix `Script` JSONization along the way, 3.0 node wraps it within `witnesses`.
Note that the protocol differs a bit from #895 in its notifications format,
to avoid additional server-side processing we're omitting some metadata like:
* block size and confirmations
* transaction fees, confirmations, block hash and timestamp
* application execution doesn't have ScriptHash populated
Some block fields may also differ in encoding compared to `getblock` results
(like nonce field).
I think these differences are unnoticieable for most use cases, so we can
leave them as is, but it can be changed in the future.
1. Dropped `Base.ConsensusData` block field
2. Added `Block.ConsensusData` field with `Nonce` and `PrimaryIndex`
3. Removed "Neo.Header.GetConsensusData" and
"AntShares.Header.GetConsensusData" interops
Modified result.AssetState:
- removed `FeeMode` and `FeeAddress` fields
- fixed json name of `ID` and `AssetType` fields
to be consistent with C# RPC server
Merged two types:
- smartcontract.ParamType
- rpc.StackParamType
into single one:
- smartcontract.ParamType
as they duplicated the functionality.
NOTE: type smartcontract.MapType was added (as in C# implementation).
From now, list of supported smartcontract parameter types:
UnknownType
SignatureType
BoolType
IntegerType
Hash160Type
Hash256Type
ByteArrayType
PublicKeyType
StringType
ArrayType
MapType
InteropInterfaceType
VoidType
sendrawtransaction just returns a bool, sendtoaddress returns a proper
transaction and that should be the same as the one we have in
TransactionOutputRaw.
Mostly as is, no real effort done yet to optimize them, so there are still a
lot of duplicates there, but at least we sort them out into different smaller
packages.