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SomberNight 09b9fb8374 exchange_rate: try harder to refresh quote when cache is expiring
Previously we polled every 2.5 minutes to get the fx spot price,
and had a 10 minute cache expiry during which the latest spot price
was valid.

On Android, this often resulted in having no price available (showing
"No data" in GUI) when putting the app in the foreground after e.g.
a half-hour sleep in the background: often there would be no fx price
until the next tick, which could take 2.5 minutes. (btw in some cases
I saw the application trying to get new quotes from the network as
soon as the app was put in the foreground but it seems those happened
so fast that the network was not ready yet and DNS lookups failed)

Now we make the behaviour a bit more complex: we still fetch the price
every 2.5 mins, and the cache is still valid for 10 mins, however if
the last price is >7.5 mins old, we become more aggressive and go into
an exponential backoff, initially trying a request every few seconds.
For the Android scenario, this means there might be "No data" for fx
for a few seconds after a long sleep, however if there is a working
network, it should soon get a fresh fx spot price quote.
2023-06-14 15:42:28 +00:00
2023-04-24 13:37:01 +00:00
2021-09-13 16:20:54 +00:00
2022-08-10 17:32:23 +02:00
2022-10-28 12:07:30 +02:00
2015-11-09 22:53:27 +09:00
2016-02-24 10:20:30 +01:00

Electrum - Lightweight Bitcoin client

Licence: MIT Licence
Author: Thomas Voegtlin
Language: Python (>= 3.8)
Homepage: https://electrum.org/

Build Status Test coverage statistics Help translate Electrum online

Getting started

(If you've come here looking to simply run Electrum, you may download it here.)

Electrum itself is pure Python, and so are most of the required dependencies, but not everything. The following sections describe how to run from source, but here is a TL;DR:

$ sudo apt-get install libsecp256k1-dev
$ python3 -m pip install --user ".[gui,crypto]"

Not pure-python dependencies

If you want to use the Qt interface, install the Qt dependencies:

$ sudo apt-get install python3-pyqt5

For elliptic curve operations, libsecp256k1 is a required dependency:

$ sudo apt-get install libsecp256k1-dev

Alternatively, when running from a cloned repository, a script is provided to build libsecp256k1 yourself:

$ sudo apt-get install automake libtool
$ ./contrib/make_libsecp256k1.sh

Due to the need for fast symmetric ciphers, cryptography is required. Install from your package manager (or from pip):

$ sudo apt-get install python3-cryptography

If you would like hardware wallet support, see this.

Running from tar.gz

If you downloaded the official package (tar.gz), you can run Electrum from its root directory without installing it on your system; all the pure python dependencies are included in the 'packages' directory. To run Electrum from its root directory, just do:

$ ./run_electrum

You can also install Electrum on your system, by running this command:

$ sudo apt-get install python3-setuptools python3-pip
$ python3 -m pip install --user .

This will download and install the Python dependencies used by Electrum instead of using the 'packages' directory. It will also place an executable named electrum in ~/.local/bin, so make sure that is on your PATH variable.

Development version (git clone)

(For OS-specific instructions, see here for Windows, and for macOS)

Check out the code from GitHub:

$ git clone https://github.com/spesmilo/electrum.git
$ cd electrum
$ git submodule update --init

Run install (this should install dependencies):

$ python3 -m pip install --user -e .

Create translations (optional):

$ sudo apt-get install python3-requests gettext qttools5-dev-tools
$ ./contrib/pull_locale

Finally, to start Electrum:

$ ./run_electrum

Run tests

Run unit tests with pytest:

$ pytest electrum/tests -v

To run a single file, specify it directly like this:

$ pytest electrum/tests/test_bitcoin.py -v

Creating Binaries

Contributing

Any help testing the software, reporting or fixing bugs, reviewing pull requests and recent changes, writing tests, or helping with outstanding issues is very welcome. Implementing new features, or improving/refactoring the codebase, is of course also welcome, but to avoid wasted effort, especially for larger changes, we encourage discussing these on the issue tracker or IRC first.

Besides GitHub, most communication about Electrum development happens on IRC, in the #electrum channel on Libera Chat. The easiest way to participate on IRC is with the web client, web.libera.chat.

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