Please Note! Not maintained.
Currently django-bitcoin
is not maintained. I don't recommend using it.
If you want to develop it, don't issue pull requests, but create your own fork. Thanks!
Introduction
django-bitcoin
is a Django web framework
application for building Bitcoin web apps.
Contents
Features
- Simple Bitcoin wallet management
- Bitcoin payment processing
- Bitcoin market information
Installation
To install, just add the app to your settings.py INSTALLED_APPS like:
INSTALLED_APPS = [ ... 'django_bitcoin', ... ]
Also you have to run a local bitcoind instance, and specify connection string in settings:
BITCOIND_CONNECTION_STRING = "http://bitcoinuser:password@localhost:8332"
Usage
Tutorial
There is a small tutorial about how to use django-bitcoin to create your own instawallet.
Wallet websites, escrow services using the "Wallet"-model
You can use the Wallet class to do different bitcoin-moving applications. Typical example would be a marketplace-style site, where there are multiple sellers and buyer. Or job freelance site, where escrow is needed. Or even an exchange could be done with this abstraction (a little extra classes would be needed however).
Note that while you move bitcoins between Wallet-objects, only bitcoin transactions needed are incoming and outgoing transactions. Transactions between the system "Wallet"-objects don't generate "real" bitcoin transactions. Every transaction (except incoming transactions) is logged to WalletTransaction object to ease accounting.
This also means that outgoing bitcoin transactions are "mixed":
from django_bitcoin import Wallet, currency class Profile(models.Model): wallet = ForeignKey(Wallet) outgoing_bitcoin_address = CharField() class Escrow(models.Model): wallet = ForeignKey(Wallet) buyer_happy = BooleanField(default=False) buyer=Profile.objects.create() seller=Profile.objects.create() purchase=Escrow.objects.create() AMOUNT_USD="9.99" m=currency.Money(AMOUNT_USD, "USD") btc_amount=currency.exchange(m, "BTC") print "Send "+str(btc_amount)+" BTC to address "+buyer.wallet.receiving_address() sleep(5000) # wait for transaction if p1.wallet.total_balance()>=btc_amount: p1.send_to_wallet(purchase, btc_amount) sleep(1000) # wait for product/service delivery if purchase.buyer_happy: purchase.wallet.send_to_wallet(seller.wallet) seller.wallet.send_to_address(seller.outgoing_bitcoin_address, seller.wallet.total_balance()) else: print "WHY U NO HAPPY" #return bitcoins to buyer, 50/50 split or something
Templatetags
To display transaction history and simple wallet tagline in your views, use the following templatetags:
{% load currency_conversions %} <!-- display balance tagline, estimate in USD and received/sent --> {% wallet_tagline profile.bitcoin_wallet %} <!-- display list of transactions as a table --> {% wallet_history profile.bitcoin_wallet %}
Easy way to convert currencies from each other: btc2usd, usd2btc, eur2btc, btc2eur
Also currency2btc, btc2currency for any currencies on bitcoincharts.com:
{% load currency_conversions %} Hi, for the pizza: send me {{bitcoin_amount}}BTC (about {{ bitcoin_amount|btc2usd }}USD).
Display QR code of the bitcoin payment using google charts API:
{% load currency_conversions %} Pay the following payment with your android bitcoin wallet: {% bitcoin_payment_qr wallet.receiving_address bitcoin_amount %}. The same but display also description and an estimate in EUR: {% bitcoin_payment_qr wallet.receiving_address bitcoin_amount "One beer" "EUR" %}.
Transaction notifications
To enable bitcoin transaction notifications, set the following flag in your settings.py
:
BITCOIN_TRANSACTION_SIGNALING = True
After that, you need to setup a cron job to run each minute, something like the following:
* * * * * (cd $APP_PATH && python manage.py python manage.py CheckTransactions >> $APP_PATH/logs/email_sends.log 2>&1)
After that you can define your balance_changed and balance_changed_confirmed signals:
from django_bitcoin.models import balance_changed, balance_changed_confirmed from django.dispatch import receiver @receiver(balance_changed) def balance_changed_handler(sender, **kwargs): pass # try: # print "balance changed", sender.id, kwargs["changed"], sender.total_balance() @receiver(balance_changed_confirmed) def balance_changed_confirmed_handler(sender, **kwargs): pass