Building on Libbitcoin
Today I’m announcing the availability of the open source Bitcoin framework for iOS. I have been working with Blockchain Commons on wallet apps for iOS that will support airgapped transaction signing and BTCR Decentralized Identity (DID). As part of this effort we chose to build on the open source libbitcoin library.
From C++ to Swift
Libbitcoin is written in C++. This poses a problem for incorporating it into native iOS apps: there is no straightforward way to import C++ code into Swift. Swift does interface fairly easily to straight C, however. So to bridge the gap I wrote two frameworks: CBitcoin, which exports a C-based interface from libbitcoin, and Bitcoin, which builds on CBitcoin to export a clean Swift interface to libbitcoin.
Since the purpose of these two frameworks is primarily to facilitate building cryptocurrency wallets on iOS, I haven’t (so far) had a need to export parts of libbitcoin that are useful primarily to Bitcoin nodes. Pull requests are welcome!
Building libbitcoin for iOS is no simple task. It has two other dependencies: libsecp256k1, which handles the elliptic curve cryptography and libboost, which is a large toolkit for writing better C++. These and libbitcoin itself have to be built as fat binaries for two ARM architectures for running on the iPhone, native MacOS, and another version for running on MacOS under the iOS simulator. For this I built on the open source work of Airbitz.
Once the binaries are built, they have to be combined into fat binaries and then bundled into frameworks. I wrote a Bash shell script to coordinate these steps. The build takes over half an hour on my Mac Pro, so to save others the time my script zips up the resulting frameworks and checks them into GitHub too. However, the zipped frameworks exceed GitHub’s file size limit, but it turns out they also have a solution: Git Large File Storage.
Use Now with Cocoapods
The final frameworks are deployed as Cocoapods, and the Bitcoin framework is the only one you need to reference directly in your iOS app, by including:
pod 'Bitcoin'
in your Podfile
, and:
import Bitcoin
in your .swift
files.
Unit tests are in the Bitcoin framework Example
target. All the detailed instructions are in the README.md
for the Bitcoin framework.
🐺