This document describes usage of the multiprocess feature. For design information, see the design/multiprocess.md file.
On unix systems, the --enable-multiprocess
build option can be passed to ./configure
to build new bitcoin-node
, bitcoin-wallet
, and bitcoin-gui
executables alongside existing bitcoind
and bitcoin-qt
executables.
The -debug=ipc
command line option can be used to see requests and responses between processes.
The multiprocess feature requires Cap'n Proto and libmultiprocess as dependencies. A simple way to get started using it without installing these dependencies manually is to use the depends system with the MULTIPROCESS=1
dependency option passed to make:
cd <BITCOIN_SOURCE_DIRECTORY>
make -C depends NO_QT=1 MULTIPROCESS=1
CONFIG_SITE=$PWD/depends/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu/share/config.site ./configure
make
src/bitcoin-node -regtest -printtoconsole -debug=ipc
BITCOIND=bitcoin-node test/functional/test_runner.py
The configure script will pick up settings and library locations from the depends directory, so there is no need to pass --enable-multiprocess
as a separate flag when using the depends system (it's controlled by the MULTIPROCESS=1
option).
Alternately, you can install Cap'n Proto and libmultiprocess packages on your system, and just run ./configure --enable-multiprocess
without using the depends system. The configure script will be able to locate the installed packages via pkg-config. See Installation section of the libmultiprocess readme for install steps. See build-unix.md and build-osx.md for information about installing dependencies in general.
bitcoin-node
is a drop-in replacement for bitcoind
, and bitcoin-gui
is a drop-in replacement for bitcoin-qt
, and there are no differences in use or external behavior between the new and old executables. But internally after #10102, bitcoin-gui
will spawn a bitcoin-node
process to run P2P and RPC code, communicating with it across a socket pair, and bitcoin-node
will spawn bitcoin-wallet
to run wallet code, also communicating over a socket pair. This will let node, wallet, and GUI code run in separate address spaces for better isolation, and allow future improvements like being able to start and stop components independently on different machines and environments.
#19460 also adds a new bitcoin-node
-ipcbind
option and an bitcoind-wallet
-ipcconnect
option to allow new wallet processes to connect to an existing node process.
And #19461 adds a new bitcoin-gui
-ipcconnect
option to allow new GUI processes to connect to an existing node process.