Wladimir [ARCHIVE] on Nostr: 📅 Original date posted:2015-01-28 📝 Original message:On Wed, 28 Jan 2015, ...
📅 Original date posted:2015-01-28
📝 Original message:On Wed, 28 Jan 2015, Nicolas DORIER wrote:
> I agree that the use protocol buffer and x509 by BIP70 is a poor choice.
Well x509 is an international standard in common use, you can't do much
better with regard to portability. Your suggestion about HTTPS makes
little sense, you do know what TLS uses x509 internally as well?
Re: protocol buffers, I don't know if it's the best possible one, but one
serialization method had to be picked. If it weren't, we could still have
still been discussing which one to use by now. Just like for JSON there
are bindings for many languages.
Though JSON parsers are much more diverse, which people using Bitcoin
Core's RPC have bumped into e.g. some have some problems
handling large numbers. Something you wouldn't expect using a
straightforward binary format. There's no obvious best choice.
Wladimir
📝 Original message:On Wed, 28 Jan 2015, Nicolas DORIER wrote:
> I agree that the use protocol buffer and x509 by BIP70 is a poor choice.
Well x509 is an international standard in common use, you can't do much
better with regard to portability. Your suggestion about HTTPS makes
little sense, you do know what TLS uses x509 internally as well?
Re: protocol buffers, I don't know if it's the best possible one, but one
serialization method had to be picked. If it weren't, we could still have
still been discussing which one to use by now. Just like for JSON there
are bindings for many languages.
Though JSON parsers are much more diverse, which people using Bitcoin
Core's RPC have bumped into e.g. some have some problems
handling large numbers. Something you wouldn't expect using a
straightforward binary format. There's no obvious best choice.
Wladimir