Testing Applications

Bitcoin Core provides testing tools designed to let developers test their applications with reduced risks and limitations.

Testnet

When run with no arguments, all Bitcoin Core programs default to Bitcoin’s main network (mainnet). However, for development, it’s safer and cheaper to use Bitcoin’s test network (testnet) where the satoshis spent have no real-world value. Testnet also relaxes some restrictions (such as standard transaction checks) so you can test functions which might currently be disabled by default on mainnet.

To use testnet, use the argument -testnet with bitcoin-cli, bitcoind or bitcoin-qt or add testnet=1 to your bitcoin.conf file as described earlier. To get free satoshis for testing, use Piotr Piasecki’s testnet faucet. Testnet is a public resource provided for free by members of the community, so please don’t abuse it.

Regtest Mode

For situations where interaction with random peers and blocks is unnecessary or unwanted, Bitcoin Core’s regression test mode (regtest mode) lets you instantly create a brand-new private block chain with the same basic rules as testnet—but one major difference: you choose when to create new blocks, so you have complete control over the environment.

Many developers consider regtest mode the preferred way to develop new applications. The following example will let you create a regtest environment after you first configure bitcoind.

> bitcoind -regtest -daemon
Bitcoin server starting

Start bitcoind in regtest mode to create a private block chain.

## Bitcoin Core 0.10.1 and earlier
bitcoin-cli -regtest setgenerate true 101

## Bitcoin Core 17.1 and earlier
bitcoin-cli -regtest generate 101

## Bitcoin Core 18.0 and later
bitcoin-cli -regtest generatetoaddress 101 $(bitcoin-cli -regtest getnewaddress)

Generate 101 blocks using a special RPC which is only available in regtest mode. This takes less than a second on a generic PC. Because this is a new block chain using Bitcoin’s default rules, the first blocks pay a block reward of 50 bitcoins. Unlike mainnet, in regtest mode only the first 150 blocks pay a reward of 50 bitcoins. However, a block must have 100 confirmations before that reward can be spent, so we generate 101 blocks to get access to the coinbase transaction from block #1.

If block generation fails, check the returned error before resetting your test environment:

Error

Likely cause

Resolution

bad-fork-prior-to-checkpoint (code 67)

The node is not actually mining on a clean regtest chain, or the regtest chain state is stale.

Stop Bitcoin Core, make sure both bitcoind and bitcoin-cli are using -regtest, and restart with a fresh regtest chain if necessary. The regtest chain state is stored in the regtest subdirectory of the Bitcoin Core configuration directory.

Method not found for generate

Recent Bitcoin Core versions no longer use the generate RPC.

Use generatetoaddress with an address returned by bitcoin-cli -regtest getnewaddress.

No wallet is loaded

getnewaddress was called before a regtest wallet was created or loaded.

Create or load a wallet first, for example with bitcoin-cli -regtest createwallet "regtest".

Error: Invalid address

The address passed to generatetoaddress is missing, mistyped, or for a different chain.

Generate a fresh regtest address and pass it to generatetoaddress in the same command.

bitcoin-cli -regtest getbalance
50.00000000

Verify that we now have 50 bitcoins available to spend.

You can now use Bitcoin Core RPCs prefixed with bitcoin-cli -regtest.

Regtest wallets and block chain state (chainstate) are saved in the regtest subdirectory of the Bitcoin Core configuration directory. You can safely delete the regtest subdirectory and restart Bitcoin Core to start a new regtest. (See the Developer Examples Introduction for default configuration directory locations on various operating systems. Always back up mainnet wallets before performing dangerous operations such as deleting.)