com.r3corda.protocols / TwoPartyTradeProtocol / Seller

Seller

class Seller : ProtocolLogic<SignedTransaction>


Types

AWAITING_PROPOSAL object AWAITING_PROPOSAL : Step
NOTARY object NOTARY : Step
SENDING_SIGS object SENDING_SIGS : Step
SIGNING object SIGNING : Step
VERIFYING object VERIFYING : Step

Constructors

<init> Seller(otherParty: Party, notaryNode: NodeInfo, assetToSell: StateAndRef<OwnableState>, price: Amount<Currency>, myKeyPair: KeyPair, progressTracker: ProgressTracker = Seller.tracker())

Properties

assetToSell val assetToSell: StateAndRef<OwnableState>
myKeyPair val myKeyPair: KeyPair
notaryNode val notaryNode: NodeInfo
otherParty val otherParty: Party
price val price: Amount<Currency>
progressTracker open val progressTracker: ProgressTracker

Override this to provide a ProgressTracker. If one is provided and stepped, the framework will do something helpful with the progress reports. If this protocol is invoked as a sub-protocol of another, then the tracker will be made a child of the current step in the parent. If its null, this protocol doesnt track progress.

Inherited Properties

logger val logger: <ERROR CLASS>

This is where you should log things to.

psm lateinit var psm: ProtocolStateMachine<*>

Reference to the Fiber instance that is the top level controller for the entire flow.

serviceHub val serviceHub: ServiceHub

Provides access to big, heavy classes that may be reconstructed from time to time, e.g. across restarts. It is only available once the protocol has started, which means it cannnot be accessed in the constructor. Either access this lazily or from inside call.

Functions

calculateOurSignature open fun calculateOurSignature(partialTX: SignedTransaction): WithKey
call open fun call(): SignedTransaction

This is where you fill out your business logic.

Inherited Functions

getCounterpartyMarker open fun getCounterpartyMarker(party: Party): Class<*>

Return the marker Class which party has used to register the counterparty protocol that is to execute on the other side. The default implementation returns the class object of this ProtocolLogic, but any Class instance will do as long as the other side registers with it.

receive fun <T : Any> receive(otherParty: Party): UntrustworthyData<T>
fun <T : Any> receive(otherParty: Party, receiveType: Class<T>): UntrustworthyData<T>
send fun send(otherParty: Party, payload: Any): Unit
sendAndReceive fun <T : Any> sendAndReceive(otherParty: Party, payload: Any, receiveType: Class<T>): UntrustworthyData<T>
fun <T : Any> sendAndReceive(otherParty: Party, payload: Any): UntrustworthyData<T>
subProtocol fun <R> subProtocol(subLogic: ProtocolLogic<R>, shareParentSessions: Boolean = false): R

Invokes the given subprotocol by simply passing through this ProtocolLogics reference to the ProtocolStateMachine and then calling the call method.

track fun track(): <ERROR CLASS><String, <ERROR CLASS><String>>?

Companion Object Functions

tracker fun tracker(): ProgressTracker