Python wrapper for Acinq’s Strike lightning network payment service.
The lightning network allows near-fee, near-instant transactions atop the Bitcoin chain layer. Acinq operates the Strike service, which allows you to create lightning invoices, receive lightning payments into your Strike account, and then receive consolidated payouts on-chain. This Python library allows you to invoice customers and check the payment-status of those invoices in just a few lines of code.
This library does not require any third-party dependencies.
Initialize the Charge
class:
from pystrike.charge import make_charge_class Charge = make_charge_class( api_key="YOURSTRIKETESTNETAPIKEY", api_host="api.dev.strike.acinq.co", api_base="/api/v1/", )
Create a new charge
:
charge = Charge( currency=Charge.CURRENCY_BTC, amount=4200, # Amount in Satoshi description="services rendered", )
Retrieve a payment request:
payment_request = charge.payment_request # Now `payment_request` might be something like "lnbtb420u1pfoobarbaz..."
At this point, you would present the payment_request
to your
customer. You can call charge.update()
to poll the Strike server
for the current status of the charge, and then retrieve whether or not
the charge has been paid from the charge.paid
attribute.
For example, suppose that charge.payment_request
has not yet been paid and then we run the following code:
charge.update() # Reaches out the the Acinq server to retrieve the # status of the charge paid = charge.paid # Because the payment request has not yet been paid, charge.paid is False
Then suppose that the client pays the charge.payment_request
and then we run the following code:
charge.update() paid = charge.paid # Because the client paid the request before we called `update`, charge.paid # evaluates to True.
Acinq's Strike service also offers a web hook/callback service, which is a better way to update your charges than frequent polling if you are running a web service.
The example above uses Strike's testnet web service at api.dev.strike.acinq.co
. When you're ready to issue mainnet lightning invoices, you'll need to use your Strike mainnet API key and make your requests to host api.strike.acinq.co
.
$ pip install pystrike
Begin by creating an account on Acinq’s Strike lightning network payment service. Note that there is also a testnet version of the service that you may wish to use for your initial development. The two versions of this service are distinct, with separate accounts, separate API keys, and separate API hosts.
Once you have created an account and logged into the dashboard, you can retrieve an API key from your dashboard settings. You will need this key to configure your connection to Strike.
You'll begin by creating a Charge class from the provided make_charge_class
function.
from pystrike.charge import make_charge_class Charge = make_charge_class( api_key="YOURSTRIKETESTNETAPIKEY", api_host="api.dev.strike.acinq.co", api_base="/api/v1/", )
The host will probably be one of:
- api.strike.acinq.co: the mainnet version of Strike
- api.dev.strike.acinq.co: the testnet version of Strike
If you're pointing your charge class to the mainnet version then be sure to use the API key from your mainnet Strike dashboard.
You can create a new charge with the following code:
charge = Charge( currency=Charge.CURRENCY_BTC, amount=4200, # Amount in Satoshi description="services rendered", )
This initialization will automatically reach out to the Strike web service and create a new charge on their servers. Once this call has returned, you can immediately access the details of that charge through charge.id
, charge.payment_request
, and so on.
At this point, you might present the charge.payment_request
to your customer for payment.
Rather than creating a new charge, if you know the Strike id of an existing charge you can retrieve it with the following code:
charge = Charge.from_charge_id('ch_LWafoobarbazjFFv8eurFJkerhgDA')
You can poll the Strike server to update your local charge object:
charge.update()
This command reaches out to the Strike server and updates the attributes of the charge. For example, if you are waiting on payment for a charge, you might run charge.update()
to retrieve the status of the charge from the Strike server and then access charge.paid
to see if a payment has been recorded for the charge on the Strike server.
If you're developing a web application, you could use web hooks instead of polling the server. See Strike's documentation on web hooks for more information.
Running the library tests requires two environment variables:
STRIKE_TESTNET_API_KEY
: Your API key for theapi.dev.strike.acinq.co
web service.RETRIEVE_CHARGE_ID
: The Strike id of a charge in yourapi.dev.strike.acinq.co
. For example:ch_LWafoobarbazjFFv8eufoobarbaz