Bitcoin Core 26.0

Bitcoin Core installation binaries can be downloaded from bitcoincore.org and the source-code is available from the Bitcoin Core source repository.

26.0 Release Notes

Bitcoin Core version 26.0 is now available from:

https://bitcoincore.org/bin/bitcoin-core-26.0/

This release includes new features, various bug fixes and performance improvements, as well as updated translations.

Please report bugs using the issue tracker at GitHub:

https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/issues

To receive security and update notifications, please subscribe to:

https://bitcoincore.org/en/list/announcements/join/

How to Upgrade

If you are running an older version, shut it down. Wait until it has completely shut down (which might take a few minutes in some cases), then run the installer (on Windows) or just copy over /Applications/Bitcoin-Qt (on macOS) or bitcoind/bitcoin-qt (on Linux).

Upgrading directly from a version of Bitcoin Core that has reached its EOL is possible, but it might take some time if the data directory needs to be migrated. Old wallet versions of Bitcoin Core are generally supported.

Compatibility

Bitcoin Core is supported and extensively tested on operating systems using the Linux kernel, macOS 11.0+, and Windows 7 and newer. Bitcoin Core should also work on most other Unix-like systems but is not as frequently tested on them. It is not recommended to use Bitcoin Core on unsupported systems.

Notable changes

P2P and network changes

  • Experimental support for the v2 transport protocol defined in BIP324 was added. It is off by default, but when enabled using -v2transport it will be negotiated on a per-connection basis with other peers that support it too. The existing v1 transport protocol remains fully supported.

  • Nodes with multiple reachable networks will actively try to have at least one outbound connection to each network. This improves individual resistance to eclipse attacks and network level resistance to partition attacks. Users no longer need to perform active measures to ensure being connected to multiple enabled networks. (#27213)

Pruning

  • When using assumeutxo with -prune, the prune budget may be exceeded if it is set lower than 1100MB (i.e. MIN_DISK_SPACE_FOR_BLOCK_FILES * 2). Prune budget is normally split evenly across each chainstate, unless the resulting prune budget per chainstate is beneath MIN_DISK_SPACE_FOR_BLOCK_FILES in which case that value will be used. (#27596)

Updated RPCs

  • Setting -rpcserialversion=0 is deprecated and will be removed in a future release. It can currently still be used by also adding the -deprecatedrpc=serialversion option. (#28448)

  • The hash_serialized_2 value has been removed from gettxoutsetinfo since the value it calculated contained a bug and did not take all data into account. It is superseded by hash_serialized_3 which provides the same functionality but serves the correctly calculated hash. (#28685)

  • New fields transport_protocol_type and session_id were added to the getpeerinfo RPC to indicate whether the v2 transport protocol is in use, and if so, what the session id is.

  • A new argument v2transport was added to the addnode RPC to indicate whether a v2 transaction connection is to be attempted with the peer.

  • Miniscript expressions can now be used in Taproot descriptors for all RPCs working with descriptors. (#27255)

  • finalizepsbt is now able to finalize a PSBT with inputs spending Miniscript-compatible Taproot leaves. (#27255)

Changes to wallet related RPCs can be found in the Wallet section below.

New RPCs

  • loadtxoutset has been added, which allows loading a UTXO snapshot of the format generated by dumptxoutset. Once this snapshot is loaded, its contents will be deserialized into a second chainstate data structure, which is then used to sync to the network’s tip.

    Meanwhile, the original chainstate will complete the initial block download process in the background, eventually validating up to the block that the snapshot is based upon.

    The result is a usable bitcoind instance that is current with the network tip in a matter of minutes rather than hours. UTXO snapshot are typically obtained via third-party sources (HTTP, torrent, etc.) which is reasonable since their contents are always checked by hash.

    You can find more information on this process in the assumeutxo design document (https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin/blob/master/doc/design/assumeutxo.md).

    getchainstates has been added to aid in monitoring the assumeutxo sync process.

  • A new getprioritisedtransactions RPC has been added. It returns a map of all fee deltas created by the user with prioritisetransaction, indexed by txid. The map also indicates whether each transaction is present in the mempool. (#27501)

  • A new RPC, submitpackage, has been added. It can be used to submit a list of raw hex transactions to the mempool to be evaluated as a package using consensus and mempool policy rules. These policies include package CPFP, allowing a child with high fees to bump a parent below the mempool minimum feerate (but not minimum relay feerate). (#27609)

    • Warning: successful submission does not mean the transactions will propagate throughout the network, as package relay is not supported.

    • Not all features are available. The package is limited to a child with all of its unconfirmed parents, and no parent may spend the output of another parent. Also, package RBF is not supported. Refer to doc/policy/packages.md for more details on package policies and limitations.

    • This RPC is experimental. Its interface may change.

  • A new RPC getaddrmaninfo has been added to view the distribution of addresses in the new and tried table of the node’s address manager across different networks(ipv4, ipv6, onion, i2p, cjdns). The RPC returns count of addresses in new and tried table as well as their sum for all networks. (#27511)

  • A new importmempool RPC has been added. It loads a valid mempool.dat file and attempts to add its contents to the mempool. This can be useful to import mempool data from another node without having to modify the datadir contents and without having to restart the node. (#27460)

    • Warning: Importing untrusted files is dangerous, especially if metadata from the file is taken over.
    • If you want to apply fee deltas, it is recommended to use the getprioritisedtransactions and prioritisetransaction RPCs instead of the apply_fee_delta_priority option to avoid double-prioritising any already-prioritised transactions in the mempool.

Updated settings

  • bitcoind and bitcoin-qt will now raise an error on startup if a datadir that is being used contains a bitcoin.conf file that will be ignored, which can happen when a datadir= line is used in a bitcoin.conf file. The error message is just a diagnostic intended to prevent accidental misconfiguration, and it can be disabled to restore the previous behavior of using the datadir while ignoring the bitcoin.conf contained in it. (#27302)

  • Passing an invalid -debug, -debugexclude, or -loglevel logging configuration option now raises an error, rather than logging an easily missed warning. (#27632)

Changes to GUI or wallet related settings can be found in the GUI or Wallet section below.

New settings

Tools and Utilities

  • A new bitcoinconsensus_verify_script_with_spent_outputs function is available in libconsensus which optionally accepts the spent outputs of the transaction being verified.
  • A new bitcoinconsensus_SCRIPT_FLAGS_VERIFY_TAPROOT flag is available in libconsensus that will verify scripts with the Taproot spending rules.

Wallet

  • Wallet loading has changed in this release. Wallets with some corrupted records that could be previously loaded (with warnings) may no longer load. For example, wallets with corrupted address book entries may no longer load. If this happens, it is recommended load the wallet in a previous version of Bitcoin Core and import the data into a new wallet. Please also report an issue to help improve the software and make wallet loading more robust in these cases. (#24914)

  • The createwallet RPC will no longer create legacy (BDB) wallets when setting descriptors=false without also providing the -deprecatedrpc=create_bdb option. This is because the legacy wallet is being deprecated in a future release. (#28597)

  • The gettransaction, listtransactions, listsinceblock RPCs now return the abandoned field for all transactions. Previously, the “abandoned” field was only returned for sent transactions. (#25158)

  • The listdescriptors, decodepsbt and similar RPC methods now show h rather than apostrophe (') to indicate hardened derivation. This does not apply when using the private parameter, which matches the marker used when descriptor was generated or imported. Newly created wallets use h. This change makes it easier to handle descriptor strings manually. E.g. the importdescriptors RPC call is easiest to use h as the marker: '["desc": ".../0h/..."]'. With this change listdescriptors will use h, so you can copy-paste the result, without having to add escape characters or switch ' to ‘h’ manually. Note that this changes the descriptor checksum. For legacy wallets the hdkeypath field in getaddressinfo is unchanged, nor is the serialization format of wallet dumps. (#26076)

  • The getbalances RPC now returns a lastprocessedblock JSON object which contains the wallet’s last processed block hash and height at the time the balances were calculated. This result shouldn’t be cached because importing new keys could invalidate it. (#26094)

  • The gettransaction RPC now returns a lastprocessedblock JSON object which contains the wallet’s last processed block hash and height at the time the transaction information was generated. (#26094)

  • The getwalletinfo RPC now returns a lastprocessedblock JSON object which contains the wallet’s last processed block hash and height at the time the wallet information was generated. (#26094)

  • Coin selection and transaction building now accounts for unconfirmed low-feerate ancestor transactions. When it is necessary to spend unconfirmed outputs, the wallet will add fees to ensure that the new transaction with its ancestors will achieve a mining score equal to the feerate requested by the user. (#26152)

  • For RPC methods which accept options parameters ((importmulti, listunspent, fundrawtransaction, bumpfee, send, sendall, walletcreatefundedpsbt, simulaterawtransaction), it is now possible to pass the options as named parameters without the need for a nested object. (#26485)

This means it is possible make calls like:

src/bitcoin-cli -named bumpfee txid fee_rate=100

instead of

src/bitcoin-cli -named bumpfee txid options='{"fee_rate": 100}'
  • The deprecatedrpc=walletwarningfield configuration option has been removed. The createwallet, loadwallet, restorewallet and unloadwallet RPCs no longer return the “warning” string field. The same information is provided through the “warnings” field added in v25.0, which returns a JSON array of strings. The “warning” string field was deprecated also in v25.0. (#27757)

  • The signrawtransactionwithkey, signrawtransactionwithwallet, walletprocesspsbt and descriptorprocesspsbt calls now return the more specific RPC_INVALID_PARAMETER error instead of RPC_MISC_ERROR if their sighashtype argument is malformed. (#28113)

  • RPC walletprocesspsbt, and descriptorprocesspsbt return object now includes field hex (if the transaction is complete) containing the serialized transaction suitable for RPC sendrawtransaction. (#28414)

  • It’s now possible to use Miniscript inside Taproot leaves for descriptor wallets. (#27255)

Descriptors

  • The usage of hybrid public keys in output descriptors has been removed. Hybrid public keys are an exotic public key encoding not supported by output descriptors (as specified in BIP380 and documented in doc/descriptors.md). Bitcoin Core would previously incorrectly accept descriptors containing such hybrid keys. (#28587)

GUI changes

  • The transaction list in the GUI no longer provides a special category for “payment to yourself”. Now transactions that have both inputs and outputs that affect the wallet are displayed on separate lines for spending and receiving. (gui#119)

  • A new menu option allows migrating a legacy wallet based on keys and implied output script types stored in BerkeleyDB (BDB) to a modern wallet that uses descriptors stored in SQLite. (gui#738)

  • The PSBT operations dialog marks outputs paying your own wallet with “own address”. (gui#740)

  • The ability to create legacy wallets is being removed. (gui#764)

Contrib

  • Bash completion files have been renamed from bitcoin*.bash-completion to bitcoin*.bash. This means completions can be automatically loaded on demand based on invoked commands’ names when they are put into the completion directory (found with pkg-config --variable=completionsdir bash-completion) without requiring renaming. (#28507)

Low-level changes

Tests

  • Non-standard transactions are now disabled by default on testnet for relay and mempool acceptance. The previous behaviour can be re-enabled by setting -acceptnonstdtxn=1. (#28354)

Credits

Thanks to everyone who directly contributed to this release:

  • 0xb10c
  • Amiti Uttarwar
  • Andrew Chow
  • Andrew Toth
  • Anthony Towns
  • Antoine Poinsot
  • Antoine Riard
  • Ari
  • Aurèle Oulès
  • Ayush Singh
  • Ben Woosley
  • Brandon Odiwuor
  • Brotcrunsher
  • brunoerg
  • Bufo
  • Carl Dong
  • Casey Carter
  • Cory Fields
  • David Álvarez Rosa
  • dergoegge
  • dhruv
  • dimitaracev
  • Erik Arvstedt
  • Erik McKelvey
  • Fabian Jahr
  • furszy
  • glozow
  • Greg Sanders
  • Harris
  • Hennadii Stepanov
  • Hernan Marino
  • ishaanam
  • ismaelsadeeq
  • Jake Rawsthorne
  • James O’Beirne
  • John Moffett
  • Jon Atack
  • josibake
  • kevkevin
  • Kiminuo
  • Larry Ruane
  • Luke Dashjr
  • MarcoFalke
  • Marnix
  • Martin Leitner-Ankerl
  • Martin Zumsande
  • Matthew Zipkin
  • Michael Ford
  • Michael Tidwell
  • mruddy
  • Murch
  • ns-xvrn
  • pablomartin4btc
  • Pieter Wuille
  • Reese Russell
  • Rhythm Garg
  • Ryan Ofsky
  • Sebastian Falbesoner
  • Sjors Provoost
  • stickies-v
  • stratospher
  • Suhas Daftuar
  • TheCharlatan
  • Tim Neubauer
  • Tim Ruffing
  • Vasil Dimov
  • virtu
  • vuittont60
  • willcl-ark
  • Yusuf Sahin HAMZA

As well as to everyone that helped with translations on Transifex.