Difference between revisions of "VarInt"
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− | A VarInt or "Variable Integer" is an integer format used widely in Bitcoin to indicate the lengths of fields within transaction, block and peer-to-peer network data. | + | A VarInt or "Variable Integer" is an [[integer]] format used widely in Bitcoin to indicate the lengths of fields within transaction, block and peer-to-peer network data. |
− | A VarInt is a variable length field 1, 3, 5 or 9 bytes in length dependent on the size of the object being defined. The VarInt format is used as it is space efficient over simply using an 8-byte field where variable length objects are used. | + | A VarInt is a variable length field 1, 3, 5 or 9 bytes in length dependent on the size of the object being defined. The VarInt format is used as it is space efficient over simply using an 8-byte field where variable length objects are used. VarInt values are almost always represented in little endian. |
==Using VarInts== | ==Using VarInts== | ||
− | When expressing an integer between zero and <code>0xFC</code> (252) the value itself can be used expressed in uint8_t format. | + | When expressing an integer between zero and <code>0xFC</code> (252) the value itself can be used and expressed in uint8_t format. |
When expressing an integer value greater than <code>0xFC</code> but less than or equal to <code>0xFFFF</code> (65,535), the varint is <code>0xFDXXXX</code> where XXXX represents the two byte integer in uint16_t format. | When expressing an integer value greater than <code>0xFC</code> but less than or equal to <code>0xFFFF</code> (65,535), the varint is <code>0xFDXXXX</code> where XXXX represents the two byte integer in uint16_t format. | ||
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{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | ! Value | + | ! Value Range <br> <br> Example Value |
− | ! Size | + | ! Size Range <br> <br> Example Size |
− | ! VarInt | + | ! VarInt Format <br> <br> Example VarInt |
|- | |- | ||
− | | 0 <= | + | | 0 <= Value <= 252 (<code>0xFC</code>) <br> <br> e.g. 187 (<code>0xBB</code>) |
− | | | + | | 1 byte <br> <br> 1 byte |
− | | uint8_t | + | | uint8_t <br> <br> <code>0xBB</code> |
|- | |- | ||
− | | 253 <= | + | | 253 <= Value <= 65,535 (<code>0xFFFF</code>) <br> <br> e.g. 255 (<code>0xFF</code>) <br> <br> e.g. 13,337 (<code>0x3419</code>) |
− | | | + | | 1 - 2 bytes <br> <br> 1 byte but greater than <code>0xFC</code> <br> <br> 2 bytes |
− | | 0xFD + number as uint16_t | + | | 0xFD + number as uint16_t <br> <br> <code>0xFDFF00</code> <br> <br> <code>0xFD1934</code> |
|- | |- | ||
− | | 14,435,729 (<code>0xDC4591</code>) | + | | 65,536 <= Value <= 4,294,967,295 (<code>0xFFFFFFFF</code>) <br> <br> e.g. 14,435,729 (<code>0xDC4591</code>) <br> <br> e.g. 134,250,981 (<code>0x80081E5</code>) |
− | | 3 bytes | + | | 3 - 4 bytes <br> <br> 3 bytes <br> <br> 4 bytes |
− | | <code> | + | | 0xFE + number as uint32_t <br> <br> <code>0xFE9145DC00</code> <br> <br> <code>0xFEE5810008</code> |
|- | |- | ||
− | | | + | | 4,294,967,296 <= value <= 18,446,744,073,709,551,615 (<code>0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF</code>) <br> <br> e.g.198,849,843,832,919 (<code>0xB4DA564E2857</code>) <br> <br> e.g. 5,473,425,651,754,713,432 (<code>0x4BF583A17D59C158</code>) |
− | + | | 5 - 8 bytes <br> <br> 6 bytes <br> <br> 8 bytes | |
− | + | | 0xFF + number as uint64_t <br> <br> <code>0xFF57284E56DAB40000</code> <br> <br> <code>0xFF58C1597DA183F54B</code> | |
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | | 8 bytes | ||
− | | <code> | ||
|} | |} |
Latest revision as of 13:33, 25 October 2023
A VarInt or "Variable Integer" is an integer format used widely in Bitcoin to indicate the lengths of fields within transaction, block and peer-to-peer network data.
A VarInt is a variable length field 1, 3, 5 or 9 bytes in length dependent on the size of the object being defined. The VarInt format is used as it is space efficient over simply using an 8-byte field where variable length objects are used. VarInt values are almost always represented in little endian.
Using VarInts
When expressing an integer between zero and 0xFC
(252) the value itself can be used and expressed in uint8_t format.
When expressing an integer value greater than 0xFC
but less than or equal to 0xFFFF
(65,535), the varint is 0xFDXXXX
where XXXX represents the two byte integer in uint16_t format.
When expressing an integer value greater than 0xFFFF
but less than or equal to 0xFFFFFFFF
(4,294,967,295), the varint is 0xFEXXXXXXXX
where XXXXXXXX represents the 4 byte integer in uint32_t format.
When expressing an integer value greater than 0xFFFFFFFF
but less than or equal to 0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF
(18,446,744,073,709,551,615), the varint is 0xFFXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
where XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX represents the 8 byte integer in uint64_t format.
References with Examples
Value Range Example Value |
Size Range Example Size |
VarInt Format Example VarInt |
---|---|---|
0 <= Value <= 252 (0xFC ) e.g. 187 ( 0xBB )
|
1 byte 1 byte |
uint8_t 0xBB
|
253 <= Value <= 65,535 (0xFFFF ) e.g. 255 ( 0xFF ) e.g. 13,337 ( 0x3419 )
|
1 - 2 bytes 1 byte but greater than 0xFC 2 bytes |
0xFD + number as uint16_t 0xFDFF00 0xFD1934
|
65,536 <= Value <= 4,294,967,295 (0xFFFFFFFF ) e.g. 14,435,729 ( 0xDC4591 ) e.g. 134,250,981 ( 0x80081E5 )
|
3 - 4 bytes 3 bytes 4 bytes |
0xFE + number as uint32_t 0xFE9145DC00 0xFEE5810008
|
4,294,967,296 <= value <= 18,446,744,073,709,551,615 (0xFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF ) e.g.198,849,843,832,919 ( 0xB4DA564E2857 ) e.g. 5,473,425,651,754,713,432 ( 0x4BF583A17D59C158 )
|
5 - 8 bytes 6 bytes 8 bytes |
0xFF + number as uint64_t 0xFF57284E56DAB40000 0xFF58C1597DA183F54B
|