github.com/k1rill-fedoseev/go-ethereum@v1.9.7/cmd/clef/tutorial.md (about) 1 ## Initializing Clef 2 3 First thing's first, Clef needs to store some data itself. Since that data might be sensitive (passwords, signing rules, accounts), Clef's entire storage is encrypted. To support encrypting data, the first step is to initialize Clef with a random master seed, itself too encrypted with your chosen password: 4 5 ```text 6 $ clef init 7 8 WARNING! 9 10 Clef is an account management tool. It may, like any software, contain bugs. 11 12 Please take care to 13 - backup your keystore files, 14 - verify that the keystore(s) can be opened with your password. 15 16 Clef is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; 17 without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR 18 PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. 19 20 Enter 'ok' to proceed: 21 > ok 22 23 The master seed of clef will be locked with a password. 24 Please specify a password. Do not forget this password! 25 Password: 26 Repeat password: 27 28 A master seed has been generated into /home/martin/.clef/masterseed.json 29 30 This is required to be able to store credentials, such as: 31 * Passwords for keystores (used by rule engine) 32 * Storage for JavaScript auto-signing rules 33 * Hash of JavaScript rule-file 34 35 You should treat 'masterseed.json' with utmost secrecy and make a backup of it! 36 * The password is necessary but not enough, you need to back up the master seed too! 37 * The master seed does not contain your accounts, those need to be backed up separately! 38 ``` 39 40 *For readability purposes, we'll remove the WARNING printout, user confirmation and the unlocking of the master seed in the rest of this document.* 41 42 ## Remote interactions 43 44 Clef is capable of managing both key-file based accounts as well as hardware wallets. To evaluate clef, we're going to point it to our Rinkeby testnet keystore and specify the Rinkeby chain ID for signing (Clef doesn't have a backing chain, so it doesn't know what network it runs on). 45 46 ```text 47 $ clef --keystore ~/.ethereum/rinkeby/keystore --chainid 4 48 49 INFO [07-01|11:00:46.385] Starting signer chainid=4 keystore=$HOME/.ethereum/rinkeby/keystore light-kdf=false advanced=false 50 DEBUG[07-01|11:00:46.389] FS scan times list=3.521941ms set=9.017µs diff=4.112µs 51 DEBUG[07-01|11:00:46.391] Ledger support enabled 52 DEBUG[07-01|11:00:46.391] Trezor support enabled via HID 53 DEBUG[07-01|11:00:46.391] Trezor support enabled via WebUSB 54 INFO [07-01|11:00:46.391] Audit logs configured file=audit.log 55 DEBUG[07-01|11:00:46.392] IPC registered namespace=account 56 INFO [07-01|11:00:46.392] IPC endpoint opened url=$HOME/.clef/clef.ipc 57 ------- Signer info ------- 58 * intapi_version : 7.0.0 59 * extapi_version : 6.0.0 60 * extapi_http : n/a 61 * extapi_ipc : $HOME/.clef/clef.ipc 62 ``` 63 64 By default, Clef starts up in CLI (Command Line Interface) mode. Arbitrary remote processes may *request* account interactions (e.g. sign a transaction), which the user will need to individually *confirm*. 65 66 To test this out, we can *request* Clef to list all account via its *External API endpoint*: 67 68 ```text 69 echo '{"id": 1, "jsonrpc": "2.0", "method": "account_list"}' | nc -U ~/.clef/clef.ipc 70 ``` 71 72 This will prompt the user within the Clef CLI to confirm or deny the request: 73 74 ```text 75 -------- List Account request-------------- 76 A request has been made to list all accounts. 77 You can select which accounts the caller can see 78 [x] 0xD9C9Cd5f6779558b6e0eD4e6Acf6b1947E7fA1F3 79 URL: keystore://$HOME/.ethereum/rinkeby/keystore/UTC--2017-04-14T15-15-00.327614556Z--d9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3 80 [x] 0x086278A6C067775F71d6B2BB1856Db6E28c30418 81 URL: keystore://$HOME/.ethereum/rinkeby/keystore/UTC--2018-02-06T22-53-11.211657239Z--086278a6c067775f71d6b2bb1856db6e28c30418 82 ------------------------------------------- 83 Request context: 84 NA -> NA -> NA 85 86 Additional HTTP header data, provided by the external caller: 87 User-Agent: 88 Origin: 89 Approve? [y/N]: 90 > 91 ``` 92 93 Depending on whether we approve or deny the request, the original NetCat process will get: 94 95 ```text 96 {"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":1,"result":["0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3","0x086278a6c067775f71d6b2bb1856db6e28c30418"]} 97 98 or 99 100 {"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":1,"error":{"code":-32000,"message":"Request denied"}} 101 ``` 102 103 Apart from listing accounts, you can also *request* creating a new account; signing transactions and data; and recovering signatures. You can find the available methods in the Clef [External API Spec](https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/tree/master/cmd/clef#external-api-1) and the [External API Changelog](https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/blob/master/cmd/clef/extapi_changelog.md). 104 105 *Note, the number of things you can do from the External API is deliberately small, since we want to limit the power of remote calls by as much as possible! Clef has an [Internal API](https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/tree/master/cmd/clef#ui-api-1) too for the UI (User Interface) which is much richer and can support custom interfaces on top. But that's out of scope here.* 106 107 ## Automatic rules 108 109 For most users, manually confirming every transaction is the way to go. However, there are cases when it makes sense to set up some rules which permit Clef to sign a transaction without prompting the user. One such example would be running a signer on Rinkeby or other PoA networks. 110 111 For starters, we can create a rule file that automatically permits anyone to list our available accounts without user confirmation. The rule file is a tiny JavaScript snippet that you can program however you want: 112 113 ```js 114 function ApproveListing() { 115 return "Approve" 116 } 117 ``` 118 119 Of course, Clef isn't going to just accept and run arbitrary scripts you give it, that would be dangerous if someone changes your rule file! Instead, you need to explicitly *attest* the rule file, which entails injecting its hash into Clef's secure store. 120 121 ```text 122 $ sha256sum rules.js 123 645b58e4f945e24d0221714ff29f6aa8e860382ced43490529db1695f5fcc71c rules.js 124 125 $ clef attest 645b58e4f945e24d0221714ff29f6aa8e860382ced43490529db1695f5fcc71c 126 Decrypt master seed of clef 127 Password: 128 INFO [07-01|13:25:03.290] Ruleset attestation updated sha256=645b58e4f945e24d0221714ff29f6aa8e860382ced43490529db1695f5fcc71c 129 ``` 130 131 At this point, we can start Clef with the rule file: 132 133 ```text 134 $ clef --keystore ~/.ethereum/rinkeby/keystore --chainid 4 --rules rules.js 135 136 INFO [07-01|13:39:49.726] Rule engine configured file=rules.js 137 INFO [07-01|13:39:49.726] Starting signer chainid=4 keystore=$HOME/.ethereum/rinkeby/keystore light-kdf=false advanced=false 138 DEBUG[07-01|13:39:49.726] FS scan times list=35.15µs set=4.251µs diff=2.766µs 139 DEBUG[07-01|13:39:49.727] Ledger support enabled 140 DEBUG[07-01|13:39:49.727] Trezor support enabled via HID 141 DEBUG[07-01|13:39:49.727] Trezor support enabled via WebUSB 142 INFO [07-01|13:39:49.728] Audit logs configured file=audit.log 143 DEBUG[07-01|13:39:49.728] IPC registered namespace=account 144 INFO [07-01|13:39:49.728] IPC endpoint opened url=$HOME/.clef/clef.ipc 145 ------- Signer info ------- 146 * intapi_version : 7.0.0 147 * extapi_version : 6.0.0 148 * extapi_http : n/a 149 * extapi_ipc : $HOME/.clef/clef.ipc 150 ``` 151 152 Any account listing *request* will now be auto-approved by the rule file: 153 154 ```text 155 $ echo '{"id": 1, "jsonrpc": "2.0", "method": "account_list"}' | nc -U ~/.clef/clef.ipc 156 {"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":1,"result":["0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3","0x086278a6c067775f71d6b2bb1856db6e28c30418"]} 157 ``` 158 159 ## Under the hood 160 161 While doing the operations above, these files have been created: 162 163 ```text 164 $ ls -laR ~/.clef/ 165 166 $HOME/.clef/: 167 total 24 168 drwxr-x--x 3 user user 4096 Jul 1 13:45 . 169 drwxr-xr-x 102 user user 12288 Jul 1 13:39 .. 170 drwx------ 2 user user 4096 Jul 1 13:25 02f90c0603f4f2f60188 171 -r-------- 1 user user 868 Jun 28 13:55 masterseed.json 172 173 $HOME/.clef/02f90c0603f4f2f60188: 174 total 12 175 drwx------ 2 user user 4096 Jul 1 13:25 . 176 drwxr-x--x 3 user user 4096 Jul 1 13:45 .. 177 -rw------- 1 user user 159 Jul 1 13:25 config.json 178 179 $ cat ~/.clef/02f90c0603f4f2f60188/config.json 180 {"ruleset_sha256":{"iv":"SWWEtnl+R+I+wfG7","c":"I3fjmwmamxVcfGax7D0MdUOL29/rBWcs73WBILmYK0o1CrX7wSMc3y37KsmtlZUAjp0oItYq01Ow8VGUOzilG91tDHInB5YHNtm/YkufEbo="}} 181 ``` 182 183 In `$HOME/.clef`, the `masterseed.json` file was created, containing the master seed. This seed was then used to derive a few other things: 184 185 - **Vault location**: in this case `02f90c0603f4f2f60188`. 186 - If you use a different master seed, a different vault location will be used that does not conflict with each other (e.g. `clef --signersecret /path/to/file`). This allows you to run multiple instances of Clef, each with its own rules (e.g. mainnet + testnet). 187 - **`config.json`**: the encrypted key/value storage for configuration data, currently only containing the key `ruleset_sha256`, the attested hash of the automatic rules to use. 188 189 ## Advanced rules 190 191 In order to make more useful rules - like signing transactions - the signer needs access to the passwords needed to unlock keys from the keystore. You can inject an unlock password via `clef setpw`. 192 193 ```text 194 $ clef setpw 0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3 195 196 Please enter a password to store for this address: 197 Password: 198 Repeat password: 199 200 Decrypt master seed of clef 201 Password: 202 INFO [07-01|14:05:56.031] Credential store updated key=0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3 203 ``` 204 205 Now let's update the rules to make use of the new credentials: 206 207 ```js 208 function ApproveListing() { 209 return "Approve" 210 } 211 212 function ApproveSignData(req) { 213 if (req.address.toLowerCase() == "0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3") { 214 if (req.messages[0].value.indexOf("bazonk") >= 0) { 215 return "Approve" 216 } 217 return "Reject" 218 } 219 // Otherwise goes to manual processing 220 } 221 ``` 222 223 In this example: 224 225 - Any requests to sign data with the account `0xd9c9...` will be: 226 - Auto-approved if the message contains `bazonk`, 227 - Auto-rejected if the message does not contain `bazonk`, 228 - Any other requests will be passed along for manual confirmation. 229 230 *Note, to make this example work, please use you own accounts. You can create a new account either via Clef or the traditional account CLI tools. If the latter was chosen, make sure both Clef and Geth use the same keystore by specifying `--keystore path/to/your/keystore` when running Clef.* 231 232 Attest the new rule file so that Clef will accept loading it: 233 234 ```text 235 $ sha256sum rules.js 236 f163a1738b649259bb9b369c593fdc4c6b6f86cc87e343c3ba58faee03c2a178 rules.js 237 238 $ clef attest f163a1738b649259bb9b369c593fdc4c6b6f86cc87e343c3ba58faee03c2a178 239 Decrypt master seed of clef 240 Password: 241 INFO [07-01|14:11:28.509] Ruleset attestation updated sha256=f163a1738b649259bb9b369c593fdc4c6b6f86cc87e343c3ba58faee03c2a178 242 ``` 243 244 Restart Clef with the new rules in place: 245 246 ``` 247 $ clef --keystore ~/.ethereum/rinkeby/keystore --chainid 4 --rules rules.js 248 249 INFO [07-01|14:12:41.636] Rule engine configured file=rules.js 250 INFO [07-01|14:12:41.636] Starting signer chainid=4 keystore=$HOME/.ethereum/rinkeby/keystore light-kdf=false advanced=false 251 DEBUG[07-01|14:12:41.636] FS scan times list=46.722µs set=4.47µs diff=2.157µs 252 DEBUG[07-01|14:12:41.637] Ledger support enabled 253 DEBUG[07-01|14:12:41.637] Trezor support enabled via HID 254 DEBUG[07-01|14:12:41.638] Trezor support enabled via WebUSB 255 INFO [07-01|14:12:41.638] Audit logs configured file=audit.log 256 DEBUG[07-01|14:12:41.638] IPC registered namespace=account 257 INFO [07-01|14:12:41.638] IPC endpoint opened url=$HOME/.clef/clef.ipc 258 ------- Signer info ------- 259 * intapi_version : 7.0.0 260 * extapi_version : 6.0.0 261 * extapi_http : n/a 262 * extapi_ipc : $HOME/.clef/clef.ipc 263 ``` 264 265 Then test signing, once with `bazonk` and once without: 266 267 ``` 268 $ echo '{"id": 1, "jsonrpc":"2.0", "method":"account_signData", "params":["data/plain", "0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3", "0x202062617a6f6e6b2062617a2067617a0a"]}' | nc -U ~/.clef/clef.ipc 269 {"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":1,"result":"0x4f93e3457027f6be99b06b3392d0ebc60615ba448bb7544687ef1248dea4f5317f789002df783979c417d969836b6fda3710f5bffb296b4d51c8aaae6e2ac4831c"} 270 271 $ echo '{"id": 1, "jsonrpc":"2.0", "method":"account_signData", "params":["data/plain", "0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3", "0x2020626f6e6b2062617a2067617a0a"]}' | nc -U ~/.clef/clef.ipc 272 {"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":1,"error":{"code":-32000,"message":"Request denied"}} 273 ``` 274 275 Meanwhile, in the Clef output log you can see: 276 ```text 277 INFO [02-21|14:42:41] Op approved 278 INFO [02-21|14:42:56] Op rejected 279 ``` 280 281 The signer also stores all traffic over the external API in a log file. The last 4 lines shows the two requests and their responses: 282 283 ```text 284 $ tail -n 4 audit.log 285 t=2019-07-01T15:52:14+0300 lvl=info msg=SignData api=signer type=request metadata="{\"remote\":\"NA\",\"local\":\"NA\",\"scheme\":\"NA\",\"User-Agent\":\"\",\"Origin\":\"\"}" addr="0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3 [chksum INVALID]" data=0x202062617a6f6e6b2062617a2067617a0a content-type=data/plain 286 t=2019-07-01T15:52:14+0300 lvl=info msg=SignData api=signer type=response data=4f93e3457027f6be99b06b3392d0ebc60615ba448bb7544687ef1248dea4f5317f789002df783979c417d969836b6fda3710f5bffb296b4d51c8aaae6e2ac4831c error=nil 287 t=2019-07-01T15:52:23+0300 lvl=info msg=SignData api=signer type=request metadata="{\"remote\":\"NA\",\"local\":\"NA\",\"scheme\":\"NA\",\"User-Agent\":\"\",\"Origin\":\"\"}" addr="0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3 [chksum INVALID]" data=0x2020626f6e6b2062617a2067617a0a content-type=data/plain 288 t=2019-07-01T15:52:23+0300 lvl=info msg=SignData api=signer type=response data= error="Request denied" 289 ``` 290 291 For more details on writing automatic rules, please see the [rules spec](https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/blob/master/cmd/clef/rules.md). 292 293 ## Geth integration 294 295 Of course, as awesome as Clef is, it's not feasible to interact with it via JSON RPC by hand. Long term, we're hoping to convince the general Ethereum community to support Clef as a general signer (it's only 3-5 methods), thus allowing your favorite DApp, Metamask, MyCrypto, etc to request signatures directly. 296 297 Until then however, we're trying to pave the way via Geth. Geth v1.9.0 has built in support via `--signer <API endpoint>` for using a local or remote Clef instance as an account backend! 298 299 We can try this by running Clef with our previous rules on Rinkeby (for now it's a good idea to allow auto-listing accounts, since Geth likes to retrieve them once in a while). 300 301 ```text 302 $ clef --keystore ~/.ethereum/rinkeby/keystore --chainid 4 --rules rules.js 303 ``` 304 305 In a different window we can start Geth, list our accounts, even list our wallets to see where the accounts originate from: 306 307 ```text 308 $ geth --rinkeby --signer=~/.clef/clef.ipc console 309 310 > eth.accounts 311 ["0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3", "0x086278a6c067775f71d6b2bb1856db6e28c30418"] 312 313 > personal.listWallets 314 [{ 315 accounts: [{ 316 address: "0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3", 317 url: "extapi://$HOME/.clef/clef.ipc" 318 }, { 319 address: "0x086278a6c067775f71d6b2bb1856db6e28c30418", 320 url: "extapi://$HOME/.clef/clef.ipc" 321 }], 322 status: "ok [version=6.0.0]", 323 url: "extapi://$HOME/.clef/clef.ipc" 324 }] 325 326 > eth.sendTransaction({from: eth.accounts[0], to: eth.accounts[0]}) 327 ``` 328 329 Lastly, when we requested a transaction to be sent, Clef prompted us in the original window to approve it: 330 331 ```text 332 --------- Transaction request------------- 333 to: 0xD9C9Cd5f6779558b6e0eD4e6Acf6b1947E7fA1F3 334 from: 0xD9C9Cd5f6779558b6e0eD4e6Acf6b1947E7fA1F3 [chksum ok] 335 value: 0 wei 336 gas: 0x5208 (21000) 337 gasprice: 1000000000 wei 338 nonce: 0x2366 (9062) 339 340 Request context: 341 NA -> NA -> NA 342 343 Additional HTTP header data, provided by the external caller: 344 User-Agent: 345 Origin: 346 ------------------------------------------- 347 Approve? [y/N]: 348 > y 349 ``` 350 351 :boom: 352 353 *Note, if you enable the external signer backend in Geth, all other account management is disabled. This is because long term we want to remove account management from Geth.*