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Personal namespace deprecation notes | Alternatives to the methods in the deprecated personal namespace |
The JSON-RPC API's personal
namespace has historically been used to manage accounts and sign transactions and data over RPC. However, it is being deprecated in favour of using Clef as an external signer and account manager. One of the major changes is moving away from indiscriminate locking and unlocking of accounts and instead using Clef to explicitly approve or deny specific actions. This page shows the suggested replacement for each method in personal
.
Methods without replacements
personal_unlockAccount
There is no need for a direct replacement for personal_unlockAccount
. Using Clef to manually approve actions or to attest custom rulesets is a much more secure way to interact with accounts without needing to indiscriminately unlock accounts.
personal_lockAccount
There is no need for a direct replacement for personal_lockAccount
because account locking/unlocking is replaced by Clef's approve/deny logic. This is a more secure way to interact with accounts.
personal.unpair
Unpair deletes a pairing between some specific types of smartcard wallet and Geth. There is not yet an equivalent method in Clef.
personal_initializeWallet
InitializeWallet is for initializing some specific types of smartcard wallet at a provided URL. There is not yet a corresponding method in Clef.
Methods with replacements
personal_listAccounts
personal_listAccounts
displays the addresses of all accounts in the keystore. It is identical to eth.accounts
. Calling eth.accounts
requires manual approval in Clef (unless a rule for it has been attested). There is also Clef's list-accounts
command that can be called from the terminal.
Examples:
# eth_accounts using curl
curl -X POST --data '{"jsonrpc":"2.0","method":"eth_accounts","params":[],"id":1}'
// eth_accounts in Geth's JS console
eth.accounts;
# clef list-accounts in the terminal
clef list-accounts
personal_deriveAccount
personal_deriveAccount
requests a hardware wallet to derive a new account, optionally pinning it for later use. This method is identical to clef_deriveAccount
. The Clef method is not externally exposed so it must be called via a UI.
personal.ecRecover
personal_ecRecover
returns the address for the account that was used to create a signature. An equivalent method, account_ecRecover
is available on the Clef external API.
Example call:
curl --data '{"id": 4, "jsonrpc": "2.0", "method": "account_ecRecover","params": ["0xaabbccdd", "0x5b6693f153b48ec1c706ba4169960386dbaa6903e249cc79a8e6ddc434451d417e1e57327872c7f538beeb323c300afa9999a3d4a5de6caf3be0d5ef832b67ef1c"]}' -X POST localhost:8550
personal_importRawKey
personal.importRawKey
was used to create a new account in the keystore from a raw private key. Clef has an equivalent method that can be invoked in the terminal using:
clef importraw <private-key-as-hex-string>
personal_listWallets
As opposed to listAccounts
, this method lists full details, including usb path or keystore-file paths. The equivalent method is clef_listWallets
. This method can be called from the terminal using:
clef list-wallets
personal_newAccount
personal_newAccount
was used to create a new accoutn and save it in the keystore. Clef has an equivalent method, account_new
. It can be accessed on the terminal using an http request or using a Clef command:
Example call (curl):
curl --data '{"id": 1, "jsonrpc": "2.0", "method": "account_new", "params": []}' -X POST localhost:8550
Example call (Clef command):
clef newaccount
Both require manual approval in Clef unless a custom ruleset is in place.
personal_openWallet
personal_OpenWallet
initiates a hardware wallet opening procedure by establishing a USB connection and then attempting to authenticate via the provided passphrase. Note, the method may return an extra challenge requiring a second open (e.g. the Trezor PIN matrix challenge). personal_openWallet
is identical to clef_openWallet
. The Clef method is not externally eposed, meaning it must be called via a UI.
personal_sendTransaction
personal_sendTransaction
ws used to sign and submit a transaction. This can be done using eth_sendTransaction
, requiring manual approval in Clef.
Example call (Javascript console):
// this command requires 2x approval in Clef because it loads account data via eth.accounts[0]
// and eth.accounts[1]
var tx = { from: eth.accounts[0], to: eth.accounts[1], value: web3.toWei(0.1, 'ether') };
// then send the transaction
eth.sendTransaction(tx);
Example call (terminal)
curl --data '{"id":1,"jsonrpc":"2.0", "method":"eth_sendTransaction","params":[{"from": "0xE70CAD05D0D54Ae3C9Fe5442f901E0433f9bd14B", "to":"0x4FDc03d09Ffca5Bba3138149E29D85C8A9E2Ac42", "gas":"21000","gasPrice":"20000000000", "nonce":"94"}]}' -H "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST localhost:8545
personal_sign
The sign method calculates an Ethereum specific signature with sign(keccak256("\x19Ethereum Signed Message:\n" + len(message) + message))
. Adding a prefix to the message makes the calculated signature recognisable as an Ethereum specific signature. This prevents misuse where a malicious DApp can sign arbitrary data (e.g. transaction) and use the signature to impersonate the victim.
personal.sign
is equivalent to Clef's account_signData
. It returns the calculated signature.
Example call:
curl --data {"id": 3, "jsonrpc": "2.0", "method": "account_signData", "params": ["data/plain", "0x1923f626bb8dc025849e00f99c25fe2b2f7fb0db","0xaabbccdd"]} -X POST localhost:8550
Clef also has account_signTypedData
that signs data structured according to EIP-712 and returns the signature.
Example call (use the following as a template for <data>
in curl --data <data> -X POST localhost:8550 -H "Content-Type: application/json"
)
{
"id": 68,
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"method": "account_signTypedData",
"params": [
"0xcd2a3d9f938e13cd947ec05abc7fe734df8dd826",
{
"types": {
"EIP712Domain": [
{
"name": "name",
"type": "string"
},
{
"name": "version",
"type": "string"
},
{
"name": "chainId",
"type": "uint256"
},
{
"name": "verifyingContract",
"type": "address"
}
],
"Person": [
{
"name": "name",
"type": "string"
},
{
"name": "wallet",
"type": "address"
}
],
"Mail": [
{
"name": "from",
"type": "Person"
},
{
"name": "to",
"type": "Person"
},
{
"name": "contents",
"type": "string"
}
]
},
"primaryType": "Mail",
"domain": {
"name": "Ether Mail",
"version": "1",
"chainId": 1,
"verifyingContract": "0xCcCCccccCCCCcCCCCCCcCcCccCcCCCcCcccccccC"
},
"message": {
"from": {
"name": "Cow",
"wallet": "0xCD2a3d9F938E13CD947Ec05AbC7FE734Df8DD826"
},
"to": {
"name": "Bob",
"wallet": "0xbBbBBBBbbBBBbbbBbbBbbbbBBbBbbbbBbBbbBBbB"
},
"contents": "Hello, Bob!"
}
}
]
}
personal_signTransaction
personal_signTransaction
was used to create and sign a transaction from the given arguments. The transaction was returned in RLP-form, not broadcast to other nodes. The equivalent method is Clef's account_signTransaction
from the external API. The arguments are a transaction object ({"from": , "to": , "gas": , "maxPriorityFeePerGas": , "MaxFeePerGas": , "value": , "data": , "nonce": }
)) and an optional method signature that enables Clef to decode the calldata and show the user the methods, arguments and values being sent.
Example call (terminal):
curl --data '{"id": 2, "jsonrpc": "2.0", "method": "account_signTransaction", "params": [{"from": "0x1923f626bb8dc025849e00f99c25fe2b2f7fb0db", "gas": "0x55555","gasPrice": "0x1234", "input": "0xabcd", "nonce": "0x0", "to": "0x07a565b7ed7d7a678680a4c162885bedbb695fe0", "value": "0x1234"}]}' -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" localhost:8550