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685 lines
28 KiB
---
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title: Tutorial
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sort_key: A
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---
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This page provides a step-by-step walkthrough tutorial demonstrating some common uses of Clef. This
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includes manual approvals and automated rules. Clef is presented both as a standalone general signer
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with requests made via RPC and also as a backend signer for Geth.
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{:toc}
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- this will be removed by the toc
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## Initializing Clef
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First things first, Clef needs to store some data itself. Since that data might be sensitive
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(passwords, signing rules, accounts), Clef's entire storage is encrypted. To support encrypting data,
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the first step is to initialize Clef with a random master seed, itself too encrypted with your chosen
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password:
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```text
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$ clef init
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WARNING!
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Clef is an account management tool. It may, like any software, contain bugs.
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Please take care to
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- backup your keystore files,
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- verify that the keystore(s) can be opened with your password.
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Clef is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY;
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without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
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PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
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Enter 'ok' to proceed:
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> ok
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The master seed of clef will be locked with a password.
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Please specify a password. Do not forget this password!
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Password:
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Repeat password:
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A master seed has been generated into /home/martin/.clef/masterseed.json
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This is required to be able to store credentials, such as:
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* Passwords for keystores (used by rule engine)
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* Storage for JavaScript auto-signing rules
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* Hash of JavaScript rule-file
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You should treat 'masterseed.json' with utmost secrecy and make a backup of it!
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* The password is necessary but not enough, you need to back up the master seed too!
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* The master seed does not contain your accounts, those need to be backed up separately!
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```
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*For readability purposes, we'll remove the WARNING printout, user confirmation and the unlocking of the master seed in the rest of this document.*
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## Remote interactions
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This tutorial will use Clef with Geth on the Goerli testnet. The accounts used will be in the
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Goerli keystore with the path `~/go-ethereum/goerli-data/keystore`. The tutorial assumes there
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are two accounts in this keystore. Instructions for creating accounts can be found on the
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[Account managament page](/docs/interface/managing-your-accounts). Note that Clef can also interact
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with hardware wallets, although that is not demonstrated here.
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Clef should be started before Geth, otherwise Geth will complain that it cannot find a Clef
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instance to connect to. Clef should be started with the correct `chainid` for Goerli. Clef
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itself does not connect to a blockchain, but the `chainID` parameter is included in the data
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that is aggregated to form a signature. Clef also needs a path to the correct keystore passed to
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the `--keystore` command. A custom path to the config directory can also be provided. This is where the
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`ipc` file will be saved which is needed to connect Clef to Geth:
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```sh
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clef --keystore ~/go-ethereum/goerli-data/keystore --configdir ~/go-ethereum/goerli-data/clef --chainid=5
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```
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The following logs will be displayed in the console:
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```terminal
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INFO [07-01|11:00:46.385] Starting signer chainid=4 keystore= go-ethereum/goerli-data/keystore light-kdf=false advanced=false
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DEBUG[07-01|11:00:46.389] FS scan times list=3.521941ms set=9.017µs diff=4.112µs
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DEBUG[07-01|11:00:46.391] Ledger support enabled
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DEBUG[07-01|11:00:46.391] Trezor support enabled via HID
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DEBUG[07-01|11:00:46.391] Trezor support enabled via WebUSB
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INFO [07-01|11:00:46.391] Audit logs configured file=audit.log
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DEBUG[07-01|11:00:46.392] IPC registered namespace=account
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INFO [07-01|11:00:46.392] IPC endpoint opened url=go-ethereum/goerli-data/clef/clef.ipc
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------- Signer info -------
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* intapi_version : 7.0.1
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* extapi_version : 6.1.0
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* extapi_http : n/a
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* extapi_ipc : go-ethereum/goerli-data/clef/clef.ipc
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```
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Clef starts up in CLI (Command Line Interface) mode by default. Arbitrary remote
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processes may *request* account interactions (e.g. sign a transaction), which the user
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can individually *confirm* or *deny*.
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The code snippet below shows a request made to Clef via its *External API endpoint* using
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[NetCat](http://netcat.sourceforge.net/). The request invokes the
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["account_list"](/docs/_clef/apis#accountlist) endpoint which lists the accounts in the keystore.
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This command should be run in a new terminal.
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```sh
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echo '{"id": 1, "jsonrpc": "2.0", "method": "account_list"}' | nc -U ~/.clef/clef.ipc
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```
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The terminal used to send the command will now hang. This is because the process is awaiting
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confirmation from Clef. Switching to the Clef console reveals Clef's prompt to the user to
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confirm or deny the request:
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```terminal
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-------- List Account request--------------
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A request has been made to list all accounts.
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You can select which accounts the caller can see
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[x] 0xD9C9Cd5f6779558b6e0eD4e6Acf6b1947E7fA1F3
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URL: keystore://go-ethereum/goerli-data/keystore/UTC--2017-04-14T15-15-00.327614556Z--d9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3
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[x] 0x086278A6C067775F71d6B2BB1856Db6E28c30418
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URL: keystore://go-ethereum/goerli-data/keystore/UTC--2018-02-06T22-53-11.211657239Z--086278a6c067775f71d6b2bb1856db6e28c30418
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-------------------------------------------
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Request context:
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NA - ipc - NA
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Additional HTTP header data, provided by the external caller:
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User-Agent:
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Origin:
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Approve? [y/N]:
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```
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Depending on whether the request is approved or denied, the NetCat process in the other terminal
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will receive one of the following responses:
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```terminal
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{"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":1,"result":["0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3","0x086278a6c067775f71d6b2bb1856db6e28c30418"]}
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```
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or
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```terminal
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{"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":1,"error":{"code":-32000,"message":"Request denied"}}
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```
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Apart from listing accounts, you can also *request* creating a new account, signing transactions
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and data or recovering signatures. The available methods are documented in the Clef
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[External API Spec](https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/tree/master/cmd/clef#external-api-1)
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and the [External API Changelog](https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/blob/master/cmd/clef/extapi_changelog.md).
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*Note, the number of things you can do from the External API is deliberately small to limit
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the power of remote calls as much as possible! Clef has an
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[Internal API](https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/tree/master/cmd/clef#ui-api-1)
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too for the UI (User Interface) which is much richer and can support custom interfaces on top.
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But that's out of scope here.*
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The example above used Clef completely independently of Geth. However, by defining Clef as
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the signer when Geth is started imposes Clef's `request - confirm - result` pattern to any
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interaction with the local Geth node that touches accounts, including requests made using
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RPC or an attached Javascript console. To demonstrate this, Geth can be started,
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with Clef as the signer:
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```sh
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geth --goerli --datadir goerli-data --signer=goerli-data/clef/clef.ipc
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```
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With Geth running, open a new terminal and attach a Javascript console:
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```sh
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geth attach goerli-data/geth.ipc
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```
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A simple request to list the accounts in the keystore will cause the Javascript console to hang.
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```js
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eth.accounts
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```
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Switching to the Clef terminal reveals that this is because the request is awaiting explicit
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confirmation from the user. The log is identical to the one shown above, when the same request
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for account information was made to Clef via Netcat:
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```terminal
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-------- List Account request--------------
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A request has been made to list all accounts.
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You can select which accounts the caller can see
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[x] 0xD9C9Cd5f6779558b6e0eD4e6Acf6b1947E7fA1F3
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URL: keystore://go-ethereum/goerli-data/keystore/UTC--2017-04-14T15-15-00.327614556Z--d9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3
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[x] 0x086278A6C067775F71d6B2BB1856Db6E28c30418
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URL: keystore://go-ethereum/goerli-data/keystore/UTC--2018-02-06T22-53-11.211657239Z--086278a6c067775f71d6b2bb1856db6e28c30418
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-------------------------------------------
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Request context:
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NA - ipc - NA
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Additional HTTP header data, provided by the external caller:
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User-Agent:
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Origin:
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Approve? [y/N]:
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```
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In this mode, the user is required to manually confirm every action that touches account data,
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including querying accounts, signing and sending transactions.
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The example below shows an ether transaction between the two accounts in the keystore
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using `eth.sendTransaction` in the attached Javascript console.
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```js
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// this command requires 2x approval in Clef because it loads account data via eth.accounts[0]
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// and eth.accounts[1]
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var tx = {from: eth.accounts[0], to: eth.accounts[1], value: web3.toWei(0.1, "ether")}
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// then send the transaction
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eth.sendTransaction(tx)
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```
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This example demonstrates the power of Clef much more clearly than the account-listing example.
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In the Clef terminal, all the details of the transaction are presented to the user so that they
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can be reviewed before being confirmed. This gives the user an opportunity to review the fine
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details and make absolutely sure they really want to sign the transaction. `eth.sendTransaction`
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returns the following confirmation prompt in the Clef terminal:
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```terminal
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-------- Transaction request----------------
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to: 0x086278A6C067775F71d6B2BB1856Db6E28c30418
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from: 0xD9C9Cd5f6779558b6e0eD4e6Acf6b1947E7fA1F3 [chksum ok]
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value: 100000000000000000 wei
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gas: 0x5208 (21000)
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maxFeePerGas: 1500000016 wei
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maxPriorityFeePerGas: 1500000000 wei
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nonce: 0x0 (0)
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chainid: 0x5
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Accesslist
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Request context:
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NA - ipc - NA
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Additional HTTP header data, provided by the external caller:
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User-Agent: ""
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Origin: ""
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---------------------------------------------
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Approve? [y/N]
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```
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Approving this transaction causes Clef to prompt the user to provide the password for
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the sender account. Providing the password enables the transaction to be signed and sent to
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Geth for broadcasting to the network. The details of the signed transaction are displayed
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in the console. Account passwords can also be stored in Clef's encrypted vault so that they
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do not have to be manually entered - [more on this below](#account-passwords).
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## Automatic rules
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For most users, manually confirming every transaction is the right way to use Clef because a
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human-in-the-loop can review every action. However, there are cases when it makes sense to
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set up some rules which permit Clef to sign a transaction without prompting the user.
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For example, well defined rules such as:
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* Auto-approve transactions with Uniswap v2, with value between 0.1 and 0.5 ETH
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per 24h period
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* Auto-approve transactions to address `0xD9C9Cd5f6779558b6e0eD4e6Acf6b1947E7fA1F3`
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as long as gas < 44k and gasPrice < 80Gwei
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can be encoded and intepreted by Clef's built-in ruleset engine.
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### Rule files
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Rules are implemented as Javascript code in `js` files. The ruleset engine includes the
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same methods as the JSON_RPC defined in the [UI Protocol](/docs/_clef/datatypes.md).
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The following code snippet demonstrates a rule file that approves a transaction if it
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satisfies the following conditions:
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* the recipient is `0xae967917c465db8578ca9024c205720b1a3651a9`
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* the value is less than 50000000000000000 wei (0.05 ETH)
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and approves account listing if:
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* the request has arrived via ipc
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```js
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//ancillary function for formatting numbers
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function asBig(str) {
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if (str.slice(0, 2) == "0x") {
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return new BigNumber(str.slice(2), 16)
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}
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return new BigNumber(str)
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}
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// Approve transactions to a certain contract if value is below a certain limit
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function ApproveTx(req) {
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var limit = big.Newint("0xb1a2bc2ec50000")
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var value = asBig(req.transaction.value);
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if (req.transaction.to.toLowerCase() == "0xae967917c465db8578ca9024c205720b1a3651a9")
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&& value.lt(limit)) {
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return "Approve"
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}
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else{
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return "Reject"
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}
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}
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// Approve listings if request made from IPC
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function ApproveListing(req){
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if (req.metadata.scheme == "ipc"){ return "Approve"}
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}
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// returning nothing passes the decision to the next UI for manual assessment
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```
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There are three possible outcomes to this ruleset that are handled in different ways:
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| Return value | Action |
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| ----------- | ----------- |
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| "Approve" | Auto-approve request |
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| "Reject" | Auto-approve request |
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| Error | Pass decision to UI for manual approval |
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| Unexpected value | Pass decision to UI for manual approval |
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| Nothing | Pass decision to UI for manual approval |
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### Attestations
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Clef will not just accept and run arbitrary scripts - that would create an attack vector because a malicious party could
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change the rule file. Instead, the user explicitly *attests* to a rule file, which involves injecting the file's SHA256
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hash into Clef's secure store. The following code snippet shows how to calculate a SHA256 hash for a file named `rules.js`
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and pass it to Clef. Note that Clef will prompt the user to provide the master password because the Clef store has to
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be decrypted in order to add the attestation to it.
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```sh
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# calculate hash
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sha256sum rules.js
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# attest to rules.js in Clef
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clef attest 645b58e4f945e24d0221714ff29f6aa8e860382ced43490529db1695f5fcc71c
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```
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Once this attestation has been added to the Clef store, it can be used to automatically approve
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interactions that satisfy the conditions encoded in `rules.js` in Clef.
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### Account passwords
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The rules described in `rules.js` above require access to the accounts in the Clef keystore which
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are protected by user-defined passwords. The signer therefore requires access to these passwords
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in order to automatically unlock the keystore and sign data and transactions using the accounts.
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This is done using `clef setpw`, passing the account address as the sole argument:
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```sh
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clef setpw 0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3
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```
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which displays the following in the terminal:
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```terminal
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Please enter a password to store for this address:
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Password:
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Repeat password:
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Decrypt master seed of clef
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Password:
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INFO [07-01|14:05:56.031] Credential store updated key=0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3
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```
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Note that Clef does not really 'unlock' an account, it just abstracts the process of providing the
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password away from the end-user in specific, predefined scenarios. If an account password
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exists in the Clef vault and the rule evaluates to "Approve" then Clef decrypts the password,
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uses it to decrypt the key, does the requested signing and then re-locks the account.
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### Implementing rules
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Clef can be instructed to run an attested rule file simply by passing the path to `rules.js`
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to the `--rules` flag:
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```sh
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clef --keystore go-ethereum/goerli-data/ --configdir go-ethereum/goerli-data/clef --chainid 5 --rules rules.js
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```
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The following logs will be displayed in the terminal:
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```
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INFO [07-01|13:39:49.726] Rule engine configured file=rules.js
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INFO [07-01|13:39:49.726] Starting signer chainid=5 keystore=$go-ethereum/goerli-data/ light-kdf=false advanced=false
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DEBUG[07-01|13:39:49.726] FS scan times list=35.15µs set=4.251µs diff=2.766µs
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DEBUG[07-01|13:39:49.727] Ledger support enabled
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DEBUG[07-01|13:39:49.727] Trezor support enabled via HID
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DEBUG[07-01|13:39:49.727] Trezor support enabled via WebUSB
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INFO [07-01|13:39:49.728] Audit logs configured file=audit.log
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DEBUG[07-01|13:39:49.728] IPC registered namespace=account
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INFO [07-01|13:39:49.728] IPC endpoint opened url=go-ethereum/goerli-data/clef/clef.ipc
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------- Signer info -------
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* intapi_version : 7.0.0
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* extapi_version : 6.0.0
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* extapi_http : n/a
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* extapi_ipc : go-ethereum/goerli-data/clef/clef.ipc
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```
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Any request that satisfies the ruleset will now be auto-approved by the rule file, for example
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the following request to sign a transaction made using the Geth Javascript console
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(note that the password for account `0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3`
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has already been provided to `setpw` and the recipient and value comply with the rules in `rules.js`):
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```js
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var tx = {to: "0xae967917c465db8578ca9024c205720b1a3651a9", from: "0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3", value: web3.toWei(0.01, "ether")}
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eth.sendTransaction(tx)
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```
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By contrast, the following transactions *do not* satisfy the rules in `rules.js`:
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```js
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// violate maximum transaction value condition
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var tx = {to: "0xae967917c465db8578ca9024c205720b1a3651a9", from: "0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3", value: web3.toWei(1, "ether")}
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eth.sendTransaction(tx)
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```
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```js
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// violate recipient condition
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var tx = {to: "0xae967917c465db8578ca9024c205720b1a3651a9", from: "0xd4c4bb7d6889453c6c6ea3e9eab3c4177b4fbcc3", value: web3.toWei(0.01, "ether")}
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eth.sendTransaction(tx)
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```
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These latter two transactions, that do not satisfy the encoded rules in `rules.js`, are not automatically approved, but instead pass the
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decision back to the UI for manual approval by the user.
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### Summary of basic usage
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To summarize, the steps required to run Clef with an automated ruleset that requires account access is as follows:
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**1)** Define rules as Javascript and save as a `.js` file, e.g. `rules.js`
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**2)** Calculate hash of rule file using `sha256sum rules.js`
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|
|
**3)** Attest the rules in Clef using `clef attest <hash>`
|
|
|
|
**4)** Set account passwords in Clef using `clef --setpw <address>`
|
|
|
|
**5)** Start Clef with rule file enabled using `clef --keystore <path-to-keystore> --chainid <chainID> --rules rules.js`
|
|
|
|
**6)** Make requests directly to Clef using the external API or connect to Geth by passing `--signer=<path to clef.ipc>` at Geth startup
|
|
|
|
|
|
## More rules
|
|
|
|
Since rules are defined as Javascript code, rulesets of arbitrary complexity can be created and they can
|
|
impose conditions on any part of a transaction, not only the recipient and value.
|
|
|
|
A simple example is implementing a "whitelist" of recipients where transactions that have those
|
|
accounts in the `to` field are automatically signed (for example perhaps transactions between
|
|
a user's own accounts might be whitelisted):
|
|
|
|
```js
|
|
function ApproveTx(r) {
|
|
if (r.transaction.to.toLowerCase() == "0xd4c4bb7d6889453c6c6ea3e9eab3c4177b4fbcc3") {
|
|
return "Approve"
|
|
}
|
|
if (r.transaction.to.toLowerCase() == "0xae967917c465db8578ca9024c205720b1a3651a9") {
|
|
return "Reject"
|
|
}
|
|
// Otherwise goes to manual processing
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
In addition to addresses and values, other properties of a request can also be incorporated
|
|
into a ruleset. The example below demonstrates a ruleset for `approve_signData` imposing
|
|
the following conditions on a transaction's sender and message data.
|
|
|
|
1. The sender must be `0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3`
|
|
2. The transaction message must include the text `wen-merge`, which is `77656E2D6D65726765` in hex.
|
|
|
|
If these conditions are satisfied then the transaction is auto-approved (assuming the password for
|
|
`0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3` has been provided to `setpw`).
|
|
|
|
```js
|
|
function ApproveListing() {
|
|
return "Approve"
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
function ApproveSignData(req) {
|
|
if (req.address.toLowerCase() == "0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3") {
|
|
if (req.messages[0].value.indexOf("wen-merge") >= 0) {
|
|
return "Approve"
|
|
}
|
|
return "Reject"
|
|
}
|
|
// Otherwise goes to manual processing
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
This file should be saved as a `.js` file, hashed and attested in Clef:
|
|
|
|
```sh
|
|
sha256sum rules.js
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
which returns:
|
|
|
|
```terminal
|
|
84d9e70aa30d0e5ffb3c4b376c9490f428390a196bfdc1d36770ffd2bbe66845 rules.js
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
then:
|
|
|
|
```sh
|
|
clef attest 84d9e70aa30d0e5ffb3c4b376c9490f428390a196bfdc1d36770ffd2bbe66845
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
which returns:
|
|
|
|
```terminal
|
|
Decrypt master seed of clef
|
|
Password:
|
|
INFO [07-01|14:11:28.509] Ruleset attestation updated sha256=84d9e70aa30d0e5ffb3c4b376c9490f428390a196bfdc1d36770ffd2bbe66845
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Then, Clef can be restarted with the new rules in place:
|
|
|
|
```sh
|
|
clef --keystore go-ethereum/goerli-data/clef --configdir go-ethereum/goerli-data/clef --chainid 5 --rules rules.js
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
```terminal
|
|
INFO [07-01|14:12:41.636] Rule engine configured file=rules.js
|
|
INFO [07-01|14:12:41.636] Starting signer chainid=5 keystore=go-ethereum/goerli-data/clef/keystore light-kdf=false advanced=false
|
|
DEBUG[07-01|14:12:41.636] FS scan times list=46.722µs set=4.47µs diff=2.157µs
|
|
DEBUG[07-01|14:12:41.637] Ledger support enabled
|
|
DEBUG[07-01|14:12:41.637] Trezor support enabled via HID
|
|
DEBUG[07-01|14:12:41.638] Trezor support enabled via WebUSB
|
|
INFO [07-01|14:12:41.638] Audit logs configured file=audit.log
|
|
DEBUG[07-01|14:12:41.638] IPC registered namespace=account
|
|
INFO [07-01|14:12:41.638] IPC endpoint opened url=go-ethereum/goerli-data/clef/clef.ipc
|
|
------- Signer info -------
|
|
* intapi_version : 7.0.0
|
|
* extapi_version : 6.0.0
|
|
* extapi_http : n/a
|
|
* extapi_ipc : go-ethereum/goerli-data/clef/clef.ipc
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Finally, a request can be submitted to test that the rules are being applied as expected.
|
|
Here, Clef is used independently of Geth by making a request via RPC, but the same logic
|
|
would be imposed if the request was made via a connected Geth node. Some arbitrary text
|
|
will be included in the message data that includes the term `wen-merge`. The plaintext
|
|
`clefdemotextthatincludeswen-merge` is `636c656664656d6f7465787474686174696e636c7564657377656e2d6d65726765`
|
|
when represented as a hexadecimal string. This can be passed as data to an `account_signData`
|
|
request as follows:
|
|
|
|
```sh
|
|
echo '{"id": 1, "jsonrpc":"2.0", "method":"account_signData", "params":["data/plain", "0x636c656664656d6f7465787474686174696e636c7564657377656e2d6d65726765"]}' | nc -U ~/go-ethereum.goerli-data/clef/clef.ipc
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
This will be automatically signed, returning a result that looks like the following:
|
|
|
|
```terminal
|
|
{"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":1,"result":"0x4f93e3457027f6be99b06b3392d0ebc60615ba448bb7544687ef1248dea4f5317f789002df783979c417d969836b6fda3710f5bffb296b4d51c8aaae6e2ac4831c"}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Alternatively, a request that does not include the phrase `wen-merge` will not automatically approve. For example, the following request passes the hexadecimal
|
|
string representing the plaintext `clefdemotextwithoutspecialtext`:
|
|
|
|
```sh
|
|
echo '{"id": 1, "jsonrpc":"2.0", "method":"account_signData", "params":["data/plain", "0x636c656664656d6f74657874776974686f75747370656369616c74657874"]}' | nc -U ~/go-ethereum.goerli-data/clef/clef.ipc
|
|
```
|
|
This returns a `Request denied` message as follows:
|
|
|
|
```terminal
|
|
{"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":1,"error":{"code":-32000,"message":"Request denied"}}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile, in the output logs in the Clef terminal you can see:
|
|
```text
|
|
INFO [02-21|14:42:41] Op approved
|
|
INFO [02-21|14:42:56] Op rejected
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
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:
|
|
|
|
```text
|
|
$ tail -n 4 audit.log
|
|
t=2022-07-01T15:52:14+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
|
|
t=2022-07-01T15:52:14+0300 lvl=info msg=SignData api=signer type=response data=0x636c656664656d6f7465787474686174696e636c7564657377656e2d6d65726765 error=nil
|
|
t=2022-07-01T15:52:23+0300 lvl=info msg=SignData api=signer type=request metadata="{\"remote\":\"NA\",\"local\":\"NA\",\"scheme\":\"NA\",\"User-Agent\":\"\",\"Origin\":\"\"}" addr="0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3 [chksum INVALID]" data=0x636c656664656d6f74657874776974686f75747370656369616c74657874 content-type=data/plain
|
|
t=2022-07-01T15:52:23+0300 lvl=info msg=SignData api=signer type=response data= error="Request denied"
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
More examples, including a ruleset for a rate-limited window, are available on the [Clef Github][rate-limited-window-example]
|
|
and on the [Rules page](/docs/clef/rules).
|
|
|
|
|
|
## Under the hood
|
|
|
|
The examples on this page have provided step-by-step instructions for verious operations using Clef.
|
|
However, they have not provided much detail as to what is happening under the hood.
|
|
This section will provide some more details about how Clef organizes itself locally.
|
|
|
|
Initializing Clef with a master password and providing an account password to `clef setpw`
|
|
and attesting a ruleset creates the following files in the directory `~/.clef/`
|
|
(this path is independent of the paths provided to `--keystore` and `--configdir` on startup):
|
|
|
|
```terminal
|
|
# displayed using $ ls -laR ~/.clef/
|
|
|
|
/home/user/.clef/:
|
|
total 24
|
|
drwxr-x--x 3 user user 4096 Jul 1 13:45 .
|
|
drwxr-xr-x 102 user user 12288 Jul 1 13:39 ..
|
|
drwx------ 2 user user 4096 Jul 1 13:25 02f90c0603f4f2f60188
|
|
-r-------- 1 user user 868 Jun 28 13:55 masterseed.json
|
|
|
|
/home/user/.clef/02f90c0603f4f2f60188:
|
|
total 12
|
|
drwx------ 2 user user 4096 Jul 1 13:25 .
|
|
drwxr-x--x 3 user user 4096 Jul 1 13:45 ..
|
|
-rw------- 1 user user 159 Jul 1 13:25 config.json
|
|
-rw------- 1 user user 115 Jul 1 13:35 credentials.json
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The file `masterseed.json` includes a json object containing the masterseed which was used to derive
|
|
the vault directory (in this case `02f90c0603f4f2f60188`). The vault is encrypted using a password
|
|
which is also derived from the masterseed. Inside the vault are two subdirectories:
|
|
|
|
`credentials.json`
|
|
|
|
`config.json`
|
|
|
|
|
|
Inside `credentials.json` are the confidential `ksp` data (standing for "keystore pass" - these
|
|
are the account passwords used to unlock the keystore).
|
|
|
|
The `config.json` file contains encrypted key/value pairs for configuration data. Usually
|
|
this is only the `sha256` hashes of any attested rulesets.
|
|
|
|
Vault locations map uniquely to masterseeds so that multiple instances of Clef can co-exist
|
|
each with their own attested rules and their own set of keystore passwords. This is useful for,
|
|
for example, maintaining separate setups for Mainnet and testnets.
|
|
|
|
The contents of each of these json files can be viewed using `cat` and should look something
|
|
like the following:
|
|
|
|
For `config.json`:
|
|
|
|
```sh
|
|
cat ~/.clef/02f90c0603f4f2f60188/config.json
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
```terminal
|
|
{"ruleset_sha256":{"iv":"SWWEtnl+R+I+wfG7","c":"I3fjmwmamxVcfGax7D0MdUOL29/rBWcs73WBILmYK0o1CrX7wSMc3y37KsmtlZUAjp0oItYq01Ow8VGUOzilG91tDHInB5YHNtm/YkufEbo="}}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
and for `credentials.json`:
|
|
|
|
```sh
|
|
cat ~/.clef/02f90c0603f4f2f60188/config.json
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
```terminal
|
|
{"0xd9c9cd5f6779558b6e0ed4e6acf6b1947e7fa1f3": {"iv": "6SC062CfaUW8uSqH","c":"C+S5kaJyrarrxrAESs4EmPjL5zmg5tRh0Q=="}}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
## Geth integration
|
|
|
|
This tutorial has bounced back and forth between demonstrating Clef as a standalone tool by making
|
|
'manual` JSON RPC requests from the terminal and integrating it as a backend singer for Geth.
|
|
Using Clef for account management is considered best practise for Geth users because of the additional
|
|
security benefits it offers over and above what it offered by Geth's built-in accounts module. Clef is
|
|
far more flexible and composable than Geth's built-in account management tool and can interface directly
|
|
with hardware wallets, while Apps and wallets can request signatures directly from Clef.
|
|
|
|
Ultimately, the goal is to deprecate Geth's account management tools completely and replace them with
|
|
Clef. Until then, users are simply encouraged to choose to use Clef as an optional backend signer for Geth.
|
|
In addition to the examples on this page, the [Getting started tutorial](/docs/_getting-started/index.md)
|
|
also demonstrates Clef/Geth integration.
|
|
|
|
|
|
## Summary
|
|
|
|
This page includes step-by-step instructions for basic and intermediate uses of Clef, including using
|
|
it as a standalone app and a backend signer for Geth. Further information is available on our other
|
|
Clef pages, including [Introduction](/docs/clef/introduction), [Setup](/docs/clef/setup),
|
|
[Rules](/docs/clef/rules), [Communication Datatypes](/docs/clef/datatypes) and [Communication APIs](/docs/clef/apis).
|
|
Also see the [Clef Github](https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/tree/master/cmd/clef) for further reading.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[rate-limited-window-example]:https://github.com/ethereum/go-ethereum/blob/master/cmd/clef/rules.md#example-1-ruleset-for-a-rate-limited-window |