This change adds the ability to create a new unsigned transaction
from a watch only wallet, and save it to a file. This file can
then be moved to another computer/VM where a cold wallet may load
it, sign it, and save it. That cold wallet does not need to have
a blockchain nor daemon. The signed transaction file can then be
moved back to the watch only wallet, which can load it and send
it to the daemon.
Two new simplewallet commands to use it:
sign_transfer (on the cold wallet)
submit_transfer (on the watch only wallet)
The transfer command used on a watch only wallet now writes an
unsigned transaction set in a file called 'unsigned_monero_tx'
instead of submitting the tx to the daemon as a normal wallet does.
The signed tx file is called 'signed_monero_tx'.
Keep the immediate direct deps at the library that depends on them,
declare deps as PUBLIC so that targets that link against that library
get the library's deps as transitive deps.
Break dep cycle between blockchain_db <-> crytonote_core.
No code refactoring, just hide cycle from cmake so that
it doesn't complain (cycles are allowed only between
static libs, not shared libs).
This is in preparation for supproting BUILD_SHARED_LIBS cmake
built-in option for building internal libs as shared.
We keep 1, 2, 3 multipliers till the fee decrase from 0.01/kB
to 0.002/kB, where we start using 1, 20, 166 multipliers.
This ensures the higher multiplier will compensate for the
block reward penalty when pushing past 100% of the past median.
The fee-multiplier wallet setting is now rename to priority,
since it keeps its [0..3] range, but maps to different multiplier
values.
This adds [snap](https://snapcraft.io) packaging to the project. See the
link for more information on snaps. Snap packages install on all Linux
distributions. On Ubuntu, snap confinement with apparmor and seccomp
provide an additional layer of security.
This snap sets up monerod as a systemd service, which should start
immediately on install. To access the wallet CLI, simply run `monero`
(/snap/bin/monero). I think it's a really quick & easy way to get
started with monero.
I've made some opinionated decisions in the packaging just to kick this
off, but I'm happy to iterate on this stuff.
This allows the key to be not the same for two outputs sent to
the same address (eg, if you pay yourself, and also get change
back). Also remove the key amounts lists and return parameters
since we don't actually generate random ones, so we don't need
to save them as we can recalculate them when needed if we have
the correct keys.
The "transfer" simplewallet command is renamed to "transfer_original".
"transfer_new" is renamed "transfer", "transfer_rct" is removed,
and the new "transfer" now selects rct or non rct transactions
based on the current block height.
This plugs a privacy leak from the wallet to the daemon,
as the daemon could previously see what input is included
as a transaction input, which the daemon hadn't previously
supplied. Now, the wallet requests a particular set of
outputs, including the real one.
This can result in transactions that can't be accepted if
the wallet happens to select too many outputs with non standard
unlock times. The daemon could know this and select another
output, but the wallet is blind to it. It's currently very
unlikely since I don't think anything uses non default
unlock times. The wallet requests more outputs than necessary
so it can use spares if any of the returns outputs are still
locked. If there are not enough spares to reach the desired
mixin, the transaction will fail.
Simplewallet improperly skipped the restore from height code if
restoring a deterministic wallet AND not specifying a wallet file in the
command line. The other generate options require a wallet file as an
argument, which prevents "ask_wallet_create_if_needed()" from being
called, which in turn causes "m_generate_new" to remain unset.
Specifying a wallet file at launch with --restore-deterministic emulated
this behavior.
Squashed commit of the following:
commit 9af9e4223b58bbb65a3519af2c2bfc273cbd23d6
fixed some formatting
commit c7920e1cf88ff46eb9294101344d9a567f22e2da
Merge: 97eb28b 1da1c68
fix#864 fix using boolean
commit 97eb28ba5dd49ddde8c8785f39b24d955e5de31c
Fix#864 boolean value used to verify on new wallet
commit 1da1c68bd3a9a373c70482b6e6e95251096149f1
fix#864 changed to boolean to prompt for verify
commit 5bee96652434762d2c91ce31a1b1c9f169446ddc
fix 864; made variable names easier for understanding branching.
commit 45715960d30293f781b2ff9e5e647c2ec893f4a3
fix#864; allow password to be entered twice for new wallets for verification.
fix#864 password entry verification; ammended boolean
fix#864 ; default constructor for password_container should set verify=true
They are used to export a signed set of key images from a wallet
with a private spend key, so an auditor with the matching view key
may see which of those are spent, and which are not.
Signing is done using the spend key, since the view key may
be shared. This could be extended later, to let the user choose
which key (even a per tx key).
simplewallet's sign/verify API uses a file. The RPC uses a
string (simplewallet can't easily do strings since commands
receive a tokenized set of arguments).
Fee can now be multiplied by 2 or 3, if users want to give
priority to their transactions. There are only three levels
to avoid too much fingerprinting. Default is 1 (minimum fee).
The default multiplier can be set by "set fee-multiplier X".
It sets the max number of threads to use for a parallel job.
This is different that the number of total threads, since monero
binaries typically start a lot of them.
We want to lock operations which access the blockchain in
wallet2. We also want the background refresh to happen again
when we cancel a foreground refresh. Wrap the locking setup
in a macro so it doesn't get copy/pasted/mangled, and use
a scope exit trick to ensure it's always properly restored.
This sends all outputs in a wallet to a given address, alleviating
the difficulty people have had trying to send all monero but
being left with some small amount left.
modified: src/wallet/wallet2.cpp
modified: src/wallet/wallet2.h
Update to fix unconfirmed balance and give a slightly more verbose and informative confirmation message for transfers
^C when in RPC mode would not save the wallet while it was still
refreshing after starting up.
Also, save the wallet out of the signal handler. We don't want
to call complex stuff in a signal handler.
b4eada9 wallet: make load_keys check types when loading JSON (moneromooo-monero)
3e55725 wallet: make the JSON reading type safe (moneromooo-monero)
f8d05f3 common: new json_util.h (moneromooo-monero)
This allows appropriate action to be taken, like displaying
the reason to the user.
Do just that in simplewallet, which should help a lot in
determining why users fail to send.
Also make it so a tx which is accepted but not relayed is
seen as a success rather than a failure.
With the change in mixin rules for v2, the "annoying" outputs are
slightly changed. There is high correlation between dust and
unmixable, but no equivalence.
It takes a filename containing JSON data to generate a wallet.
The following fields are valid:
version: integer, should be 1
filename: string, path/filename for the newly created wallet
scan_from_height: 64 bit unsigned integer, optional
password: string, optional
viewkey: string, hex representation
spendkey: string, hex representation
seed: string, optional, list of words separated by spaces
Either seed or private keys should be given. If using private
keys, the spend key may be omitted (the wallet will not be
able to spend, but will see incoming transactions).
If scan_from_height is given, blocks below this height will not
be checked for transactions as an optimization.
It would try to join the auto refresh thread, which would
only happen after it was done, which would take a long time
when doing so on a newly created wallet.