Core module
The core
module is the core (duh!) functionality of Bitcoin-S. The goal is to provide basic
data structures that are found in the Bitcoin and Lightning protocols while
minimizing external depedencies for security purposes. We aim to have an extremely
high level of test coverage in this module to flesh out bugs. We use property based
testing heavily in this library to ensure high quality of code.
The basics
Every bitcoin protocol data structure (and some other data structures) extends NetworkElement
. NetworkElement
provides methods to convert the data structure to hex or byte representation. When paired with Factory
we can easily serialize and deserialize data structures.
Most data structures have companion objects that extends Factory
to be able to easily create protocol data structures. An example of this is the ScriptPubKey
companion object. You can use this companion object to create a ScriptPubKey
from a hex string or a byte array.
core
Main modules in protocol
- basic protocol data structures. Useful for serializing/deserializing thingscrypto
- cryptograhic functionality used in Bitcoin and Lightningscript
- an implementation of Script - the programming language in Bitcoinwallet
- implements signing logic for Bitcoin transactions. This module is not named well as there is NO functionality to persist wallet state to disk as it stands. This will most likely be renamed in the future.config
- Contains information about a chain's genesis block and DNS seedsnumber
- Implements number types that are native in C, i.e.UInt8
,UInt32
,UInt64
, etc.currency
- Implements currency units in the Bitcoin protocolbloom
- Implements Bloom filters and merkle blocks needed for BIP37hd
- Contains implementations of hierarchical deterministic (HD) paths, that when combined withExtPrivKey
andExtPubKey
incrypto
can implement BIP32, BIP44, BIP49 and BIP84.
Examples
Transaction
Serializing and deserializing a Here is an example scala console session with bitcoins-core
import org.bitcoins.core.protocol.transaction._
val hexTx = "0100000001ccf318f0cbac588a680bbad075aebdda1f211c94ba28125b0f627f9248310db3000000006b4830450221008337ce3ce0c6ac0ab72509f8$9c1d52701817a2362d6357457b63e3bdedc0c0602202908963b9cf1a095ab3b34b95ce2bc0d67fb0f19be1cc5f7b3de0b3a325629bf01210241d746ca08da0a668735c3e01c1$a02045f2f399c5937079b6434b5a31dfe353ffffffff0210335d05000000001976a914b1d7591b69e9def0feb13254bace942923c7922d88ac48030000000000001976a9145e$90c865c2f6f7a9710a474154ab1423abb5b9288ac00000000"
// hexTx: String = "0100000001ccf318f0cbac588a680bbad075aebdda1f211c94ba28125b0f627f9248310db3000000006b4830450221008337ce3ce0c6ac0ab72509f8$9c1d52701817a2362d6357457b63e3bdedc0c0602202908963b9cf1a095ab3b34b95ce2bc0d67fb0f19be1cc5f7b3de0b3a325629bf01210241d746ca08da0a668735c3e01c1$a02045f2f399c5937079b6434b5a31dfe353ffffffff0210335d05000000001976a914b1d7591b69e9def0feb13254bace942923c7922d88ac48030000000000001976a9145e$90c865c2f6f7a9710a474154ab1423abb5b9288ac00000000"
This gives us an example of a hex encoded Bitcoin transaction that is deserialized to a native Scala object called a Transaction
. You could also serialize the transaction to bytes using tx.bytes
instead of tx.hex
. These methods are available on every data structure that extends NetworkElement, like ECPrivateKey
, ScriptPubKey
, ScriptWitness
, and Block
.
xpriv
Generating a BIP39 mnemonic phrase and an BIP39 mnemonic phrases are the most common way of creating backups of wallets.
They are between 12 and 24 words the user writes down, and can later be used to restore
their bitcoins. From the mnemonic phrase we generate a wallet seed, and that seed
can be used to generate what's called an extended private key
(ExtPrivateKey
in Bitcoin-S).
Here's an example:
import org.bitcoins.core.crypto._
import org.bitcoins.core.hd._
// the length of the entropy bit vector determine
// how long our phrase ends up being
// 256 bits of entropy results in 24 words
val entropy: BitVector = MnemonicCode.getEntropy256Bits
// entropy: BitVector = BitVector(256 bits, 0x574d20e6ea2087645573fba9f81e8ce37978145d099093e973e19dc5bbec4a28)
val mnemonicCode = MnemonicCode.fromEntropy(entropy)
// mnemonicCode: MnemonicCode = MnemonicCodeImpl(Vector(firm, harbor, defy, stairs, anchor, rate, fiction, legal, prepare, science, permit, shoulder, nurse, any, injury, craft, negative, entire, wear, describe, forum, wage, chunk, buyer))
mnemonicCode.words // the phrase the user should write down
// res0: Vector[String] = Vector(firm, harbor, defy, stairs, anchor, rate, fiction, legal, prepare, science, permit, shoulder, nurse, any, injury, craft, negative, entire, wear, describe, forum, wage, chunk, buyer) // the phrase the user should write down
// the password argument is an optional, extra security
// measure. all MnemonicCode instances will give you a
// valid BIP39 seed, but different passwords will give
// you different seeds. So you could have as many wallets
// from the same seed as you'd like, by simply giving them
// different passwords.
val bip39Seed = BIP39Seed.fromMnemonic(mnemonicCode,
password = "secret password")
// bip39Seed: BIP39Seed = BIP39SeedImpl(ByteVector(64 bytes, 0x736cda24cdaa9d037276191a07f0bd067c0bf75366241f35830f7d99741428ec2d03fd7ff896e7f30f4776bba8bfa5fb4fc9692443f20d23c840d0a59a774541))
val xpriv = ExtPrivateKey.fromBIP39Seed(ExtKeyVersion.SegWitMainNetPriv,
bip39Seed)
// xpriv: ExtPrivateKey = zprvAWgYBBk7JR8GjK4toR1D3nBk7hzpR4Ub6teUFG29phdrKk9f1ERymniBTYR4586pZiTwC6FyCgrnG9SEeRNRqBehteqSsydiezHJfJTDPZL
val xpub = xpriv.extPublicKey
// xpub: ExtPublicKey = zpub6jftahH18ngZwo9MuSYDQv8UfjqJpXCSU7a53eRmP3AqCYUoYmkEKb2fJpPXe2QLTDunZhBE8j8Bg5twZ3SVvpSb2suuSbmp3zEW5XTV6vM
// you can now use the generated xpriv to derive further
// private or public keys
// this can be done with BIP89 paths (called SegWitHDPath in bitcoin-s)
val segwitPath = SegWitHDPath.fromString("m/84'/0'/0'/0/0")
// segwitPath: SegWitHDPath = m/84'/0'/0'/0/0
// alternatively:
val otherSegwitPath =
SegWitHDPath(HDCoinType.Bitcoin,
accountIndex = 0,
HDChainType.External,
addressIndex = 0)
// otherSegwitPath: SegWitHDPath = m/84'/0'/0'/0/0
segwitPath == otherSegwitPath
// res1: Boolean = true
Building a signed transaction
Bitcoin Core supports building unsigned transactions and then signing them with a set of private keys. The first important thing to look at is UTXOSpendingInfo
. This contains all of the information needed to create a validly signed ScriptSignature
that spends this output.
Our TxBuilder
class requires you to provide the following:
destinations
- the places we are sending bitcoin to. These are TransactionOutputs you are sending coins tooutxos
- these are the UTXOs used to fund your transaction. These must exist in your wallet, and you must know how to spend them (i.e. have the private key)feeRate
- the fee rate you want to pay for this transactionchangeSPK
- where the change (i.e.creditingAmount - destinationAmount - fee
) from the transaction will be sentnetwork
- the network(/api/org/bitcoins/core/config/NetworkParameters) we are transacting on
After providing this information, you can generate a validly signed bitcoin transaction by calling the sign
method.
To see a complete example of this, see our TxBuilder
example
Sign
API
The This is the API we define to sign things with. It takes in an arbitrary byte vector and returns a Future[ECDigitalSignature]
. The reason we incorporate Future
s here is for extensibility of this API. We would like to provide implementations of this API for hardware devices, which need to be asynchrnous since they may require user input.
From core/src/main/scala/org/bitcoins/core/crypto/Sign.scala
:
import scala.concurrent._
import scala.concurrent.duration._
trait Sign {
def signFunction: ByteVector => Future[ECDigitalSignature]
def signFuture(bytes: ByteVector): Future[ECDigitalSignature] =
signFunction(bytes)
def sign(bytes: ByteVector): ECDigitalSignature = {
Await.result(signFuture(bytes), 30.seconds)
}
def publicKey: ECPublicKey
}
The ByteVector
that is input to the signFunction
should be the hash that is output from TransactionSignatureSerializer
's hashForSignature
method. Our in-memory ECKey
types implement the Sign
API.
If you wanted to implement a new Sign
api for a hardware wallet, you can easily pass it into the TxBuilder
/Signer
classes to allow for you to use those devices to sign with Bitcoin-S.
This API is currently used to sign ordinary transactions with our Signer
s. The Signer
subtypes (i.e. P2PKHSigner
) implement the specific functionality needed to produce a valid digital signature for their corresponding script type.
Verifying a transaction's script is valid (does not check if UTXO is valid)
Transactions are run through the interpreter to check their validity. These are packaged up into an object called ScriptProgram
, which contains the following:
- The transaction that is being checked
- The specific input index that it is checking
- The
scriptPubKey
for the crediting transaction - The flags used to verify the script
Here is an example of a transaction spending a scriptPubKey
which is correctly evaluated with our interpreter implementation:
import org.bitcoins.core.protocol.script._
import org.bitcoins.core.protocol.transaction._
import org.bitcoins.core.script._
import org.bitcoins.core.policy._
import org.bitcoins.core.number._
import org.bitcoins.core.crypto._
import org.bitcoins.core.currency._
val spendingTx = Transaction.fromHex("0100000001ccf318f0cbac588a680bbad075aebdda1f211c94ba28125b0f627f9248310db3000000006b4830450221008337ce3ce0c6ac0ab72509f889c1d52701817a2362d6357457b63e3bdedc0c0602202908963b9cf1a095ab3b34b95ce2bc0d67fb0f19be1cc5f7b3de0b3a325629bf01210241d746ca08da0a668735c3e01c1fa02045f2f399c5937079b6434b5a31dfe353ffffffff0210335d05000000001976a914b1d7591b69e9def0feb13254bace942923c7922d88ac48030000000000001976a9145e690c865c2f6f7a9710a474154ab1423abb5b9288ac00000000")
val scriptPubKey = ScriptPubKey.fromAsmHex("76a91431a420903c05a0a7de2de40c9f02ebedbacdc17288ac")
val output = TransactionOutput(CurrencyUnits.zero, scriptPubKey)
val inputIndex = UInt32.zero
val btxsc = BaseTxSigComponent(spendingTx,inputIndex,output,Policy.standardScriptVerifyFlags)
val preExecution = PreExecutionScriptProgram(btxsc)
val result = ScriptInterpreter.run(preExecution)
// result: org.bitcoins.core.script.result.ScriptResult = ScriptOk