an online/offline cryptocurrency wallet for the command line https://mmgen-wallet.cc
MMGen d1b8aefde6 Subwallets, Part 2: key/address generation using the parent wallet | 5 years ago | |
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cmds | 5 years ago | |
data_files | 5 years ago | |
doc | 5 years ago | |
extmod | 5 years ago | |
mmgen | 5 years ago | |
scripts | 5 years ago | |
test | 5 years ago | |
INSTALL | 7 years ago | |
LICENSE | 9 years ago | |
MANIFEST.in | 5 years ago | |
README.md | 5 years ago | |
SIGNING_KEYS.pub | 6 years ago | |
setup.py | 5 years ago |
Note: This is the source code repository of the MMGen wallet system. For an easier way to install MMGen, check out the prebuilt bootable USB images on the MMGenLive home page.
MMGen is a wallet and cold storage solution for Bitcoin (and selected altcoins) implemented as a suite of lightweight Python scripts. The scripts work in tandem with a reference Bitcoin Core daemon (or altcoin daemon) running on both an online and offline computer to provide a robust solution for securely storing, tracking, sending and receiving Bitcoins.
The online computer is used only for tracking balances and creating and sending transactions. Thus it holds no private keys that can be hacked or stolen. All transactions are signed offline: your seed and private keys never touch a network-connected device. The offline computer used for wallet creation, address generation and transaction signing is typically a low-powered device such as a Raspberry Pi.
MMGen is designed for reliability by having the Bitcoin daemon itself, rather than less-tested third-party software, do all the “heavy lifting” of tracking and signing transactions. It’s also designed with privacy in mind: unlike some other online/offline wallet solutions, MMGen plus Bitcoin Core is a completely self-contained system that makes no connections to the Internet except for the Bitcoin network itself: no third parties are involved, and thus no information about the addresses you’re tracking is leaked to the outside world.
Like all deterministic wallets, MMGen can generate a virtually unlimited number of address/key pairs from a single seed. Your wallet never changes, so you need back it up only once.
At the heart of the MMGen system is the seed, the “master key” providing access to all your Bitcoins. The seed can be stored in five different ways:
as a password-encrypted wallet. For password hashing, the crack-resistant scrypt hash function is used. Scrypt’s parameters can be tuned on the command line to make your wallet’s password virtually impossible to crack should it fall into the wrong hands. The wallet is a tiny, six-line text file suitable for printing or even writing out by hand;
as a seed file: a one-line, conveniently formatted base-58 representation of your unencrypted seed plus a checksum;
as an Electrum-like mnemonic of 12, 18 or 24 words;
as a brainwallet passphrase (this option is recommended only for users who understand the risks of brainwallets and know how to create a strong brainwallet passphrase). The brainwallet is hashed using scrypt with tunable parameters, making it much harder to crack than standard SHA-256 brainwallets; or
as “incognito data”, an MMGen wallet encrypted to make it indistinguishable from random data. This data can be hidden in and retrieved from a random-data filled disk partition or file at an offset of your choice. This makes it possible to hide a wallet in a public location -- on cloud storage, for example. Incognito wallet hiding/retrieval is seamlessly integrated into MMGen, making its use nearly as easy as that of the standard wallet.
The best part is that all these methods can be combined. If you forget your mnemonic, for example, you can regenerate it and your keys from the stored wallet or seed file. Correspondingly, a lost wallet can be regenerated from the mnemonic or seed or a lost seed from the wallet or mnemonic. Keys from a forgotten brainwallet can be recovered from the brainwallet’s corresponding wallet file.
mmgen-txcreate running in a terminal window
To deterministically derive its keys, MMGen uses a non-hierarchical scheme differing from the one used by most of today's popular wallets based on the BIP32 protocol. One advantage of this simple, hash-based scheme is that users can easily recover their private keys from their seed without the MMGen program itself using standard command-line utilities.
MMGen also differs from most cryptocurrency wallets today in its use of the original 1626-word Electrum wordlist for mnemonic seed phrases. Seed phrases are derived using ordinary base conversion, allowing users to recover their seeds from them in the absence of the MMGen program itself, should the need arise. An example of how to do this at the Python prompt is provided here.
The original Electrum wordlist was derived from a frequency list of words found in contemporary English poetry. The high emotional impact of these words makes seed phrases easy to memorize. Curiously, only 861 of them are shared by the more prosaic 2048-word BIP39 wordlist used in most wallets today.
Install a prebuilt bootable image (MMGenLive) on a USB stick
Install from source on Microsoft Windows
Install from source on Debian, Ubuntu, Raspbian or Armbian Linux
Getting Started with MMGen
MMGen Quick Start with Regtest Mode
MMGen command help
Recovering your keys without the MMGen software
Altcoin and Forkcoin support (ETH,ETC,XMR,ZEC,LTC,BCH and 144 Bitcoin-derived alts)
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