for rough equivalent see https://github.com/ethjs/ethjs-provider-signer
for advanced configuration see https://github.com/metamask/provider-engine
The Hooked Web3 Provider is a normal HTTP Web3 provider that allows you to "hook in" an external transaction signer that can be used to sign transactions for accounts not managed by the Ethereum client (i.e., aren't managed by geth
). An example transaction signer might be an external program or device that manages its own accounts and private keys. Together, the transaction signer and the web3 provider will use the Ethereum client to place signed transactions on the network.
The goal of this library is to successfully modularize all the moving parts related to external transaction signing, to improve usability and encourage a separation of concerns.
npm install hooked-web3-provider
First, include the package. In Node:
var HookedWeb3Provider = require("hooked-web3-provider");
Or the Browser:
<script type="text/javascript" src="./build/hooked-web3-provider.js"></script>
Then, instantiate the provider:
var provider = new HookedWeb3Provider({
host: "http://localhost:8545",
transaction_signer: {
// Can be any object that implements the following methods:
hasAddress: function(address, callback) {...},
signTransaction: function(tx_params, callback) {...}
}
});
Transaction signers are bound by a simple interface. The object must contain two methods, described below.
Asynchronous method used to determine if the transaction signer manages the address passed in. We recommend the transaction signer account for addresses that start with "0x" as well as those that do not.
######Arguments:
string
- Address that will be checked.function(error, boolean)
- callback when finished. If an error occured,error
will be non-null; otherwise it's null. Upon a successful request, the boolean value will represent whether or not the address is managed by the transaction signer.
Asynchronous method used to sign a transaction. This method will only be called if hasAddress
provides a value of true
for a specific address. This method should sign a transaction based on the parameters.
######Arguments
object
- An object containing the transaction parameters. Example below.function(error, string)
- callback when finished signing. If an error occured,error
will be non-null; otherwise it's null. If the transaction was successfully signed, the string reterned via the callback will be the raw, signed hash of the transaction. Example below.
Example Transaction Parameters: tx_params
Note that proper transaction parameters are those used by web3 in its RPC interface. All values are hexadecimal, and are prefixed with "0x".
{
from: "0x985095ef977ba75fb2bb79cd5c4b84c81392dff6",
gas: "0x2fefd8",
gasPrice: "0xba43b7400",
nonce: "0x21",
to: "0x54450450e24286143a35686ad77a7c851ada01a0",
value: "0xde0b6b3a7640000",
data: "0x..."
}
Example Raw Transaction Response
The above example transaction parameters, when signed, would produce a raw, signed transaction like the following:
0xf86d21850ba43b7400832fefd89454450450e24286143a35686ad77a7c851ada01a0880de0b6b3a7640000801ba0c36fdbf8043a64a6096ee81da4de7f04def477b9a3210a18967fad07f72112b2a04aedfd1d9d9085256373b40ef02bc3da0a95054f40075de340086c9512707b29
For an example of this in action, see ./build/index.html
for a test application that uses the hooked provider in conjunction with ethereumjs-accounts.
To develop and contribute to this project, first install Truffle:
$ npm install -g truffle
Then edit ./app/hooked-web3-provider.es6
, and run:
cd ./checkout/of/repository
$ truffle build
You can have Truffle build automatically as you make changes via:
$ truffle watch
MIT