Trezor UTXO library (@trezor/utxo-lib)
Originally a fork of bitgo-utxo-lib; we evolved this library to support the transaction parsing for Trezor. Synchronized with upstream 1.5.0 version
Trezor features
- Transaction.fromHex returns input values as string
- Transaction.getExtraData returns data necessary for Trezor signing process
- Komodo support
- Dash special transactions support
- Capricoin support
- Zcash testnet support (coin shortcut: TAZ)
- Peercoin support
Update from upstream:
git checkout trezor
git fetch upstream
git rebase upstream/master
- update package.json
upstreamVersion
field
Supported coins
- Bitcoin
- Bitcoin Cash
- Bitcoin Gold
- Bitcoin SV (Satoshi Vision)
- Dash
- Litecoin
- Zcash (Sapling compatible)
Features
- Clean: Pure JavaScript, concise code, easy to read.
- Tested: Coverage > 90%, third-party integration tests.
- Compatible: Works on Node.js and all modern browsers.
- Powerful: Support for advanced features, such as multi-sig, HD Wallets.
- Secure: Strong random number generation, PGP signed releases, trusted developers.
- Principled: No support for browsers with RNG (IE < 11)
- Standardized: Node community coding style, Browserify, Node's stdlib and Buffers.
- Experiment-friendly: Mainnet and Testnet support.
- Multicoin support: Configurable behaviour based on network objects.
- Backed by BitGo
Installation
npm install @trezor/utxo-lib
Setup
Node.js
var bitcoin = require('@trezor/utxo-lib')
Browser
If you're familiar with how to use browserify, ignore this and proceed normally. These steps are advisory only, and may not be suitable for your application.
Browserify is assumed to be installed for these steps.
For your project, create an index.js
file
let bitcoin = require('@trezor/utxo-lib')
// your code here
function myFunction () {
return bitcoin.ECPair.makeRandom().toWIF()
}
module.exports = {
myFunction
}
Now, to compile for the browser:
browserify index.js --standalone foo > app.js
You can now put <script src="app.js" />
in your web page, using foo.myFunction
to create a new Bitcoin private key.
NOTE: If you uglify the javascript, you must exclude the following variable names from being mangled: BigInteger
, ECPair
, Point
.
This is because of the function-name-duck-typing used in typeforce.
Example:
uglifyjs ... --mangle --reserved 'BigInteger,ECPair,Point'
NOTE: If you are using webpack you may run into a issue related to blake2b-wasm dependency
Until it get fixed you may need to set this line in your webpack.config
plugins: [
new webpack.NormalModuleReplacementPlugin(/.blake2b$/, './blake2b.js'),
]
NOTE: This library tracks Node LTS features, if you need strict ES5, use --transform babelify
in conjunction with your browserify
step (using an es2015
preset).
NOTE: If you expect this library to run on an iOS 10 device, ensure that you are using buffer@5.0.5 or greater.
Examples
The below examples are implemented as integration tests, they should be very easy to understand. Otherwise, pull requests are appreciated. Some examples interact (via HTTPS) with a 3rd Party Blockchain Provider (3PBP).
Bitcoin
Running the test suite
npm test
npm run-script coverage
Complementing Libraries
- BIP21 - A BIP21 compatible URL encoding utility library
- BIP38 - Passphrase-protected private keys
- BIP39 - Mnemonic generation for deterministic keys
- BIP32-Utils - A set of utilities for working with BIP32
- BIP66 - Strict DER signature decoding
- BIP69 - Lexicographical Indexing of Transaction Inputs and Outputs
- Base58 - Base58 encoding/decoding
- Base58 Check - Base58 check encoding/decoding
- Bech32 - A BIP173 compliant Bech32 encoding library
- coinselect - A fee-optimizing, transaction input selection module for bitcoinjs-lib.
- merkle-lib - A performance conscious library for merkle root and tree calculations.
- minimaldata - A module to check bitcoin policy: SCRIPT_VERIFY_MINIMALDATA