This tool generates vanity ed25519 (hidden service version 312, formely known as proposal 224) onion addresses.
- C99 compatible compiler (gcc and clang should work)
- libsodium (including headers)
- GNU make
- GNU autoconf (to generate configure script, needed only if not using release tarball)
- UNIX-like platform (currently tested in Linux and OpenBSD, but should also build under cygwin and msys2).
For debian-like linux distros, this should be enough to prepare for building:
apt install gcc libc6-dev libsodium-dev make autoconf
Run ./autogen.sh
to generate a configure script, if there isn't one already.
Run ./configure
to generate a makefile.
On *BSD platforms you may need to specify extra include/library paths:
./configure CPPFLAGS="-I/usr/local/include" LDFLAGS="-L/usr/local/lib"
.
On AMD64 platforms, you probably also want to pass something like
--enable-amd64-51-30k
to the configure script invocation for faster key generation;
run ./configure --help
to see all available options.
Finally, make
to start building (gmake
in *BSD platforms).
mkp224o needs one or more filters to work.
You may specify them as command line arguments,
eg ./mkp224o test
, or load them from file with -f
switch.
It makes directories with secret/public keys and hostnames
for each discovered service. By default, the working directory is the current
directory, but that can be overridden with -d
switch.
Use -s
switch to enable printing of statistics, which may be useful
when benchmarking different ed25519 implementations on your machine.
Use -h
switch to obtain all available options.
I highly recommend reading OPTIMISATION.txt for performance-related tips.
-
How do I generate address?
Once compiled, run it like
./mkp224o neko
, and it will try creating keys for onions starting with "neko" in this example; use./mkp224o -d nekokeys neko
to not litter current directory and put all discovered keys in directory named "nekokeys". -
How do I make tor use generated keys?
Copy key folder (though technically only
hs_ed25519_secret_key
is required) to where you want your service keys to reside:sudo cp -r neko54as6d54....onion /var/lib/tor/nekosvc
You may need to adjust ownership and permissions:
sudo chown -R tor: /var/lib/tor/nekosvc sudo chmod -R u+rwX,og-rwx /var/lib/tor/nekosvc
Then edit
torrc
and add new service with that folder.
After reload/restart tor should pick it up. -
How to generate addresses with
0-1
and8-9
digits?Onion addresses use base32 encoding which does not include
0,1,8,9
numbers.
So no, that's not possible to generate these, and mkp224o tries to detect invalid filters containing them early on. -
How long is it going to take?
Because of probablistic nature of brute force key generation, and varience of hardware it's going to run on, it's hard to make promisses about how long it's going to take, especially when the most of users want just a few keys.
See this issue for very valuable discussion about this.
If your machine is powerful enough, 6 character prefix shouldn't take more than few tens of minutes, if using batch mode (read OPTIMISATION.txt) 7 characters can take hours to days.
No promisses though, it depends on pure luck. -
Will this work with onionbalance?
It appears that onionbalance supports loading usual
hs_ed25519_secret_key
key so it should work. -
Is there a docker image?
Yes, if you do not wish to compile mkp224o yourself, you can use the
ghcr.io/cathugger/mkp224o
image like so:docker run --rm -it -v $PWD:/keys ghcr.io/cathugger/mkp224o:master -d /keys neko
To the extent possible under law, the author(s) have dedicated all copyright and related and neighboring rights to this software to the public domain worldwide. This software is distributed without any warranty. You should have received a copy of the CC0 Public Domain Dedication along with this software. If not, see CC0.
keccak.c
is based on Keccak-more-compact.ced25519/{ref10,amd64-51-30k,amd64-64-24k}
are adopted from SUPERCOPed25519/ed25519-donna
adopted from ed25519-donna- Idea used in
worker_fast()
is stolen from horse25519 - base64 routines and initial YAML processing work contributed by Alexander Khristoforov (heios at protonmail dot com)
- Passphrase-based generation code and idea used in
worker_batch()
contributed by foobar2019