hyperkeys v1.0.0
hyperkeys
Keychain that derives deterministic Ed25519 keypairs for Hypercore
npm install hyperkeys
Usage
const Keychain = require('hyperkeys')
const keys = new Keychain()
const cur = keys.get() // returns the current keypair instance
const foo = keys.get('foo') // tweaks and returns a keypair instancoe for 'foo'
const sub = keys.sub('bar') // get a sub keychain tweaked by 'bar'
const subsub = sub.sub('baz') // sub the the sub chain
// to sign things
const sig = cur.sign(message)
const publicKey = cur.publicKey
API
keys = new Keychain(publicKeyOrKeyPair)
Make a new Keychain instance.
const keys = new Keychain() // generates a fresh keypair for you
const keys = new Keychain(publicKey) // generate a "readonly" keychain
const keys = new Keychain(keyPair) // generate a keychain from a keypair
keys.home
Points to the keypair that was used to construct the Keychain.
keys.base
Points to current checkout, or home if not checkout was made.
keys.tweak
Points to the current tweak used.
keys.head
The key pair of this chain, basically base + tweak
.
keys = Keychain.from(keyChainOrPublicKeyOrKeyPair)
Same as above, except it will return the Keychain if passed to it. Useful to avoid a peer dependency on the Keychain in your application, ie
const Keychain = require('hyperkeys')
function myModule (keychain) {
const keys = Keychain.from(keychain) // ensures the version of keys is the one you installed
}
keyPairInstance = keys.get([nameOrKeyPair])
Get a new KeyPair instance from the Keychain. Optionally you can provide a name or key pair to tweak the keypair before returning it.
const k = keys.get() // get a keypair instance from the current head
const k = keys.get('name') // tweak it with "name" first
const k = keys.get(keyPair) // tweak it with this keypair first
keychain = keys.sub(nameOrKeyPair)
Make a new sub Keychain, tweaked from a name or key pair.
const keychain = keys.sub('name') // tweak the current keychain
const keychain = keys.sub({ publicKey: ... }) // new "readonly" keychain
const keychain = keys.sub({ publicKey: ..., scalar: ... }) // same as above to "writable" as well
Note that the following keypairs are equivalent
const k = keys.get('name')
const k = keys.sub('name').get()
All tweaks are "one way", meaning the actual tweak used is
tweakSeed = blake2b([currentTweak ? currentTweak.publicKey : blank, tweakInput])
Ie, you need to know the previous tweak to get to it.
keychain = keys.checkout(publicKeyOrKeyPair)
Get a new Keychain, based on an "absolute" keypair or public key. This preserves the "home" pointer, meaning you can get from a checkout to your home keychain by doing
const c = keys.checkout(somePublicKey)
// go back to home
const h = c.checkout(c.home)
License
MIT