1
0
mirror of https://github.com/bitcoinbook/bitcoinbook synced 2024-12-26 00:18:11 +00:00
bitcoinbook/selected BIPs/bip-0021.asciidoc

224 lines
7.8 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Normal View History

---------------------------------------------------
BIP: 21
Title: URI Scheme
Author: Nils Schneider <nils.schneider@gmail.com>
Matt Corallo <bip21@bluematt.me>
Status: Accepted
Type: Standards Track
Created: 2012-01-29
---------------------------------------------------
This BIP is a modification of an earlier link:bip-0020.mediawiki[BIP
0020] by Luke Dashjr. BIP 0020 was based off an earlier document by Nils
Schneider. The alternative payment amounts in BIP 0020 have been
removed.
[[abstract]]
Abstract
~~~~~~~~
This BIP proposes a URI scheme for making Bitcoin payments.
[[motivation]]
Motivation
~~~~~~~~~~
The purpose of this URI scheme is to enable users to easily make
payments by simply clicking links on webpages or scanning QR Codes.
[[specification]]
Specification
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
[[general-rules-for-handling-important]]
General rules for handling (important!)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Bitcoin clients MUST NOT act on URIs without getting the user's
authorization. They SHOULD require the user to manually approve each
payment individually, though in some cases they MAY allow the user to
automatically make this decision.
[[operating-system-integration]]
Operating system integration
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Graphical bitcoin clients SHOULD register themselves as the handler for
the "bitcoin:" URI scheme by default, if no other handler is already
registered. If there is already a registered handler, they MAY prompt
the user to change it once when they first run the client.
[[general-format]]
General Format
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Bitcoin URIs follow the general format for URIs as set forth in RFC
3986. The path component consists of a bitcoin address, and the query
component provides additional payment options.
Elements of the query component may contain characters outside the valid
range. These must first be encoded according to UTF-8, and then each
octet of the corresponding UTF-8 sequence must be percent-encoded as
described in RFC 3986.
[[abnf-grammar]]
ABNF grammar
^^^^^^^^^^^^
(See also link:#Simpler_syntax[a simpler representation of syntax])
`bitcoinurn     = "bitcoin:" bitcoinaddress [ "?" bitcoinparams ]` +
`bitcoinaddress = *base58` +
`bitcoinparams  = bitcoinparam [ "&" bitcoinparams ]` +
`bitcoinparam   = [ amountparam / labelparam / messageparam / otherparam / reqparam ]` +
`amountparam    = "amount=" *digit [ "." *digit ]` +
`labelparam     = "label=" *qchar` +
`messageparam   = "message=" *qchar` +
`otherparam     = qchar *qchar [ "=" *qchar ]` +
`reqparam       = "req-" qchar *qchar [ "=" *qchar ]`
Here, "qchar" corresponds to valid characters of an RFC 3986 URI query
component, excluding the "=" and "&" characters, which this BIP takes as
separators.
The scheme component ("bitcoin:") is case-insensitive, and
implementations must accept any combination of uppercase and lowercase
letters. The rest of the URI is case-sensitive, including the query
parameter keys.
[[query-keys]]
Query Keys
^^^^^^^^^^
* label: Label for that address (e.g. name of receiver)
* address: bitcoin address
* message: message that describes the transaction to the user
(link:#Examples[see examples below])
* size: amount of base bitcoin units (link:#Transfer_amount/size[see
below])
* (others): optional, for future extensions
[[transfer-amountsize]]
Transfer amount/size
++++++++++++++++++++
If an amount is provided, it MUST be specified in decimal BTC. All
amounts MUST contain no commas and use a period (.) as the separating
character to separate whole numbers and decimal fractions. I.e.
amount=50.00 or amount=50 is treated as 50 BTC, and amount=50,000.00 is
invalid.
Bitcoin clients MAY display the amount in any format that is not
intended to deceive the user. They SHOULD choose a format that is
foremost least confusing, and only after that most reasonable given the
amount requested. For example, so long as the majority of users work in
BTC units, values should always be displayed in BTC by default, even if
mBTC or TBC would otherwise be a more logical interpretation of the
amount.
[[rationale]]
Rationale
~~~~~~~~~
[[payment-identifiers-not-person-identifiers]]
Payment identifiers, not person identifiers
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Current best practices are that a unique address should be used for
every transaction. Therefore, a URI scheme should not represent an
exchange of personal information, but a one-time payment.
[[accessibility-uri-scheme-name]]
Accessibility (URI scheme name)
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Should someone from the outside happen to see such a URI, the URI scheme
name already gives a description. A quick search should then do the rest
to help them find the resources needed to make their payment. Other
proposed names sound much more cryptic; the chance that someone googles
that out of curiosity are much slimmer. Also, very likely, what he will
find are mostly technical specifications - not the best introduction to
bitcoin.
[[forward-compatibility]]
Forward compatibility
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Variables which are prefixed with a req- are considered required. If a
client does not implement any variables which are prefixed with req-, it
MUST consider the entire URI invalid. Any other variables which are not
implemented, but which are not prefixed with a req-, can be safely
ignored.
[[backward-compatibility]]
Backward compatibility
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
As this BIP is written, several clients already implement a bitcoin: URI
scheme similar to this one, however usually without the additional
"req-" prefix requirement. Thus, it is recommended that additional
variables prefixed with req- not be used in a mission-critical way until
a grace period of 6 months from the finalization of this BIP has passed
in order to allow client developers to release new versions, and users
of old clients to upgrade.
[[appendix]]
Appendix
~~~~~~~~
[[simpler-syntax]]
Simpler syntax
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
This section is non-normative and does not cover all possible syntax.
Please see the BNF grammar above for the normative syntax.
[foo] means optional, <bar> are placeholders
`bitcoin:<address>[?amount=<amount>][?label=<label>][?message=<message>]`
[[examples]]
Examples
^^^^^^^^
Just the address:
bitcoin:175tWpb8K1S7NmH4Zx6rewF9WQrcZv245W[`bitcoin:175tWpb8K1S7NmH4Zx6rewF9WQrcZv245W`]
Address with name:
bitcoin:175tWpb8K1S7NmH4Zx6rewF9WQrcZv245W?label=Luke-Jr[`bitcoin:175tWpb8K1S7NmH4Zx6rewF9WQrcZv245W?label=Luke-Jr`]
Request 20.30 BTC to "Luke-Jr":
bitcoin:175tWpb8K1S7NmH4Zx6rewF9WQrcZv245W?amount=20.3&label=Luke-Jr[`bitcoin:175tWpb8K1S7NmH4Zx6rewF9WQrcZv245W?amount=20.3&label=Luke-Jr`]
Request 50 BTC with message:
bitcoin:175tWpb8K1S7NmH4Zx6rewF9WQrcZv245W?amount=50&label=Luke-Jr&message=Donation%20for%20project%20xyz[`bitcoin:175tWpb8K1S7NmH4Zx6rewF9WQrcZv245W?amount=50&label=Luke-Jr&message=Donation%20for%20project%20xyz`]
Some future version that has variables which are (currently) not
understood and required and thus invalid:
bitcoin:175tWpb8K1S7NmH4Zx6rewF9WQrcZv245W?req-somethingyoudontunderstand=50&req-somethingelseyoudontget=999[`bitcoin:175tWpb8K1S7NmH4Zx6rewF9WQrcZv245W?req-somethingyoudontunderstand=50&req-somethingelseyoudontget=999`]
Some future version that has variables which are (currently) not
understood but not required and thus valid:
bitcoin:175tWpb8K1S7NmH4Zx6rewF9WQrcZv245W?somethingyoudontunderstand=50&somethingelseyoudontget=999[`bitcoin:175tWpb8K1S7NmH4Zx6rewF9WQrcZv245W?somethingyoudontunderstand=50&somethingelseyoudontget=999`]
Characters must be URI encoded properly.
[[reference-implementations]]
Reference Implementations
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
[[bitcoin-clients]]
Bitcoin clients
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
* Bitcoin-Qt supports the old version of Bitcoin URIs (ie without the
req- prefix), with Windows and KDE integration as of commit
70f55355e29c8e45b607e782c5d76609d23cc858.