7210a2f56d
Enable 'confidential_assets' for Elements (following #66 and #317) to allow deriving confidential addresses and signing confidential transactions. The following Python helper script was used to update the JSON files: ``` import json import sys for f in sys.argv[1:]: d = json.load(open(f)) d["confidential_assets"] = None with open(f, "w") as o: json.dump(d, o, indent=2) o.write("\n") ``` Set it to `{'address_prefix': 4, 'blech32_prefix': 'el'}` for Elements. `coins.json` and `coininfo.py` were re-generated using: ``` $ pipenv run make gen gen_check ``` |
||
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.. | ||
bash_completion.d | ||
docs | ||
helper-scripts | ||
tools | ||
trezorlib | ||
.gitignore | ||
AUTHORS | ||
CHANGELOG.md | ||
COPYING | ||
Makefile | ||
MANIFEST.in | ||
README.md | ||
requirements-dev.txt | ||
requirements-optional.txt | ||
requirements.txt | ||
setup.cfg | ||
setup.py | ||
tox.ini | ||
trezorctl |
python-trezor
Python library and commandline client for communicating with Trezor Hardware Wallet
See https://trezor.io for more information
Install
Python-trezor requires Python 3.5 or higher, and libusb 1.0. The easiest
way to install it is with pip
. The rest of this guide assumes you have
a working pip
; if not, you can refer to this
guide.
Quick installation
On a typical Linux / Mac / BSD system, you already have all you need.
Install trezor
with:
pip3 install --upgrade setuptools
pip3 install trezor
On Windows, you also need to install libusb and the appropriate drivers. This is, unfortunately, a topic bigger than this README.
Older Trezor One support
If your Trezor One is on firmware 1.6.3 or older, you will need HIDAPI support for it to be recognized. That requires additional packages.
Debian / Ubuntu
On a Debian or Ubuntu based system, you can install these:
sudo apt-get install python3-dev python3-pip cython3 libusb-1.0-0-dev libudev-dev
Windows
On a Windows based system, you can install these (for more info on choco, refer to this):
choco install vcbuildtools python3 protoc
refreshenv
pip3 install protobuf
When installing the trezor library, you need to specify that you want
hidapi
:
pip3 install --upgrade setuptools
pip3 install trezor[hidapi]
Ethereum support
Ethereum requires additional python packages. Instead of
pip3 install trezor
, specify pip3 install trezor[ethereum]
.
You can combine it with the above, to get both HIDAPI and Ethereum support:
pip3 install trezor[ethereum,hidapi]
FreeBSD
On FreeBSD you can install the packages:
pkg install security/py-trezor
or build via ports:
cd /usr/ports/security/py-trezor
make install clean
Building from source
Sometimes you might need to install the latest-and-greatest unreleased version straight from GitHub. You will need some prerequisites first:
sudo apt-get install protobuf-compiler protobuf-dev
pip3 install protobuf
If you just need to install the package, you can use pip again:
pip3 install git+https://github.com/trezor/python-trezor
If you want to work on the sources, make a local clone:
git clone https://github.com/trezor/python-trezor
cd python-trezor
python3 setup.py prebuild
python3 setup.py develop
Command line client (trezorctl)
The included trezorctl
python script can perform various tasks such as
changing setting in the Trezor, signing transactions, retrieving account
info and addresses. See the docs/ sub folder for detailed
examples and options.
NOTE: An older version of the trezorctl
command is available for
Debian Stretch
(and comes pre-installed on Tails OS).
Python Library
You can use this python library to interact with a Bitcoin Trezor and use its capabilities in your application. See examples here in the tools/ sub folder.
PIN Entering
When you are asked for PIN, you have to enter scrambled PIN. Follow the numbers shown on Trezor display and enter the their positions using the numeric keyboard mapping:
7 | 8 | 9 |
4 | 5 | 6 |
1 | 2 | 3 |
Example: your PIN is 1234 and Trezor is displaying the following:
2 | 8 | 3 |
5 | 4 | 6 |
7 | 9 | 1 |
You have to enter: 3795
Contributing
Python-trezor pulls coins info and protobuf messages from
trezor-common repository. If
you are developing new features for Trezor, you will want to start
there. Once your changes are accepted to trezor-common
, you can make a
PR against this repository. Don't forget to update the submodule with:
git submodule update --init --remote
Then, rebuild the protobuf messages and get coins.json
by running:
python3 setup.py prebuild
To get support for BTC-like coins, these steps are enough and no further changes to the library are necessary.