Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Apr 9, 2024. It is now read-only.

Latest commit

 

History

History
75 lines (52 loc) · 3.58 KB

bip-0178.mediawiki

File metadata and controls

75 lines (52 loc) · 3.58 KB

  BIP: 178
  Layer: Applications
  Title: Version Extended WIF
  Author: Karl-Johan Alm <[email protected]>
  Comments-Summary: No comments yet.
  Comments-URI: https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/wiki/Comments:BIP-0178
  Status: Draft
  Type: Standards Track
  Created: 2018-04-04
  License: CC0-1.0

Table of Contents

Abstract

An extension to the Wallet Import Format (WIF) to specify what kind of bitcoin address the private key corresponds to.

Motivation

There are several types of bitcoin addresses which can all be associated with a given private key: P2PKH (legacy 1... format), P2SH-P2WPKH (SegWit public key inside P2SH), P2WPKH (bech32), etc.

While private keys have a 1-byte suffix indicating whether the corresponding public key is compressed (0x01) or not (through suffix absence), there is no way of knowing what kind of bitcoin address were associated with the private key. As a result, when importing a private key, the wallet has to assume all kinds, and keep track of each possible alternative.

By extending the suffix, we can specify what kind of bitcoin address was associated with a given private key.

Specification

Currently, private keys are stored as a uint256 (private key data) followed by an optional uint8 (compressed flag). The latter is extended to specify the address types:

Value Type Compr Clarification
No suffix P2PKH_UNCOMPRESSED No Uncompressed legacy public key. Unknown public key format
0x01 P2PKH_COMPRESSED Yes Compressed legacy public key. Unknown public key format
0x10 P2PKH Yes Compressed legacy public key. Legacy public key format (1...)
0x11 P2WPKH Yes Bech32 format (native Segwit)
0x12 P2WPKH_P2SH Yes Segwit nested in BIP16 P2SH (3...)

When a wallet imports a private key, it will have two outcomes:

  • the key is using one of the legacy types, in which case all types must be accounted for
  • the key is using one of the extended types, in which case the wallet need only track the specific corresponding address
Note: the difference between `0x01` and `0x10` is that the former can correspond to any of the types above, whereas the latter *only* corresponds to a P2PKH (legacy non-segwit).

Compatibility

This proposal is not backwards compatible, in that software that does not recognize the new types will not understand the compressed flag. It would be trivial to change this, by keeping the 'uncompressed' state as it is (no suffix) and changing 'compressed' to be 'anything not 0', as opposed to 'the value 1'.

The proposal is backwards compatible in that new wallet software will always understand the old WIF format, however. It will, as it does today, assume that any kind of bitcoin address is possible, and will have to track all of them, as it has to today.

Acknowledgements

This BIP is based on the initial proposal by Thomas Voegtlin (thomasv at electrum dot org) on the Bitcoin Dev mailing list[1] and the Electrum 3.0 implementation[2]

Reference implementation

There is a partial implementation which adds, but does not use, the types described in this BIP here: bitcoin/bitcoin#12869

References

  1. ^ https://lists.linuxfoundation.org/pipermail/bitcoin-dev/2017-September/015007.html
  2. ^ https://github.com/spesmilo/electrum/blob/82e88cb89df35288b80dfdbe071da74247351251/RELEASE-NOTES#L95-L108

Copyright

This document is licensed under the Creative Commons CC0 1.0 Universal license.