• Matt Corallo's avatar
    Add wallet privkey encryption. · 4e87d341
    Matt Corallo authored
    This commit adds support for ckeys, or enCrypted private keys, to the wallet.
    All keys are stored in memory in their encrypted form and thus the passphrase
    is required from the user to spend coins, or to create new addresses.
    
    Keys are encrypted with AES-256-CBC using OpenSSL's EVP library. The key is
    calculated via EVP_BytesToKey using SHA512 with (by default) 25000 rounds and
    a random salt.
    
    By default, the user's wallet remains unencrypted until they call the RPC
    command encryptwallet <passphrase> or, from the GUI menu, Options->
    Encrypt Wallet.
    
    When the user is attempting to call RPC functions which require the password
    to unlock the wallet, an error will be returned unless they call
    walletpassphrase <passphrase> <time to keep key in memory> first.
    
    A keypoolrefill command has been added which tops up the users keypool
    (requiring the passphrase via walletpassphrase first).
    keypoolsize has been added to the output of getinfo to show the user the
    number of keys left before they need to specify their passphrase (and call
    keypoolrefill).
    
    Note that walletpassphrase will automatically fill keypool in a separate
    thread which it spawns when the passphrase is set. This could cause some
    delays in other threads waiting for locks on the wallet passphrase, including
    one which could cause the passphrase to be stored longer than expected,
    however it will not allow the passphrase to be used longer than expected as
    ThreadCleanWalletPassphrase will attempt to get a lock on the key as soon
    as the specified lock time has arrived.
    
    When the keypool runs out (and wallet is locked) GetOrReuseKeyFromPool
    returns vchDefaultKey, meaning miners may start to generate many blocks to
    vchDefaultKey instead of a new key each time.
    
    A walletpassphrasechange <oldpassphrase> <newpassphrase> has been added to
    allow the user to change their password via RPC.
    
    Whenever keying material (unencrypted private keys, the user's passphrase,
    the wallet's AES key) is stored unencrypted in memory, any reasonable attempt
    is made to mlock/VirtualLock that memory before storing the keying material.
    This is not true in several (commented) cases where mlock/VirtualLocking the
    memory is not possible.
    
    Although encryption of private keys in memory can be very useful on desktop
    systems (as some small amount of protection against stupid viruses), on an
    RPC server, the password is entered fairly insecurely. Thus, the only main
    advantage encryption has for RPC servers is for RPC servers that do not spend
    coins, except in rare cases, eg. a webserver of a merchant which only receives
    payment except for cases of manual intervention.
    
    Thanks to jgarzik for the original patch and sipa, gmaxwell and many others
    for all their input.
    
    Conflicts:
    
    	src/wallet.cpp
    4e87d341
makefile.unix 1.92 KB