npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

@digitalbazaar/ed25519-multikey

v1.3.0

Published

Javascript library for generating and working with Ed25519Multikey key pairs.

Downloads

18,231

Readme

Ed25519Multikey Key Pair Library for Linked Data (@digitalbazaar/ed25519-multikey)

Node.js CI NPM Version

Javascript library for generating and working with Ed25519Multikey key pairs.

Table of Contents

Background

For use with:

See also (related specs):

Security

As with most security- and cryptography-related tools, the overall security of your system will largely depend on your design decisions.

Install

  • Node.js 16+ is required.

To install locally (for development):

git clone https://github.com/digitalbazaar/ed25519-multikey.git
cd ed25519-multikey
npm install

Usage

Generating a new public/secret key pair

To generate a new public/secret key pair:

  • {string} [id] Optional id for the generated key.
  • {string} [controller] Optional controller URI or DID to initialize the generated key. (This will also init the key id.)
  • {string} [seed] Optional deterministic seed value from which to generate the key.
import * as Ed25519Multikey from '@digitalbazaar/ed25519-multikey';

const edKeyPair = await Ed25519Multikey.generate();

Importing a key pair from storage

To create an instance of a public/secret key pair from data imported from storage, use .from():

const serializedKeyPair = { ... };

const keyPair = await Ed25519Multikey.from(serializedKeyPair);

Exporting the public key only

To export just the public key of a pair:

await keyPair.export({publicKey: true});
// ->
{
  type: 'Multikey',
  id: 'did:example:1234#z6Mkon3Necd6NkkyfoGoHxid2znGc59LU3K7mubaRcFbLfLX',
  controller: 'did:example:1234',
  publicKeyMultibase: 'z6Mkon3Necd6NkkyfoGoHxid2znGc59LU3K7mubaRcFbLfLX'
}

Exporting the full public-secret key pair

To export the full key pair, including secret key (warning: this should be a carefully considered operation, best left to dedicated Key Management Systems):

await keyPair.export({publicKey: true, secretKey: true});
// ->
{
  type: 'Multikey',
  id: 'did:example:1234#z6Mkon3Necd6NkkyfoGoHxid2znGc59LU3K7mubaRcFbLfLX',
  controller: 'did:example:1234',
  publicKeyMultibase: 'z6Mkon3Necd6NkkyfoGoHxid2znGc59LU3K7mubaRcFbLfLX',
  secretKeyMultibase: 'zruzf4Y29hDp7vLoV3NWzuymGMTtJcQfttAWzESod4wV2fbPvEp4XtzGp2VWwQSQAXMxDyqrnVurYg2sBiqiu1FHDDM'
}

Creating a signer function

In order to perform a cryptographic signature, you need to create a sign function, and then invoke it.

const keyPair = Ed25519Multikey.generate();

const {sign} = keyPair.signer();

// data is a Uint8Array of bytes
const data = (new TextEncoder()).encode('test data goes here');
// Signing also outputs a Uint8Array, which you can serialize to text etc.
const signatureValueBytes = await sign({data});

Creating a verifier function

In order to verify a cryptographic signature, you need to create a verify function, and then invoke it (passing it the data to verify, and the signature).

const keyPair = Ed25519Multikey.generate();

const {verify} = keyPair.verifier();

const valid = await verify({data, signature});
// true

Converting from previous Ed25519VerificationKey2020 key type

If you have serialized and stored keys of the previous Ed25519VerificationKey2020 key type (for example, generated using the ed25519-verification-key-2020) library, things to keep in mind:

  • Instances of those key types still contain the same key material, the only thing that has changed from the 2020 suite to Multikey is the property name change for storing the secret key and replacing the type with Multikey. The 2020 suite key types serialize using the type Ed25519VerificationKey2020 and stored secret key material in privateKeyMultibase, and the Ed25519 Multikey (this repo) serializes using corresponding the type Multikey an stores the secret key material in secretKeyMultibase property.
  • You can convert from the 2020 key type to Multikey using the provided Ed25519Multikey.from() method (see below).
  • They generate() the same key material, given the same seed parameter.
  • Both the 2020 and Multikey keys produce and verify the same signatures.

Example of converting:

import * as Ed25519Multikey from '@digitalbazaar/ed25519-multikey';
import {Ed25519VerificationKey2020}
  from '@digitalbazaar/ed25519-verification-key-2020';


const keyPair2020 = await Ed25519VerificationKey2020.generate({
  controller: 'did:example:1234'
});

const ed25519Multikey = await Ed25519Multikey.from(keyPair2020);

// The resulting ed25519Multikey will have the same `id` and `controller` properties
// as its 2020 source. They will also produce and verify the same signatures.

// data is a Uint8Array of bytes
const data = (new TextEncoder()).encode('test data goes here');
const signatureBytes2020 = await keyPair2020.signer().sign({data});

// this is the same signature as that produced by the 2020 key. And will verify
// the same.
await ed25519Multikey.verifier().verify({data, signature: signatureBytes2020})
// true

Converting from previous Ed25519VerificationKey2018 key type

If you have serialized and stored keys of the previous Ed25519VerificationKey2018 key type (for example, generated using the ed25519-verification-key-2018) library, things to keep in mind:

  • Instances of those key types still contain the same key material, the only thing that has changed from the 2018 suite to Multikey is the way the public and secret key material is serialized when exporting. The 2018 suite key types serialize using the publicKeyBase58 and secretKeyBase58 properties, and the Ed25519 Multikey (this repo) serializes using corresponding publicKeyMultibase and secretKeyMultibase property.
  • You can convert from the 2018 key type to Multikey using the provided Ed25519Multikey.from() method (see below).
  • They generate() the same key material, given the same seed parameter.
  • Both the 2018 and Multikey keys produce and verify the same signatures.

Example of converting:

import * as Ed25519Multikey from '@digitalbazaar/ed25519-multikey';
import {Ed25519VerificationKey2018}
  from '@digitalbazaar/ed25519-verification-key-2018';


const keyPair2018 = await Ed25519VerificationKey2018.generate({
  controller: 'did:example:1234'
});

const ed25519Multikey = await Ed25519Multikey.from(keyPair2018);

// The resulting ed25519Multikey will have the same `id` and `controller` properties
// as its 2018 source. They will also produce and verify the same signatures.

// data is a Uint8Array of bytes
const data = (new TextEncoder()).encode('test data goes here');
const signatureBytes2018 = await keyPair2018.signer().sign({data});

// this is the same signature as that produced by the 2020 key. And will verify
// the same.
await ed25519Multikey.verifier().verify({data, signature: signatureBytes2018})
// true

Contribute

See the contribute file!

PRs accepted.

If editing the Readme, please conform to the standard-readme specification.

Commercial Support

Commercial support for this library is available upon request from Digital Bazaar: [email protected]

License

New BSD License (3-clause) © 2020 Digital Bazaar