When the app is started, the password is checked against all
wallets in the directory.
If the test passes:
- subsequent wallet creations will use the same password
- subsequent password updates will be performed on all wallets
- wallets that are not storage encrypted will encrypted
on the next password update (even if they are watching-only)
This behaviour is restricted on Android, with a 'single_password' config variable.
Wallet creation without password is disabled if single_password is set
When running kivy on Linux desktop,
running from git clone, `./run_electrum -g kivy` worked,
but `pip install -e .; electrum -g kivy` did not.
This was due to the relative paths using cwd as base.
see #6835
Previously an unhandled exception in the main script could cause the main thread to die
but the process to hang, as the event loop thread would keep running.
example:
$ ./run_electrum -o signmessage tb1qeh090ruc3cs5hry90tev4fsvrnegulw8xssdzx "mymsg" -w ~/.electrum/testnet/wallets/test_segwit_2
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "./run_electrum", line 424, in <module>
init_cmdline(config_options, wallet_path, False)
File "./run_electrum", line 146, in init_cmdline
db = WalletDB(storage.read(), manual_upgrades=False)
File "/home/user/wspace/electrum/electrum/wallet_db.py", line 72, in __init__
self.load_data(raw)
File "/home/user/wspace/electrum/electrum/wallet_db.py", line 103, in load_data
self._after_upgrade_tasks()
File "/home/user/wspace/electrum/electrum/wallet_db.py", line 189, in _after_upgrade_tasks
self._load_transactions()
File "/home/user/wspace/electrum/electrum/util.py", line 406, in <lambda>
return lambda *args, **kw_args: do_profile(args, kw_args)
File "/home/user/wspace/electrum/electrum/util.py", line 402, in do_profile
o = func(*args, **kw_args)
File "/home/user/wspace/electrum/electrum/wallet_db.py", line 1139, in _load_transactions
self.data = StoredDict(self.data, self, [])
File "/home/user/wspace/electrum/electrum/json_db.py", line 79, in __init__
self.__setitem__(k, v)
File "/home/user/wspace/electrum/electrum/json_db.py", line 44, in wrapper
return func(self, *args, **kwargs)
File "/home/user/wspace/electrum/electrum/json_db.py", line 105, in __setitem__
v = self.db._convert_dict(self.path, key, v)
File "/home/user/wspace/electrum/electrum/wallet_db.py", line 1182, in _convert_dict
v = dict((k, Invoice.from_json(x)) for k, x in v.items())
File "/home/user/wspace/electrum/electrum/wallet_db.py", line 1182, in <genexpr>
v = dict((k, Invoice.from_json(x)) for k, x in v.items())
File "/home/user/wspace/electrum/electrum/invoices.py", line 110, in from_json
return OnchainInvoice(**x)
File "<attrs generated init electrum.invoices.OnchainInvoice>", line 8, in __init__
File "/home/user/wspace/electrum/electrum/invoices.py", line 68, in _decode_outputs
output = PartialTxOutput.from_legacy_tuple(*output)
File "/home/user/wspace/electrum/electrum/transaction.py", line 131, in from_legacy_tuple
return cls.from_address_and_value(addr, val)
File "/home/user/wspace/electrum/electrum/transaction.py", line 104, in from_address_and_value
return cls(scriptpubkey=bfh(bitcoin.address_to_script(address)),
File "/home/user/wspace/electrum/electrum/bitcoin.py", line 422, in address_to_script
raise BitcoinException(f"invalid bitcoin address: {addr}")
electrum.util.BitcoinException: invalid bitcoin address: tb1qckp4ztmstwtyxzml3dmfvegeq5mfxwu2h3q94l
Since #6014, pyaes is not really needed anymore.
As we currently require either one of pycryptodomex or cryptography,
even if pyaes is available, it will not be used.
We could strip it out completely from crypto.py...
In any case, pyaes is still pulled in by some hw wallet dependencies indirectly;
but the core library no longer depends on it.
previously, if GUI-related imports raised, the GUI would not start
but the process would not exit (e.g. asyncio event loop would go on)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "...\electrum\electrum\daemon.py", line 517, in run_gui
gui = __import__('electrum.gui.' + gui_name, fromlist=['electrum'])
File "...\electrum\electrum\gui\qt\__init__.py", line 39, in <module>
from PyQt5.QtGui import QGuiApplication
ImportError: DLL load failed while importing QtGui: The specified module could not be found.
Load DLLs from inner 'electrum' dir instead of '.dlls'.
To make it consistent with where we expect libsecp256k1 (.dll/.so) be.
(note that while in case of libsecp we specifically already search the main dir,
without this change, other DLLs such as libusb or libzbar would not be found there)
Python 3.8 changed where DLLs are searched for.
see https://docs.python.org/3/whatsnew/3.8.html#bpo-36085-whatsnew
This potentially affect our binaries when we start shipping python 3.8+, however that is not being addressed here. This commit simply addresses the usecase of running from source, on Windows, using python 3.8.
On older Python, a user could build/obtain DLLs and place them anywhere on the system %PATH%, however this no longer works with py3.8, as %PATH% is no longer checked.
With py3.8, instead, we now check if there is a folder named '.dlls' in the top-level project directory, and if so, register that as an additional search path.
A user who wants to run Electrum from source on Windows using python 3.8 or later, with their custom DLLs, should manually create the '.dlls' folder and put their DLLs there. If they also want to switch between e.g. python 3.7 and 3.8, they should also include '.dlls' in the system %PATH%.
When using Electrum, interesting DLLs include at least libsecp256k1.dll, libusb-1.0.dll, libzbar-0.dll.
The few other cases that used SimpleConfig.get_instance() now
either get passed a config instance, or they try to get a reference
to something else that has a reference to a config.
(see lnsweep, qt/qrcodewidget, qt/qrtextedit)
e.g. when interacting with hw wallets (e.g. signmessage)
it does not make sense to time out
also, str(e) of some exceptions such as TimeoutError is ""...
- commands are async
- the asyncio loop is started and stopped from the main script
- the daemon's main loop runs in the main thread
- use jsonrpcserver and jsonrpcclient instead of jsonrpclib
old style "-v" still works
filtering examples:
-v=debug,network=error,interface=error // effectively blacklists network and interface
-v=warning,network=debug,interface=debug // effectively whitelists network and interface