Icon LinkWallet Access

The kinds of operations we can perform with a Wallet instance depend on whether or not we have access to the wallet's private key.

In order to differentiate between Wallet instances that know their private key and those that do not, we use the WalletUnlocked and Wallet types respectively.

Icon LinkWallet States

The WalletUnlocked type represents a wallet whose private key is known and stored internally in memory. A wallet must be of type WalletUnlocked in order to perform operations that involve signing messages or transactions.

You can learn more about signing here .

The Wallet type represents a wallet whose private key is not known or stored in memory. Instead, Wallet only knows its public address. A Wallet cannot be used to sign transactions, however it may still perform a whole suite of useful operations including listing transactions, assets, querying balances, and so on.

Note that the WalletUnlocked type provides a Deref implementation targeting its inner Wallet type. This means that all methods available on the Wallet type are also available on the WalletUnlocked type. In other words, WalletUnlocked can be thought of as a thin wrapper around Wallet that provides greater access via its private key.

Icon LinkTransitioning States

A Wallet instance can be unlocked by providing the private key:

let wallet_unlocked = wallet_locked.unlock(private_key);

A WalletUnlocked instance can be locked using the lock method:

let wallet_locked = wallet_unlocked.lock();

Most wallet constructors that create or generate a new wallet are provided on the WalletUnlocked type. Consider locking the wallet after the new private key has been handled in order to reduce the scope in which the wallet's private key is stored in memory.

Icon LinkDesign Guidelines

When designing APIs that accept a wallet as an input, we should think carefully about the kind of access that we require. API developers should aim to minimise their usage of WalletUnlocked in order to ensure private keys are stored in memory no longer than necessary to reduce the surface area for attacks and vulnerabilities in downstream libraries and applications.

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