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babbage-rpuzzle

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    babbage-rpuzzle

A simple library to help you create, sign and spend any kind of R Puzzle.


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babbage-rpuzzle

A simple library to help you create, sign and spend any kind of R Puzzle.

Installation

Please note, RPuzzle has a peer dependency of bsv which must be installed independently to avoid version collisions.

To get started, simply run: npm i bsv rpuzzle

Alternatively, you can embed the following two scripts into your project:

<script type="text/javascript" src="https://unpkg.com/bsv@1.5.3/bsv.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://unpkg.com/rpuzzle@0.0.5/rpuzzle.min.js"></script>

Quickstart

In true Bitcoin fashion, code is well-commented, poorly documented. You can create them randomly, from a PrivateKey, a buffer, a hex string or even an XPriv path. Here's an example of creating and spending a HASH160 P2RPH from Random:

Step 1) Generating a locking script.

We're going to generate a valid R Puzzle script in ASM format and the K value used to unlock it. Make sure to save these two pieces of information as we'll need them to publish and unlock the puzzle later.

const RPuzzle = require('rpuzzle');

const rpuzzle = RPuzzle.fromRandom();
console.log(rpuzzle.toASM());
console.log(rpuzzle.k.toHex());

//Returns: 
//k value hex string
//OP_OVER OP_3 OP_SPLIT OP_NIP OP_1 OP_SPLIT OP_SWAP OP_SPLIT OP_DROP OP_HASH160 <r hash> OP_EQUALVERIFY OP_CHECKSIG
Step 2) Funding a UTXO

One of the simplest ways to do this is with MoneyButton. Copy your ASM script into the script property in data-outputs below:

<script src="https://www.moneybutton.com/moneybutton.js"></script>
<div class='money-button'
  data-outputs='[
    {
      "script": "OP_OVER OP_3 OP_SPLIT OP_NIP OP_1 OP_SPLIT OP_SWAP OP_SPLIT OP_DROP OP_HASH160 <r hash> OP_EQUALVERIFY OP_CHECKSIG",
      "amount": "0.0218",
      "currency": "USD"
    }
  ]'
></div>

Here's a jsfiddle to make the whole process a little easier: https://jsfiddle.net/wfotksg6/

Swipe to put the TX on chain, copy the TXID from your Moneybutton, then head over to: http://api.whatsonchain.com/v1/bsv/main/<txid>/hex to get the raw hex of the transaction.

Step 3) Create an unlocking transaction

Remember that K value hex string from step 1? We'll need that here:

const RPuzzle = require('rpuzzle');
const Transaction = require('babbage-bsv').Transaction;
const Script = require('babbage-bsv').Script;
const Address = require('babbage-bsv').Address;


//Create an R puzzle from the K value
const rpuzzle = RPuzzle(RPuzzle.KValue.fromHex("k value hexstring"));

//Grab the UTXO output(s) we want to spend from the previous TX we made
const fromTX = Transaction("tx raw hex");
const utxos = rpuzzle.getUTXOs(fromTX);

//Create a new Transaction to spend these outputs
let toTx = Transaction();
toTx.from(utxos);

//Get total input amount from UTXO(s)
const amount = toTx._getInputAmount();
toTx.to(Address.fromString('<a bitcoin address>'), amount-1000); //1000 sats is a pretty generous fee!

//Sign it!
toTx = rpuzzle.sign(toTx);

//Copy the raw tx hex so we can publish it!
console.log(toTx.uncheckedSerialize());
Step 4) Broadcast transaction

Head on over to https://whatsonchain.com/broadcast and paste in your new raw tx hex. You can either preview the TX to make sure everything looks correct (also not a bad way to figure out your fee rate), or assuming everything looks okay, hit the broadcast button and you're done!

Other examples

You can actually publish any kind of R Puzzle you want. Here's a transaction I made where I created one output of each type: https://whatsonchain.com/tx/1ea1d846d0e5212f28654ba0eeb1db346e38e245415bf90ccd70c95060cf7f80

And subsequently spent them: https://whatsonchain.com/tx/a61e8444b717da21da2e6b5d6cc8b2cb724123bc6c8f3f5c088839ed4d2d5f33

Puzzle Types

RPuzzle implements all of the native hashing functions of Bitcoin, defaulting to OP_HASH160 <r>. You can also just pay to the R value itself. To set a specific puzzle type, simply call setType on an RPuzzle instance like so:

const rpuzzle = RPuzzle.fromRandom();
rpuzzle.setType('PayToRHASH256');

The current type options include:

Puzzle TypeScript
PayToRHASH160OP_HASH160
PayToRRIPEMD160OP_RIPEMD160
PayToRSHA256OP_SHA256
PayToRHASH256OP_HASH256
PayToRSHA1OP_SHA1
PayToR

TODO:

  • Better examples
  • Multisig R Puzzles
  • Testnet testing (Yes, real devs code straight on Mainnet. It should work though with a bit of tweaking!)
  • SIGHASH_NONE and SIGHASH_ANYONECANPAY, haven't tried this at all.

Development

Want to contribute? Please do! Feel free to submit bugs or pull requests to this repo. You can also tip me at deanlittle@moneybutton.com, 1deanlittle or /pay @40 on Twetch.

Contributors

@TeamWinnar - u/45 - Typescript definitions, signing code, proofreading

This code is provided free of charge with no warranties. Use at your own risk. Besides that, I don't really care how you use it so long as you promise to go build something cool. ;)

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Last updated on 24 Apr 2024

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