smcli is a simple command line tool that you can use to manage wallet files (in the future it may be expanded with additional functionality).
It currently supports the following features. Note that this documentation is not intended to be as complete as the built-in help documentation in the application itself, which fully documents all commands, flags, and features. Run smcli -h
to see this documentation.
smcli allows you to read encrypted wallet files (including those created using Smapp and other compatible tools), and generate new wallet files.
To read an encrypted wallet file, run:
smcli wallet read <filename>
You'll be prompted to enter the (optional) password used to encrypt the wallet file. If you enter the correct password, you'll see the contents of the wallet printed, including the accounts it contains. Include the flags --full
to see full keys, and --private
to see private keys and mnemonic in addition to public keys.
Note that you can read both wallet files created using smcli
as well as those created using Smapp or any other tool that supports standard Spacemesh wallet format.
To generate a new wallet, run:
smcli wallet create
The command will prompt you to enter a BIP39-compatible mnemonic, or alternatively generate a new, random mnemonic for you. It will then prompt you to enter a password to encrypt the wallet file (optional but highly recommended) and will then generate an encrypted wallet file with one or more new keypairs.
Note that these keypairs (public and private key) are not the same as Spacemesh wallet addresses. The public key can be converted directly and deterministically into your wallet address; in other words, there is a one-to-one mapping between public keys and wallet addresses. Conversion and outputting of public keys as wallet addresses will be available shortly.
smcli
supports key generation using Ledger hardware devices including Nano S, Nano S+, and Nano X. To generate a wallet file using a hardware wallet, first sideload the Spacemesh Ledger app onto your device (follow the instructions in that README). Make sure the device is connected and unlocked and the Spacemesh app is open, then run:
smcli wallet create --ledger
Note that the created wallet file will not contain any private keys or mnemonic (as these obviously remain on the Ledger device). If you subsequently use smcli wallet read
to read the file, these will not be printed. We still recommend encrypting the wallet file with a secure password for privacy purposes.
NOTE: We strongly recommend only creating a new wallet on a hardware wallet or on a secure, airgapped computer. You are responsible for safely storing your mnemonic and wallet files. Your mnemonic is the ONLY way to restore access to your wallet and accounts if you misplace the wallet file, so it's essential that you back it up securely and reliably. There is absolutely nothing that we can do to help you recover your wallet if you misplace the file or mnemonic.
smcli includes commands to verify the information contained in the genesis ledger.
To verify the vesting (owner) address and vault address for a particular genesis vesting vault, run:
smcli genesis verify
This command will prompt you to enter one or more public keys, along with the multisig params (minimum required signers) and vaulted amount. It will subsequently output the vesting and vault addresses associated with the vault.
Building the app is fairly straightforward. The only prerequisites are Golang with CGO support, libudev
on Linux (sudo apt-get install libudev-dev
on Debian/Ubuntu) and two libraries that will be statically linked into the binary. All of the details are handled in Makefile
and should work on Linux (AMD64 and ARM64), macOS (Intel and Apple Silicon), and Windows. Simply run make build
, which should download the correct libraries for your OS and platform. See the release CI workflow for more details, and feel free to open an issue if you encounter any trouble.