BitShares RPC proxy
Project description
This is a simple script that acts as an RPC proxy to the BitShares client and provides simple access control to it, allowing to restrict access to certain methods of the client only in a flexible way.
If you like this tool, please vote for my delegate to support further development, and feel free to visit my page for other delegate proposals at digitalgaia.io. Thanks!
Install
To install, run:
$ pip install bts_proxy
preferably (but not required) in a virtualenv.
Running the proxy
Just run the bts-proxy script on the command line.
Configuration file with listening port and users/passwords alongside with allowed methods can be found in the same data dir as the one for the BitShares client. Config file is named proxy.json, and will be created automatically the first time you run bts-proxy if it doesn’t exist yet.
You can specify a different data dir than the default one for the BitShares client as the first argument to the bts-proxy script, e.g.:
$ bts-proxy ~/.BitShares
Configuration file format
The configuration file is a simple JSON file, looking like this:
{ "port": 5681, "users": [ { "name": "username", "password": "secret-password", "methods_allowed": ["*"] } ] }
port is the port number on which the proxy will be listening. Make sure to use a different port than the one on which the BitShares client is listening!
users is a list of objects containing the following fields:
name: the name of the user
password: the password for that user
methods_allowed: the list of methods allowed. You can used shell-like pattern matching here (eg: "wallet_*" will allow all methods starting with "wallet_")
methods_forbidden (optional): the list of forbidden methods. You can also use shell-like pattern matching here.
Note that by default, methods are forbidden, so the proxy will allow you to call a method if and only if it appears in the methods_allowed field and not in the methods_forbidden field.
Security best practices
It is highly recommended to run both the BitShares client and the RPC proxy as their own separate user, rather than your common one, and to restrict read access to the BitShares client data dir to only this user.
This should come by default with BitShares >= 0.5.0, otherwise you can do the following:
$ chmod 700 ~/.BitShares
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