Electrum

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Electrum logo.png
screenshot of Electrum with its Qt gui

Electrum is a lightweight Bitcoin client, based on a client-server protocol. It was released on november 5, 2011.

Main features:

  • Encrypted wallet: the file that contains your bitcoins is protected with a password. You are protected from thieves.
  • Deterministic key generation: If you lose your wallet, you can recover it from its seed. You are protected from your own mistakes.
  • Instant on: the client does not download the blockchain, it requests that information from a server. No delays, always up-to-date.
  • Transactions are signed locally: Your private keys are not shared with the server. You do not have to trust the server with your money.
  • Freedom and Privacy: The server does not store user accounts. You are not tied to a particular server, and the server does not need to know you. You can export your private keys.
  • No scripts: Electrum does not download any script. A compromised server cannot send you arbitrary code and steal your bitcoins.
  • No single point of failure: The server code is open source, anyone can run a server.
  • Firewall friendly: The client does not need to open a port, it simply polls the server for updates.
  • Free software: Gnu GPL v3. Anyone can audit the code.
  • Written in Python. The code is short, and easy to review.
  • Support for Bitcoin URIs, signed URIs and Bitcoin aliases

Updates

Some contents can be outdated or deprecated. To see up to date documentation visit the repository Electrum Docs

Graphical User Interfaces

Electrum has two GUIs: one that is based on Gtk, and a newer one based on Qt. The Qt GUI is enabled by default. To use the gtk interface, type:

$ ./electrum -g gtk

In addition, Electrum has a rich set of commands for the command line interface.

Brain Wallet

Electrum uses a type 2 deterministic key generation algorithm. This means that all the keys are derived from a seed.

Typical seeds have 128 bits of entropy. Electrum provides mnemonic code in order to represent the seed.

Example:

  • hexadecimal: 431a62f1c86555d3c45e5c4d9e10c8c7
  • mnemonic: "constant forest adore false green weave stop guy fur freeze giggle clock"

You can display the seed with the command line interface. Example:

$ ./electrum getseed
Password:
431a62f1c86555d3c45e5c4d9e10c8c7 "constant forest adore false green weave stop guy fur freeze giggle clock"

Wallet File

Electrum uses a file under /wallets/ folder (the default file is called default_wallet) as your wallet which is created when you first run the application.

On Windows

  • Show hidden files
  • Go to \Users\YourUserName\AppData\Roaming\Local\Electrum

On Mac

  • Open Finder
  • Go > Go to folder (shift+cmd+G) and type ~/.electrum

On Linux

  • Home Folder
  • Go > Location and type ~/.electrum

Multiple wallets

Electrum uses one single file per wallet. Your default wallet is located in your user account as listed above. If you want to use another wallet, use the -w option followed by the wallet path and name:

$ ./electrum -w /path/to/my/wallet/wallet_name

Export and import addresses

You can export your private keys using the 'dumpprivkeys' command:

$ ./electrum dumpprivkeys
Password:
{
"1LGoehbyeX4QBEPK1a6dhyaoMQZfqg5LKX": "5JBSttEGhjEcPidSovW66Rin2EZ6LEHZ2qx8Pu2RqqNaDTBVWaF"   
"1KcsBJa2cCxVkGJfSsg5bUeXN7Y5uLa8mP": "5KiP4uiNT6KG8jnXbainCM8rDWRrgxt3PAyut4FFpDoCo1Rh6VM"   
"1PXsn7LVXTccGhJPTUL8r2EGB4fF9kvex3": "5Kj8mvBJReyk8xEBMx5cTnciQCxto5JmudiTPkqwMcd61Kf1Jqc"   
"1KteSFTAphyByLTtUfFiVQ9s7fMVmx7c2h": "5JeZ3FTbWcksLt3PKydd5U9p952UQRHwv3LoxzCA9LZ7V2bku5p"   
"1GE5ZChAobeTEPLHDCDDKTSg3XvLkcQFjS": "5JwtGEygTwF2nouhRVzW3w5DWZd1sCgxLtnd1v51wjkbUrp5sqH"   
"12YNehfAoYTiwjTXULwaZqTCauu2D61fq6": "5Jvcq19ePCXKcVun4n7US99CsrEByUK2kgxXBA3rBVBqYZjhfwD"  [change] 
}

You can also import addresses into an electrum wallet, with the 'importprivkey' command:

$ ./electrum importprivkey 5JBSttEGhjEcPidSovW66Rin2EZ6LEHZ2qx8Pu2RqqNaDTBVWaF
Keypair imported:  1LGoehbyeX4QBEPK1a6dhyaoMQZfqg5LKX

Note that imported keys do not belong to the deterministic sequence of your wallet; if you import keys in a wallet, you must back it up!

Offline wallet

It is possible to create a transaction on an offline computer, and to broadcast them from another computer, with a wallet that does not have the seed or private keys.

see http://electrum.org/offline_wallets.html

List of commands

command description syntax requires password needs to be online
balance shows the balance of your wallet or of an address balance [address] no yes
contacts print your list of contacts contacts no no
create create a new wallet create no no
createmultisig  ?? createmultisig  ??  ??
createrawtransaction  ?? createrawtransaction  ??  ??
decoderawtransaction  ?? decoderawtransaction  ??  ??
deseed Create a seedless version of a wallet with the suffix .seedless deseed no no
dumpprivkey  ?? dumpprivkey  ??  ??
dumpprivkeys  ?? dumpprivkeys  ??  ??
eval call python eval eval <expression> no no
freeze  ?? freeze  ??  ??
getaddresshistory  ?? getaddresshistory  ??  ??
getbalance  ?? getbalance  ??  ??
getconfig  ?? getconfig  ??  ??
getseed write the seed and its mnemonic to stdout seed yes no
help display the help for a command help [command] no no
history print the transaction history history no yes
import import a keypair import <address:private_key> yes no
importprivkey  ?? importprivkey  ??  ??
label change the label of a transaction or address label <label> no no
listaddresses  ?? listaddresses  ??  ??
listunspent  ?? listunspent  ??  ??
mktx create a transaction and dump it mktx [-s sourceaddr] [-c changeaddr] [-f fee] <address> <amount> yes no
password update your password password yes no
payto create and broadcast a transaction payto [-s sourceaddr] [-c changeaddr] [-f fee] <address> <amount> yes yes
prioritize  ?? prioritize  ??  ??
restore restore a wallet from seed restore no yes
sendrawtransaction broadcast a transaction sendrawtransaction <tx> no yes
setconfig  ?? setconfig  ??  ??
setlabel  ?? setlabel  ??  ??
signmessage sign a message (as in bitcoind) signmessage <address> <message> yes no
signrawtransaction  ?? signrawtransaction  ??  ??
unfreeze  ?? unfreeze  ??  ??
unprioritize  ?? unprioritize  ??  ??
validateaddress check is the argument is a valid bitcoin address validateaddress <address> no no
verifymessage verify a message (as in bitcoind) verifymessage <address> <signature> <message> no no

History

Electrum was announced November 5, 2011[1].

See Also

External Links

References