I assume you are doing this to maintain the coin-age of your coins. I looked at the wallet tools and managed to get it working, but it will only work for wallets that are not encrypted. For wallets encrypted by the app you’d have to find a way to decrypt them first. Assuming you got the unencrypted wallet file it should work (fingers crossed).
I assume you are doing this to maintain the coin-age of your coins. I looked at the wallet tools and managed to get it working, but it will only work for wallets that are not encrypted. For wallets encrypted by the app you’d have to find a way to decrypt them first. Assuming you got the unencrypted wallet file it should work (fingers crossed).
I’ve loaded the keys into the peerunity and it seems to be attempting to mint every second or so )
So, dumping secret bytes was not sufficient at all, as the wallet seems to be a deterministic one and I have to take chain_code into account (and work everything out in between lol).
actually, is it possible to teach javascript wallet generator at peercointalk org to recreate same addresses? it seems that brain wallet allows creation of only one address instead of the tree.
I’m glad it worked. You can see the code with the DeterministicKeyChain class for the key derivation. External keys (What you receive with) are under the child index 0, and internal (change) keys are under 1. This is a simplistic chain structure, but not a BIP43 standardised one, so it might not be out-of-the-box compatible.
Hi,
I’ve encrypted and backed up Peerunity wallet.
Then I run Android Wallet to import that wallet, however when it prompts for a password and I enter the passphrase with which I’ve encrypted the Peerunity wallet it shows me an error.
“Wallet could not be restored: invalid base 64 encoding. Bad password?”
Could you help me to import my wallet to android device?
Easiest way to have the Peercoins on your phone is to make a transaction from your desktop Peercoin client (Peerunity) to the Peercoin address your Android wallet uses. Only drawback: It’ll cost you 0.01 PPC. :-/ So, if it is only a small amount of PPC an import of the wallet might be a good idea.
MultiSig apparently won’t be in 0.6, but if it ever is implemented, it would make minting on a phone very secure, and if PPC nodes can advance to android devices that would amplify the network by 5x at least. Very appealing.
The new trusted server is not added during an update, so you will either need to add it manually or restore the default servers in the Trusted Server settings.
The app needs permissions that are no longer set during installation. The app may fail or crash when using the camera or when viewing wallet backups without these permissions set. You can set these permissions on a device’s Apps settings. In the future I may release an update that properly requests permissions inside the app.
I’ve replaced both of my trusted servers with servers that should be much more reliable with greater performance.
My block explorer has been shutdown and both of the new servers uses my valid-hash-server software.
I’m sorry to say that Google has removed the app from the play store. According to Google the app has been removed due to violations of the “payments” and “impersonation” policies.
My guess is that Google believes the app impersonates the Peercoin Foundation but I don’t know exactly. I don’t understand the payments policy violation as the Bitcoin app is still online. I could dispute this with Google but my previous experience with Google has been poor in this regard.
I suggest that people download the APK directly from this link or clone and build the app from source.