rgb-cln/doc/lightning-commando-rune.7.md

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lightning-commando-rune -- Command to Authorize Remote Peer Access
===================================================================
SYNOPSIS
--------
**commando-rune** [*rune*] [*restrictions*]
DESCRIPTION
-----------
The **commando-rune** RPC command creates a base64 string called a
*rune* which can be used to access commands on this node. Each *rune*
contains a unique id (a number starting at 0), and can have
restrictions inside it. Nobody can remove restrictions from a rune: if
you try, the rune will be rejected. There is no limit on how many
runes you can issue; the node simply decodes
and checks them as they are received (we do store them for lightning-commando-listrunes(7) however).
If *rune* is supplied, the restrictions are simple appended to that
*rune* (it doesn't need to be a rune belonging to this node). If no
*rune* is supplied, a new one is constructed, with a new unique id.
*restrictions* can be the string "readonly" (creates a rune which
allows most *get* and *list* commands, and the *summary* command), or
an array of restrictions.
Each restriction is an array of one or more alternatives, such as "method
is listpeers", or "method is listpeers OR time is before 2023". Alternatives use a simple language to examine the command which is
being run:
* time: the current UNIX time, e.g. "time<1656759180".
doc: escape more naughty underscores The only time underscores aren't special in Markdown is when they appear in preformatted text. We have gotten away with not escaping underscores where an asterisk-enclosed span or the paragraph ends before the next underscore appears, but this is fragile and bad practice. Conversely, there are many places where we have not escaped underscores but needed to. Escape all underscores that do not appear in preformatted blocks or preformatted spans and are not themselves delineating emphasized spans. The changes in this commit are exactly the result of executing the following Bash code: ```bash e=':x;' # begin loop e+='s/^' # anchor match at beginning of line e+='(' # begin capturing subexpression e+='(' # begin list of alternatives e+='[^`_\\]|' # any mundane character, or e+='`([^`\\]|\\.)*`|' # backtick-enclosed span, or e+='\b_|_\b|' # underscore at boundary, or e+='\\.' # backslash-escaped character e+=')*' # any number of the preceding alternatives e+=')' # end capturing subexpression e+='\B_\B/\1\\_/;' # escape non-formatting underscore e+='tx' # repeat loop if we escaped an underscore escape_underscores=( sed # use extended regular expressions -E # skip over indented blocks (following an empty line) -e '/^$/{:i;n;/^( {4,}|\t)/bi}' # skip over preformatted blocks -e '/^\s*```/,/^\s*```/{p;d}' # skip over generated sections -e '/GENERATE-FROM-SCHEMA-START/,/GENERATE-FROM-SCHEMA-END/{p;d}' # escape underscores -e "${e}" ) "${escape_underscores[@]}" -i doc/*.[0-9].md ``` Changelog-None
2022-11-11 01:44:56 +00:00
* id: the node\_id of the peer, e.g. "id=024b9a1fa8e006f1e3937f65f66c408e6da8e1ca728ea43222a7381df1cc449605".
* method: the command being run, e.g. "method=withdraw".
* rate: the rate limit, per minute, e.g. "rate=60".
* pnum: the number of parameters. e.g. "pnum<2".
* pnameX: the parameter named X. e.g. "pnamedestination=1RustyRX2oai4EYYDpQGWvEL62BBGqN9T".
* parrN: the N'th parameter. e.g. "parr0=1RustyRX2oai4EYYDpQGWvEL62BBGqN9T".
RESTRICTION FORMAT
------------------
Restrictions are one or more alternatives. Each
alternative is *name* *operator* *value*. The valid names are shown
above. Note that if a value contains `\\`, it must be preceeded by another `\\`
to form valid JSON:
* `=`: passes if equal ie. identical. e.g. `method=withdraw`
* `/`: not equals, e.g. `method/withdraw`
* `^`: starts with, e.g. `id^024b9a1fa8e006f1e3937f`
* `$`: ends with, e.g. `id$381df1cc449605`.
* `~`: contains, e.g. `id~006f1e3937f65f66c40`.
* `<`: is a decimal integer, and is less than. e.g. `time<1656759180`
* `>`: is a decimal integer, and is greater than. e.g. `time>1656759180`
* `{`: preceeds in alphabetical order (or matches but is shorter), e.g. `id{02ff`.
* `}`: follows in alphabetical order (or matches but is longer), e.g. `id}02ff`.
* `#`: a comment, ignored, e.g. `dumb example#`.
* `!`: only passes if the *name* does *not* exist. e.g. `pnamedestination!`.
Every other operator except `#` fails if *name* does not exist!
EXAMPLES
--------
This creates a fresh rune which can do anything:
$ lightning-cli commando-rune
{
"rune": "KUhZzNlECC7pYsz3QVbF1TqjIUYi3oyESTI7n60hLMs9MA==",
"unique_id": "0"
}
We can add restrictions to that rune, like so:
$ lightning-cli commando-rune rune=KUhZzNlECC7pYsz3QVbF1TqjIUYi3oyESTI7n60hLMs9MA== restrictions=readonly
{
"rune": "NbL7KkXcPQsVseJ9TdJNjJK2KsPjnt_q4cE_wvc873I9MCZtZXRob2RebGlzdHxtZXRob2ReZ2V0fG1ldGhvZD1zdW1tYXJ5Jm1ldGhvZC9saXN0ZGF0YXN0b3Jl",
"unique_id": "0"
}
The "readonly" restriction is a short-cut for two restrictions:
1. `["method^list", "method^get", "method=summary"]`: You may call list, get or summary.
2. `["method/listdatastore"]`: But not listdatastore: that contains sensitive stuff!
We can do the same manually, like so:
$ lightning-cli commando-rune rune=KUhZzNlECC7pYsz3QVbF1TqjIUYi3oyESTI7n60hLMs9MA== restrictions='[["method^list", "method^get", "method=summary"],["method/listdatastore"]]'
{
"rune": "NbL7KkXcPQsVseJ9TdJNjJK2KsPjnt_q4cE_wvc873I9MCZtZXRob2RebGlzdHxtZXRob2ReZ2V0fG1ldGhvZD1zdW1tYXJ5Jm1ldGhvZC9saXN0ZGF0YXN0b3Jl",
"unique_id": "0"
}
Let's create a rune which lets a specific peer
(024b9a1fa8e006f1e3937f65f66c408e6da8e1ca728ea43222a7381df1cc449605)
run "listpeers" on themselves:
$ lightning-cli commando-rune restrictions='[["id=024b9a1fa8e006f1e3937f65f66c408e6da8e1ca728ea43222a7381df1cc449605"],["method=listpeers"],["pnum=1"],["pnameid=024b9a1fa8e006f1e3937f65f66c408e6da8e1ca728ea43222a7381df1cc449605","parr0=024b9a1fa8e006f1e3937f65f66c408e6da8e1ca728ea43222a7381df1cc449605"]]'
{
"rune": "FE8GHiGVvxcFqCQcClVRRiNE_XEeLYQzyG2jmqto4jM9MiZpZD0wMjRiOWExZmE4ZTAwNmYxZTM5MzdmNjVmNjZjNDA4ZTZkYThlMWNhNzI4ZWE0MzIyMmE3MzgxZGYxY2M0NDk2MDUmbWV0aG9kPWxpc3RwZWVycyZwbnVtPTEmcG5hbWVpZD0wMjRiOWExZmE4ZTAwNmYxZTM5MzdmNjVmNjZjNDA4ZTZkYThlMWNhNzI4ZWE0MzIyMmE3MzgxZGYxY2M0NDk2MDV8cGFycjA9MDI0YjlhMWZhOGUwMDZmMWUzOTM3ZjY1ZjY2YzQwOGU2ZGE4ZTFjYTcyOGVhNDMyMjJhNzM4MWRmMWNjNDQ5NjA1",
"unique_id": "2"
}
This allows `listpeers` with 1 argument (`pnum=1`), which is either by name (`pnameid`), or position (`parr0`). We could shorten this in several ways: either allowing only positional or named parameters, or by testing the start of the parameters only. Here's an example which only checks the first 9 bytes of the `listpeers` parameter:
$ lightning-cli commando-rune restrictions='[["id=024b9a1fa8e006f1e3937f65f66c408e6da8e1ca728ea43222a7381df1cc449605"],["method=listpeers"],["pnum=1"],["pnameid^024b9a1fa8e006f1e393", "parr0^024b9a1fa8e006f1e393"]'
{
"rune": "fTQnfL05coEbiBO8SS0cvQwCcPLxE9c02pZCC6HRVEY9MyZpZD0wMjRiOWExZmE4ZTAwNmYxZTM5MzdmNjVmNjZjNDA4ZTZkYThlMWNhNzI4ZWE0MzIyMmE3MzgxZGYxY2M0NDk2MDUmbWV0aG9kPWxpc3RwZWVycyZwbnVtPTEmcG5hbWVpZF4wMjRiOWExZmE4ZTAwNmYxZTM5M3xwYXJyMF4wMjRiOWExZmE4ZTAwNmYxZTM5Mw==",
"unique_id": "3"
}
Before we give this to our peer, let's add two more restrictions: that
it only be usable for 24 hours from now (`time<`), and that it can only
be used twice a minute (`rate=2`). `date +%s` can give us the current
time in seconds:
$ lightning-cli commando-rune rune=fTQnfL05coEbiBO8SS0cvQwCcPLxE9c02pZCC6HRVEY9MyZpZD0wMjRiOWExZmE4ZTAwNmYxZTM5MzdmNjVmNjZjNDA4ZTZkYThlMWNhNzI4ZWE0MzIyMmE3MzgxZGYxY2M0NDk2MDUmbWV0aG9kPWxpc3RwZWVycyZwbnVtPTEmcG5hbWVpZF4wMjRiOWExZmE4ZTAwNmYxZTM5M3xwYXJyMF4wMjRiOWExZmE4ZTAwNmYxZTM5Mw== restrictions='[["time<'$(($(date +%s) + 24*60*60))'","rate=2"]]'
{
"rune": "tU-RLjMiDpY2U0o3W1oFowar36RFGpWloPbW9-RuZdo9MyZpZD0wMjRiOWExZmE4ZTAwNmYxZTM5MzdmNjVmNjZjNDA4ZTZkYThlMWNhNzI4ZWE0MzIyMmE3MzgxZGYxY2M0NDk2MDUmbWV0aG9kPWxpc3RwZWVycyZwbnVtPTEmcG5hbWVpZF4wMjRiOWExZmE4ZTAwNmYxZTM5M3xwYXJyMF4wMjRiOWExZmE4ZTAwNmYxZTM5MyZ0aW1lPDE2NTY5MjA1MzgmcmF0ZT0y",
"unique_id": "3"
}
You can also use lightning-decode(7) to examine runes you have been given:
$ .lightning-cli decode tU-RLjMiDpY2U0o3W1oFowar36RFGpWloPbW9-RuZdo9MyZpZD0wMjRiOWExZmE4ZTAwNmYxZTM5MzdmNjVmNjZjNDA4ZTZkYThlMWNhNzI4ZWE0MzIyMmE3MzgxZGYxY2M0NDk2MDUmbWV0aG9kPWxpc3RwZWVycyZwbnVtPTEmcG5hbWVpZF4wMjRiOWExZmE4ZTAwNmYxZTM5M3xwYXJyMF4wMjRiOWExZmE4ZTAwNmYxZTM5MyZ0aW1lPDE2NTY5MjA1MzgmcmF0ZT0y
{
"type": "rune",
"unique_id": "3",
"string": "b54f912e33220e9636534a375b5a05a306abdfa4451a95a5a0f6d6f7e46e65da:=3&id=024b9a1fa8e006f1e3937f65f66c408e6da8e1ca728ea43222a7381df1cc449605&method=listpeers&pnum=1&pnameid^024b9a1fa8e006f1e393|parr0^024b9a1fa8e006f1e393&time<1656920538&rate=2",
"restrictions": [
{
"alternatives": [
"id=024b9a1fa8e006f1e3937f65f66c408e6da8e1ca728ea43222a7381df1cc449605"
],
"summary": "id (of commanding peer) equal to '024b9a1fa8e006f1e3937f65f66c408e6da8e1ca728ea43222a7381df1cc449605'"
},
{
"alternatives": [
"method=listpeers"
],
"summary": "method (of command) equal to 'listpeers'"
},
{
"alternatives": [
"pnum=1"
],
"summary": "pnum (number of command parameters) equal to 1"
},
{
"alternatives": [
"pnameid^024b9a1fa8e006f1e393",
"parr0^024b9a1fa8e006f1e393"
],
"summary": "pnameid (object parameter 'id') starts with '024b9a1fa8e006f1e393' OR parr0 (array parameter #0) starts with '024b9a1fa8e006f1e393'"
},
{
"alternatives": [
"time<1656920538"
],
"summary": "time (in seconds since 1970) less than 1656920538 (approximately 19 hours 18 minutes from now)"
},
{
"alternatives": [
"rate=2"
],
"summary": "rate (max per minute) equal to 2"
}
],
"valid": true
}
SHARING RUNES
-------------
Because anyone can add a restriction to a rune, you can always turn a
normal rune into a read-only rune, or restrict access for 30 minutes
from the time you give it to someone. Adding restrictions before
sharing runes is best practice.
If a rune has a ratelimit, any derived rune will have the same id, and
thus will compete for that ratelimit. You might want to consider
adding a tighter ratelimit to a rune before sharing it, so you will
keep the remainder. For example, if you rune has a limit of 60 times
per minute, adding a limit of 5 times per minute and handing that rune
out means you can still use your original rune 55 times per minute.
RETURN VALUE
------------
[comment]: # (GENERATE-FROM-SCHEMA-START)
On success, an object is returned, containing:
- **rune** (string): the resulting rune
- **unique\_id** (string): the id of this rune: this is set at creation and cannot be changed (even as restrictions are added)
The following warnings may also be returned:
- **warning\_unrestricted\_rune**: A warning shown when runes are created with powers that could drain your node
[comment]: # (GENERATE-FROM-SCHEMA-END)
AUTHOR
------
Rusty Russell <<rusty@rustcorp.com.au>> wrote the original Python
commando.py plugin, the in-tree commando plugin, and this manual page.
Christian Decker came up with the name "commando", which almost
excuses his previous adoption of the name "Eltoo".
SEE ALSO
--------
lightning-commando(7), lightning-decode(7)
RESOURCES
---------
Main web site: <https://github.com/ElementsProject/lightning>
[comment]: # ( SHA256STAMP:7064d2dcc37af3fe83739a11da57400b5c1faef51095b8dacfba6a4312fc9d25)