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pfpk's Introduction

pfpk

pic for public key. A Cloudflare Worker that allows associating a name and NFT (image) with a given set of Cosmos wallets / public keys.

Currently deployed at https://pfpk.daodao.zone

A profile contains a name and NFT image and is associated with one or more public keys. Chain preferences establish which public key to use for a given chain.

In order for the profile to be resolvable by name when searching or resolving on a given chain, and thus produce a public key and address to use on that chain, a chain preference must be set. This is because different chains use different default derivation paths for their wallet addresses, and thus different chains can end up with different public keys / wallet addresses used by one wallet. For example, Juno (and most Cosmos chains) uses coin type (slip44) 118, whereas Terra uses 330. This leads to the same wallet (i.e. private key) deriving different public keys (and thus addresses) for Juno and Terra. While a wallet can manually specify any derivation path and thus access the address for any valid public key that its private key controls, it would be confusing for someone to use an address with a non-default derivation path. Thus, we require setting a chain preference in order to explicitly opt-in/choose the address resolved on each chain so that there is never confusion about which address a profile is using.

Both the update profile and register public keys routes automatically create a new profile if one does not exist for the calling public key; similary, the fetch profile route returns an empty profile object if the provided public key, bech32 hash, or address is not associated with any profile. Thus it externally appears as if all public keys/addresses are associated with an empty profile. An empty profile contains the initial nonce (0), both name and nft set to null, and chains an empty object.

Setup

npm install -g wrangler
npm install

Development

npm run dev

Configuration

  1. Copy wrangler.toml.example to wrangler.toml.

  2. Configure secrets:

echo <VALUE> | npx wrangler secret put INDEXER_API_KEY
  1. Create D1 database for production:
npx wrangler d1 create pfpk
  1. Update the binding ID in wrangler.toml:
[[ d1_databases ]]
binding = "DB"
database_name = "pfpk"
database_id = "<REPLACE DB_ID>"

API

GET /:publicKey

publicKey is the hexadecimal representation of a secp256k1 public key used in the Cosmos.

You can alternatively use the bech32 address or hash to query for the profile:

  • GET /address/:bech32Address
  • GET /hex/:addressHex

The returned type is:

type FetchProfileResponse = {
  uuid: string;
  nonce: number;
  name: string | null;
  nft: {
    chainId: string;
    collectionAddress: string;
    tokenId: string;
    imageUrl: string;
  } | null;
  chains: Record<
    string,
    {
      publicKey: {
        type: string;
        hex: string;
      }
      address: string;
    }
  >;
};

or in the case of an error:

type FetchProfileResponse = {
  error: string;
};

This route checks that the given public key is attached to a profile, verifies that the NFT is still owned by the profile, and verifies that the NFT has an image URL set. If the profile no longer owns the NFT, or there is no image URL set, no NFT is returned.

The retrieval of the image URL depends on the chain:

  • For Stargaze, it is fetched from the Stargaze API.
  • For all other chains, a cw721 NFT is expected. It queries the nft_info method on the smart contract of the NFT's collectionAddress. If extension is present, it checks for image, image_uri, and image_url, in that order. If any is present, it uses that one. If not, it tries to fetch the data located at the URL provided by the token_uri field. If this response is JSON, it assumes the data conforms to the ERC721 Metadata JSON Schema standard, and uses the image field from that response. If the response is not JSON, it just uses token_uri directly and hopes it is an image. Some NFTs use that field for the image, and not all servers set the correct mimetype headers (such as IPFS URLs that don't care about the contents of the data).

It also returns a map of chain ID to public key and address for that chain based on the preferred public key. See the explanation at the top for more details.

If uuid is null, this means the profile has not yet been created by the specified public key (i.e. no name, image, or chains have been set). This is the default response returned for all profiles that do not yet exist. Once a profile is created, uuid is set and will remain constant even if public keys attached to it change, allowing a profile to be referenced by external services. This is useful for authorizing and associating data with a specific profile instead of just a single public key, allowing for authorized persistent data storage and other usecases.

POST /

The expected request body type is:

type UpdateProfileRequest = {
  data: {
    profile: {
      nonce: number;
      name?: string | null;
      nft?: {
        chainId: string;
        collectionAddress: string;
        tokenId: string;
      } | null;
    };
    chainIds?: string[];
    auth: {
      type: string;
      nonce: number;
      chainId: string;
      chainFeeDenom: string;
      chainBech32Prefix: string;
      publicKeyType: string;
      publicKeyHex: string;
    };
  };
  signature: string;
};

The returned type is:

type UpdateProfileResponse = {
  success: true;
};

or in the case of an error:

type UpdateProfileResponse = {
  error: string;
};

This route lets the user perform partial updates to their existing profile, or create a new profile if one does not exist for the current public key. If name or nft is null, that field is cleared. If either is undefined or omitted, nothing happens to that field. The name must be unique, at least 1 character long, at most 32 characters long, and only contain alphanumeric characters, periods, and underscores. The NFT must be owned by any of the profile's public keys. If the NFT has no image, it will fail.

A set of chain IDs can optionally be provided. If provided, the public key will be registered for all of these chains. If no chain IDs are provided when creating a profile for the first time, the public key will be registered for the chain used to sign the request.

The nonce from the latest GET request must be provided to prevent replay attacks. It starts at 0, and the GET request will return an empty profile with a nonce of 0 if nothing has been set.

The signature is derived by calling OfflineAminoSigner's signAmino function with the signDoc argument generated using makeSignDoc from the @cosmjs/amino package. This can be seen in the signature verification code located in src/index.ts around line 20.

POST /register

The expected request body type is:

type RegisterPublicKeyRequest = {
  data: {
    publicKeys: {
      data: {
        allow: string;
        chainIds?: string[];
        auth: {
          type: string;
          nonce: number;
          chainId: string;
          chainFeeDenom: string;
          chainBech32Prefix: string;
          publicKeyType: string;
          publicKeyHex: string;
        };
      };
      signature: string;
    }[];
    auth: {
      type: string;
      nonce: number;
      chainId: string;
      chainFeeDenom: string;
      chainBech32Prefix: string;
      publicKeyType: string;
      publicKeyHex: string;
    };
  };
  signature: string;
};

The returned type is:

type RegisterPublicKeyResponse = {
  success: true;
};

or in the case of an error:

type RegisterPublicKeyResponse = {
  error: string;
};

This route lets the user register public keys for their profile and/or set chain preferences for their registered public keys. The keys being registered must sign allowances (using the same nonce) to allow the profile to register them (or else anyone could claim any public key as their own). Thus, the keys being registered must set allow to the profile's public key that is registering them. chainIds is an optional array of chain IDs to set as preferences for this public key. If chainIds is omitted for a key being registered, it will just set the chain preference for the chain used to sign the nested request. The authentication structure is nested, so first the keys being registered need to sign the data objects, and then the profile public key performing the registration needs to sign all of them. When registering new chains for the profile public key performing the registration, the internal allowance signature is not required.

If this route is called with a public key that is not attached to any profile, a new empty profile is created automatically.

If a new public key being registered is attached to an existing profile, the public key will be removed from it. If an existing profile has no other public keys after the new public key is removed, the profile will be deleted.

All public keys attached to a profile will resolve to the profile when looked up using the GET request at the top (by address, public key, or bech32 hash). However, a profile must explicitly choose a public key to use for name resolution/searching on each chain. This is because chains sometimes use different public key derivation paths from other chains, and thus wallets aggregate default addresses that are associated with different public keys in the same wallet. Requiring an explicit opt-in per chain prevents the user from using an address for a profile that the profile holder does not expect to use. Although it is still safe to use any of the public keys controlled by the wallet/unique private key (since a user can manually add a new derivation path to their wallet), it would lead to unexpected behavior to use the undesired public key for a chain. Thus, the user needs to explicitly choose which public key (and thus which address) to resolve their name to on each chain. This is called a chain preference.

The nonce from the latest GET request must be provided to prevent replay attacks.

The signature is derived by calling OfflineAminoSigner's signAmino function with the signDoc argument generated using makeSignDoc from the @cosmjs/amino package. This can be seen in the signature verification code located in src/index.ts around line 20.

POST /unregister

The expected request body type is:

type UnregisterPublicKeyRequest = {
  data: {
    publicKeys: {
      type: string
      hex: string
    }[]
    auth: {
      type: string;
      nonce: number;
      chainId: string;
      chainFeeDenom: string;
      chainBech32Prefix: string;
      publicKeyType: string;
      publicKeyHex: string;
    };
  };
  signature: string;
};

The returned type is:

type UnregisterPublicKeyResponse = {
  success: true;
};

or in the case of an error:

type UnregisterPublicKeyResponse = {
  error: string;
};

This route lets the user unregister public keys from their profile.

The nonce from the latest GET request must be provided to prevent replay attacks.

The signature is derived by calling OfflineAminoSigner's signAmino function with the signDoc argument generated using makeSignDoc from the @cosmjs/amino package. This can be seen in the signature verification code located in src/index.ts around line 20.

GET /search/:chainId/:namePrefix

chainId is the chain ID of the chain, such as juno-1 or stargaze-1. It will transform the public keys associated with names to the bech32 addresses for the given chain.

namePrefix is the prefix of the name to search for. It is case-insensitive.

The returned type is:

type SearchProfilesResponse = {
  profiles: Array<{
    uuid: string | null;
    publicKey: {
      type: string;
      hex: string;
    };
    address: string;
    name: string | null;
    nft: {
      chainId: string;
      collectionAddress: string;
      tokenId: string;
      imageUrl: string;
    } | null;
  }>;
};

or in the case of an error:

type SearchProfilesResponse = {
  error: string;
};

This route lets you search for profiles with names that have a given prefix. It returns the top 5 results.

GET /resolve/:chainId/:name

chainId is the chain ID, such as juno-1 or stargaze-1. It will transform the public keys associated with names to the bech32 address for the given chain.

name is the name to resolve. It is case-insensitive.

The returned type is:

type ResolveProfileResponse = {
  resolved: {
    uuid: string;
    publicKey: {
      type: string;
      hex: string;
    };
    address: string;
    name: string | null;
    nft: {
      chainId: string;
      collectionAddress: string;
      tokenId: string;
      imageUrl: string;
    } | null;
  } | null;
};

or in the case of an error:

type ResolveProfileResponse = {
  error: string;
};

This route lets you resolve a profile from its name.

pfpk's People

Contributors

noahsaso avatar jakehartnell avatar

Stargazers

SIRIUS | PUPMØS avatar Interchain Adair avatar Junho Yeo avatar zeke avatar

Watchers

 avatar

pfpk's Issues

Async-ify NFT ownership verification and image retrieval

Right now, NFT ownership is validated and the image is fetched on every profile query. This is redundant and slow.

Let's move both of those processes elsewhere, out of the profile query itself.

One solution is to move NFT ownership and NFT image fetching to our Snapper instance, which will cache the requests and handle updating them on the specified interval automatically.

Alternatively, to avoid external dependencies, we can build a system right into pfpk:

  • store image on NFT update
  • create route that verifies NFT ownership and removes it from the profile if no longer owned by the wallet
  • asynchronously fire that request whenever a profile is queried, optimistically returning the NFT but updating it in the background for next time

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