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			8.9 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
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			209 lines
		
	
	
		
			8.9 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Go
		
	
	
	
	
	
| // Copyright 2015 The go-ethereum Authors
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| // This file is part of the go-ethereum library.
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| //
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| // The go-ethereum library is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
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| // it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by
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| // the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
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| // (at your option) any later version.
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| //
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| // The go-ethereum library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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| // but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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| // MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
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| // GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
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| //
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| // You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
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| // along with the go-ethereum library. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
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| 
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| package secp256k1
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| 
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| /*
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| <HaltingState> sipa, int secp256k1_ecdsa_pubkey_create(unsigned char *pubkey, int *pubkeylen, const unsigned char *seckey, int compressed);
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| <HaltingState> is that how i generate private/public keys?
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| <sipa> HaltingState: you pass in a random 32-byte string as seckey
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| <sipa> HaltingState: if it is valid, the corresponding pubkey is put in pubkey
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| <sipa> and true is returned
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| <sipa> otherwise, false is returned
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| <sipa> around 1 in 2^128 32-byte strings are invalid, so the odds of even ever seeing one is extremely rare
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| 
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| <sipa> private keys are mathematically numbers
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| <sipa> each has a corresponding point on the curve as public key
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| <sipa> a private key is just a number
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| <sipa> a public key is a point with x/y coordinates
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| <sipa> almost every 256-bit number is a valid private key (one with a point on the curve corresponding to it)
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| <sipa> HaltingState: ok?
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| 
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| <sipa> more than half of random points are not on the curve
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| <sipa> and actually, it is less than  the square root, not less than half, sorry :)
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| !!!
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| <sipa> a private key is a NUMBER
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| <sipa> a public key is a POINT
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| <gmaxwell> half the x,y values in the field are not on the curve, a private key is an integer.
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| 
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| <sipa> HaltingState: yes, n,q = private keys; N,Q = corresponding public keys (N=n*G, Q=q*G); then it follows that n*Q = n*q*G = q*n*G = q*N
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| <sipa> that's the reason ECDH works
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| <sipa> multiplication is associative and commutativ
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| */
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| 
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| /*
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| <HaltingState> sipa, ok; i am doing compact signatures and I want to know; can someone change the signature to get another valid signature for same message without the private key
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| <HaltingState> because i know they can do that for the normal 72 byte signatures that openssl was putting out
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| <sipa> HaltingState: if you don't enforce non-malleability, yes
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| <sipa> HaltingState: if you force the highest bit of t
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| 
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| <sipa> it _creates_ signatures that already satisfy that condition
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| <sipa> but it will accept ones that don't
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| <sipa> maybe i should change that, and be strict
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| <HaltingState> yes; i want some way to know signature is valid but fails malleability
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| <sipa> well if the highest bit of S is 1, you can take its complement
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| <sipa> and end up with a valid signature
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| <sipa> that is canonical
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| */
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| 
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| /*
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| 
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| <HaltingState> sipa, I am signing messages and highest bit of the compact signature is 1!!!
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| <HaltingState>  if (b & 0x80) == 0x80 {
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| <HaltingState>   log.Panic("b= %v b2= %v \n", b, b&0x80)
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| <HaltingState>  }
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| <sipa> what bit?
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| * Pengoo has quit (Ping timeout: 272 seconds)
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| <HaltingState> the highest bit of the first byte of signature
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| <sipa> it's the highest bit of S
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| <sipa> so the 32nd byte
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| <HaltingState> wtf
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| 
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| */
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| 
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| /*
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|  For instance, nonces are used in HTTP digest access authentication to calculate an MD5 digest
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|  of the password. The nonces are different each time the 401 authentication challenge
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|  response code is presented, thus making replay attacks virtually impossible.
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| 
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| can verify client/server match without sending password over network
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| */
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| 
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| /*
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| <hanihani> one thing I dont get about armory for instance,
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| is how the hot-wallet can generate new addresses without
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| knowing the master key
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| */
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| 
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| /*
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| <HaltingState> i am yelling at the telehash people for using secp256r1
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| instead of secp256k1; they thing r1 is "more secure" despite fact that
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| there is no implementation that works and wrapping it is now taking
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| up massive time, lol
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| <gmaxwell> ...
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| 
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| <gmaxwell> You know that the *r curves are selected via an undisclosed
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| secret process, right?
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| <gmaxwell> HaltingState: telehash is offtopic for this channel.
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| */
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| /*
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|  For instance, nonces are used in HTTP digest access authentication to calculate an MD5 digest
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|  of the password. The nonces are different each time the 401 authentication challenge
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|  response code is presented, thus making replay attacks virtually impossible.
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| 
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| can verify client/server match without sending password over network
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| */
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| 
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| /*
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| void secp256k1_start(void);
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| void secp256k1_stop(void);
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| 
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|  * Verify an ECDSA signature.
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|  *  Returns: 1: correct signature
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|  *           0: incorrect signature
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|  *          -1: invalid public key
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|  *          -2: invalid signature
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|  *
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| int secp256k1_ecdsa_verify(const unsigned char *msg, int msglen,
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|                            const unsigned char *sig, int siglen,
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|                            const unsigned char *pubkey, int pubkeylen);
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| 
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| http://www.nilsschneider.net/2013/01/28/recovering-bitcoin-private-keys.html
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| 
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| Why did this work? ECDSA requires a random number for each signature. If this random
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| number is ever used twice with the same private key it can be recovered.
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| This transaction was generated by a hardware bitcoin wallet using a pseudo-random number
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| generator that was returning the same “random” number every time.
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| 
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| Nonce is 32 bytes?
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| 
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|  * Create an ECDSA signature.
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|  *  Returns: 1: signature created
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|  *           0: nonce invalid, try another one
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|  *  In:      msg:    the message being signed
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|  *           msglen: the length of the message being signed
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|  *           seckey: pointer to a 32-byte secret key (assumed to be valid)
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|  *           nonce:  pointer to a 32-byte nonce (generated with a cryptographic PRNG)
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|  *  Out:     sig:    pointer to a 72-byte array where the signature will be placed.
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|  *           siglen: pointer to an int, which will be updated to the signature length (<=72).
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|  *
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| int secp256k1_ecdsa_sign(const unsigned char *msg, int msglen,
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|                          unsigned char *sig, int *siglen,
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|                          const unsigned char *seckey,
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|                          const unsigned char *nonce);
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| 
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| 
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|  * Create a compact ECDSA signature (64 byte + recovery id).
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|  *  Returns: 1: signature created
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|  *           0: nonce invalid, try another one
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|  *  In:      msg:    the message being signed
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|  *           msglen: the length of the message being signed
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|  *           seckey: pointer to a 32-byte secret key (assumed to be valid)
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|  *           nonce:  pointer to a 32-byte nonce (generated with a cryptographic PRNG)
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|  *  Out:     sig:    pointer to a 64-byte array where the signature will be placed.
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|  *           recid:  pointer to an int, which will be updated to contain the recovery id.
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|  *
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| int secp256k1_ecdsa_sign_compact(const unsigned char *msg, int msglen,
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|                                  unsigned char *sig64,
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|                                  const unsigned char *seckey,
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|                                  const unsigned char *nonce,
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|                                  int *recid);
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| 
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|  * Recover an ECDSA public key from a compact signature.
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|  *  Returns: 1: public key succesfully recovered (which guarantees a correct signature).
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|  *           0: otherwise.
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|  *  In:      msg:        the message assumed to be signed
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|  *           msglen:     the length of the message
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|  *           compressed: whether to recover a compressed or uncompressed pubkey
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|  *           recid:      the recovery id (as returned by ecdsa_sign_compact)
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|  *  Out:     pubkey:     pointer to a 33 or 65 byte array to put the pubkey.
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|  *           pubkeylen:  pointer to an int that will contain the pubkey length.
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|  *
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| 
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| recovery id is between 0 and 3
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| 
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| int secp256k1_ecdsa_recover_compact(const unsigned char *msg, int msglen,
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|                                     const unsigned char *sig64,
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|                                     unsigned char *pubkey, int *pubkeylen,
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|                                     int compressed, int recid);
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| 
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| 
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|  * Verify an ECDSA secret key.
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|  *  Returns: 1: secret key is valid
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|  *           0: secret key is invalid
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|  *  In:      seckey: pointer to a 32-byte secret key
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|  *
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| int secp256k1_ecdsa_seckey_verify(const unsigned char *seckey);
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| 
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| ** Just validate a public key.
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|  *  Returns: 1: valid public key
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|  *           0: invalid public key
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|  *
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| int secp256k1_ecdsa_pubkey_verify(const unsigned char *pubkey, int pubkeylen);
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| 
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| ** Compute the public key for a secret key.
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|  *  In:     compressed: whether the computed public key should be compressed
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|  *          seckey:     pointer to a 32-byte private key.
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|  *  Out:    pubkey:     pointer to a 33-byte (if compressed) or 65-byte (if uncompressed)
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|  *                      area to store the public key.
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|  *          pubkeylen:  pointer to int that will be updated to contains the pubkey's
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|  *                      length.
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|  *  Returns: 1: secret was valid, public key stores
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|  *           0: secret was invalid, try again.
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|  *
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| int secp256k1_ecdsa_pubkey_create(unsigned char *pubkey, int *pubkeylen, const unsigned char *seckey, int compressed);
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| */
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