Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
144 lines (99 loc) · 4.15 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

144 lines (99 loc) · 4.15 KB

trezorlib

repology image

Python library and command-line client for communicating with Trezor Hardware Wallet.

See https://trezor.io for more information.

Install

Python Trezor tools require Python 3.5 or higher, and libusb 1.0. The easiest way to install it is with pip. The rest of this guide assumes you have a working pip; if not, you can refer to this guide.

On a typical system, you already have all you need. Install trezor with:

pip3 install trezor

On Windows, you also need to either install Trezor Bridge, or libusb and the appropriate drivers.

Firmware version requirements

Current trezorlib version supports Trezor One version 1.8.0 and up, and Trezor T version 2.1.0 and up.

For firmware versions below 1.8.0 and 2.1.0 respectively, the only supported operation is "upgrade firmware".

Trezor One with firmware older than 1.7.0 (including firmware-less out-of-the-box units) will not be recognized, unless you install HIDAPI support (see below).

Installation options

  • Firmware-less Trezor One: If you are setting up a brand new Trezor One without firmware, you will need HIDAPI support. On Linux, you will need the following packages (or their equivalents) as prerequisites: python3-dev, cython3, libusb-1.0-0-dev, libudev-dev.

    Install with:

    pip3 install trezor[hidapi]
  • Ethereum: To support Ethereum signing from command line, additional packages are needed. Install with:

    pip3 install trezor[ethereum]

To install both, use pip3 install trezor[hidapi,ethereum].

Distro packages

Check out Repology to see if your operating system has an up-to-date python-trezor package.

Installing latest version from GitHub

pip3 install "git+https://github.com/trezor/trezor-firmware#egg=trezor&subdirectory=python"

Running from source

Install the pipenv tool, checkout trezor-firmware from git, and enter the pipenv shell:

pip3 install pipenv
git clone https://github.com/trezor/trezor-firmware
cd trezor-firmware
pipenv sync
pipenv shell

In this environment, trezorlib and the trezorctl tool is running from the live sources, so your changes are immediately effective.

Command line client (trezorctl)

The included trezorctl python script can perform various tasks such as changing setting in the Trezor, signing transactions, retrieving account info and addresses. See the docs/ sub folder for detailed examples and options.

NOTE: An older version of the trezorctl command is available for Debian Stretch (and comes pre-installed on Tails OS).

Python Library

You can use this python library to interact with a Trezor and use its capabilities in your application. See examples here in the tools/ sub folder.

PIN Entering

When you are asked for PIN, you have to enter scrambled PIN. Follow the numbers shown on Trezor display and enter the their positions using the numeric keyboard mapping:

7 8 9
4 5 6
1 2 3

Example: your PIN is 1234 and Trezor is displaying the following:

2 8 3
5 4 6
7 9 1

You have to enter: 3795

Contributing

If you want to change protobuf or coin definitions, you will need to regenerate definitions in the python/ subdirectory.

First, make sure your submodules are up-to-date with:

git submodule update --init --recursive

Then, rebuild the protobuf messages by running, from the trezor-firmware top-level directory:

make gen

To get support for BTC-like coins, these steps are enough and no further changes to the library are necessary.