I wrote a little Javascript program to print some minimal protobufs to base64.

Result for a multisig output:

Ik0SSRJHUiECpm1rIsOcaCf/CqL/YeqNXgcnQzb/+hfaawdi9u46xhEhAgoJfDU3M5mr++dfBG2gO5DiBiBVkVmLzjSLf26HEINeUq4YAA

Result for a regular pay to address output:

Ih8SGxIZdqkU4nFAzWDBp6LEi4uXgddL65H11nGIrBgA

That is without any expiry time, which you'd want in practice. For an HD-iterating payment request you'd also need a few flags and fields, but a well designed protocol should only add a handful of bytes. The above strings are, I think, short enough to set as a username in a mining program so the general UX of Eligius can be maintained.

How to generate them? That's not too hard. Building specialised one-off SPV wallets is quite easy these days with bitcoinj, there's a template app and a video tutorial on how to customise it available here:

https://bitcoinj.github.io/simple-gui-wallet

You can just copy/paste the code into a new directory and start modifying it. The final result is like Lighthouse - you run a program and get an EXE installer or MSI for Windows, a DMG for MacOS and a .deb for Linux (though a tarball would work just as well). 

So producing a little GUI that lets you build a base64 encoded payment protocol request that supports HD iteration for one or more keys, along with a little BIP70 extension that says "although this output is a multisig output, please actually create a p2sh output", would make a nice starter project for someone. It could also then act as a watching wallet and plot a graph of mining payouts over time, for example.

If anyone wants to take this on let me know. I can help out with the final code signing steps to make Gatekeeper/Internet Explorer happy so don't worry about distribution.


On Thu, Dec 4, 2014 at 6:25 PM, William Swanson <swansontec@gmail.com> wrote:
Yes. A few of us over here in San Diego actually started working on a
format like this a few months ago, but it's been on the back burner
for a while.

Our motivation was to come up with a shared HD wallet format. Say I
would like create a 2-of-3 multisig wallet using my phone, PC, and
hardware key fob. All three devices would presumably be running
different wallet software, so we need some sort of standardized HD
multisig chain-description format that all three wallets can
understand. That way, regardless of their other differences, the
wallets can at least agree on how to generate new addresses.

Of course, once you share this chain-description file with a third
party, they too can generate addresses out of the wallet. This can be
used for auditing (like for charities), for receive-only wallets (like
a merchant kiosk), and for recurring payments. The recurring payment
case is a little problematic, since you need to trust the payee with
your privacy. I imagine this would only be useful for payouts you
manage yourself, like a mining pool, and not something you share with
the general public.

Our format is very similar to yours. We have a script template, just
like you do, but we describe the HD chains in a separate section
rather than in-line with the script. The script template only comes
into being once the chains have been gathered together into one place,
so the chain descriptions need to stand alone.

Unfortunately, we still have a lot of details to work through before
we have a concrete proposal that's ready for this mailing list.
Perhaps we can work together to come up with something.

-William

On Thu, Dec 4, 2014 at 7:42 AM, Luke Dashjr <luke@dashjr.org> wrote:
> Is anyone working on a serialisation format to convey P2SH HD chains? For
> example, to give someone who wants to make recurring payments a single token
> that can be used to generate many P2SH addresses paying to a multisig script.
>
> I'm thinking of something along the lines of a simple series of tokens, each
> indicating either a HD chain or literal script content. For all HD chains in
> the data, a child key would be generated based on the payment number, and all
> tokens concatenated to form the P2SH serialised script. Eg, for a simple 2-
> of-2, you would do something like this:
>     literal(OP_2) HDChain HDChain literal(OP_2 OP_CHECKMULTISIG)
> Does this sufficiently cover all reasonable use cases?
>
> Luke

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