nsecbunkerd
Daemon to remotely sign nostr events using keys.
Easy setup via docker
To quickly install nsecbunkerd
via Docker just run:
Prepare your config directory
mkdir $HOME/.nsecbunker-config
Start nsecbunkerd
docker run -d --name nsecbunkerd -v $HOME/.nsecbunker-config:/app/config pablof7z/nsecbunkerd start --admin <your-npub>
docker exec -i nsecbunkerd npx prisma db push
Docker-compose
Edit docker-compose.yml
and add your nostrpublic key in command
directive, like start --admin npub1nftkhktqglvcsj5n4wetkpzxpy4e5x78wwj9y9p70ar9u5u8wh6qsxmzqs
And start the container
docker compose up -d
docker compose exec nsecbunker npx prisma db push
Get the connection string
docker exec nsecbunkerd cat /app/connection.txt
nsecBunker will give you a connection string like:
bunker://npub1tj2dmc4udvgafxxxxxxxrtgne8j8l6rgrnaykzc8sys9mzfcz@relay.nsecbunker.com
You can visit https://app.nsecbunker.com/ to administrate your nsecBunker remotely, or explore nsecbunkerd
's CLI
to find the options to add and approve keys from the CLI.
Hard setup:
(If you installed via docker you don't need to do any of this, skip to the Configure section)
Node.js v18 or newer is required.
git clone <nsecbunkerd-repo>
npm i
npm run build
npx prisma migrate deploy
Configure
Easy: Remote configuration
Using the connection string you saw before, you can go to https://app.nsecbunker.com and paste your connection string.
Note that ONLY the npub that you designated as an administrator when launching nsecBunker is able to control your nsecBunker. Even if someone sees your connection string, without access to your administrator keys, there's nothing they can do.
Hard: manual configuration
(If you are using remote configuration you don't need to do any of this)
Add your nsec to nsecBunker
Here you'll give nsecBunker your nsec. It will ask you for a passphrase to encrypt it on-disk. The name is an internal name you'll use to refer to this keypair. Choose anything that is useful to you.
npm run nsecbunkerd -- add --name <your-key-name>
Example
$ npm run nsecbunkerd -- add --name "Uncomfortable family"
nsecBunker uses a passphrase to encrypt your nsec when stored on-disk.
Every time you restart it, you will need to type in this password.
Enter a passphrase: <enter-your-passphrase-here>
Enter the nsec for Uncomfortable family: <copy-your-nsec-here>
nsecBunker generated an admin password for you:
***************************
You will need this to manage users of your keys.
Start
$ npm run nsecbunkerd start
Testing with nsecbunker-client
nsecbunker ships with a simple client that can request signatures from an nsecbunkerd:
nsecbunker-client sign <target-npub> "hi, I'm signing from the command line with my nsecbunkerd!"
OAuth-like provider
nsecBunker can run as an OAuth-like provider, which means it will allow new users to create accounts remotely from any compatible client.
To enable this you'll need to configure a few things on your nsecbunker.json
config file. In addition to the normal configuration:
{
"baseUrl": "https://....", // a public URL where this nsecBunker can be reached via HTTPS
"authPort": 3000, // Port number where the OAuth-like provider will listen
"domains": {
"your-domain-here": {
"nip05": "/your-nip05-nostr.json-file", // The location where NIP-05 entries to your domain are stored
"nip89": {
"profile": { // a kind:0-like profile
"name": "my cool nsecbunker instance", // The name of your nsecBunker instance
"about": "...",
},
"operator": "npub1l2vyh47mk2p0qlsku7hg0vn29faehy9hy34ygaclpn66ukqp3afqutajft", // (optional) npub of the operator of this nsecbunker
"relays": [ // list of relays where to publush the nip89 announcement
"https://relay.damus.io",
"https://pyramid.fiatjaf.com"
]
}
// Wallet configuration (optional)
"wallet": {
"lnbits": {
"url": "https://legend.lnbits.com", // The URL where your LNbits instance is running
"key": "your-lnbits-admin-key", // The admin key for your LNbits instance
"nostdressUrl": "http://localhost:5556" // The URL where your nostdress instance is running
}
}
}
}
}
With this configuration users will be able to:
- create a new key managed by your nsecbunker
- get an lnbits-based LN wallet
- get zapping capabilitiyes through nostdress
For this to work you'll need to run, in addition to nsecbunkerd
, an lnbits instance and a nostdress instance. Your LNBits needs to have the user manager extension enabled.
- TODO: Add NWC support
When booting up, the nsecbunkerd will publish a NIP-89 announcement (kind:31990
), which is the way clients find out about your nsecbunker.
When a bunker provides a wallet and zapping service (wallet
and nostdressUrl
are configured), it will add tags:
{
"tags": [
[ "f", "wallet" ],
[ "f", "zaps" ]
]
}
Authors
- pablof7z
- npub1l2vyh47mk2p0qlsku7hg0vn29faehy9hy34ygaclpn66ukqp3afqutajft
License
MIT