1e0d9254ee | ||
---|---|---|
tests | ||
.gitignore | ||
README.md | ||
README_es.md | ||
did.py | ||
requirements-test.txt | ||
requirements.txt | ||
setup.py | ||
sign.py | ||
sign_vc.py | ||
sign_vp.py | ||
templates.py | ||
utils.py | ||
verify.py | ||
verify_vc.py | ||
verify_vp.py |
README.md
PyVckit
PyVckit is a library for:
- sign verifiable credentials
- verify verifiable credentials
- generate verifiable presentations
- verify verifiable submissions
This library is strongly inspired by SpruceId didkit and aims to maintain compatibility with it.
For now the supported cryptography is only EdDSA with a signature Ed25519Signature2018.
Install
For now the installation is from the repository:
python -m venv env
source env/bin/activate
git clone https://gitea.pangea.org/ereuse/pyvckit.git
cd pyvckit
pip install -r requirements.txt
pip install -e .
Cli
The mode of use under the command line would be the following:
generate a key pair:
python did.py -n keys > keypair.json
generate a did identifier:
did key
python did.py -n did -k keypair.json
did web
python did.py -n did -k keypair.json -u https://localhost/user1/dids/
generate an example signed credential:
An example of a credential is generated, which is the one that appears in the credential_tmpl template in the file templates.py
python sign_vc.py -k keypair.json > credential_signed.json
verify a signed credential:
python verify_vc.py credential_signed.json
generate a verifiable presentation:
python sign_vp.py -k keypair.json -c credential_signed.json > presentation_signed.json
verify a verifiable presentation:
python verify_vp.py presentation_signed.json
creation of did document:
This command will create a json document and a url path where to place this document. The did must be a web did. This document is an example and in production it must be adapted to contain the revoked verifiable credentials.
python did.py -k keypair.json -g did:web:localhost:did-registry:z6MkiNc8xqJLcG7QR1wzD9HPs5oPQEaWNcVf92QsbppNiB7C
Use as a library
In the tests you can find examples of use. Now I will explain the usual cases
generate a key pair:
from pyvckit.did import generate_keys
key = generate_keys()
generate a did identifier:
did key
from pyvckit.did import generate_keys, generate_did
key = generate_keys()
did = generate_did(key)
did web
from pyvckit.did import generate_keys, generate_did
key = generate_keys()
url = "https://localhost/user1/dids/"
did = generate_did(key, url)
generate a signed credential:
Assuming credential is a valid credential. credential is a string variable
from pyvckit.did import generate_keys, generate_did, get_signing_key
from pyvckit.sign_vc import sign
key = generate_keys()
did = generate_did(key)
signing_key = get_signing_key(key)
vc = sign(credential, signing_key, did)
verify a signed credential:
Assuming vc is a properly signed verifiable credential
import json
from pyvckit.verify import verify_vc
verified = verify_vc(json.dumps(vc))
generate a verifiable presentation:
from pyvckit.did import generate_keys, generate_did, get_signing_key
from pyvckit.sign_vp import sign_vp
holder_key = generate_keys()
holder_did = generate_did(holder_key)
holder_signing_key = get_signing_key(holder_key)
vp = sign_vp(holder_signing_key, holder_did, vc_string)
verify a verifiable presentation:
from pyvckit.verify_vp import verify_vp
verified = verify_vp(json.dumps(vp))
creation of did document:
This command will create a json document and a url path where to place this document. The did must be a web did. This document is an example and in production it must be adapted to contain the revoked verifiable credentials.
from pyvckit.did import generate_keys, generate_did, gen_did_document
key = generate_keys()
url = "https://localhost/did-registry"
did = generate_did(key, url)
definitive_url, document = gen_did_document(did, key)