4.4 KiB
Using monero-lws-admin
The monero-lws-admin
executable is used to administer the database used by
monero-lws-daemon
. Any number of monero-lws-admin
instances can run
concurrently with a single monero-lws-daemon
instance on the same database.
Administration is necessary to authorize new accounts and rescan requests
submitted from the REST API. The admin executable can also be used to list
the contents of the LMDB file for debugging purposes.
Basics
The monero-lws-admin
utility is structured around command-line arguments with
JSON responses printed to stdout
. Each administration command takes arguments
by position - the design makes it potentially compatible with a JSON or MsgPack
array (as used in JSON-RPC, etc). Every available administration command and
required+optional arguments are listed when the --help
flag is given to the
executable.
The jq
utility is recommended if using
monero-lws-admin
in a shell environment. The jq
program can be used for
indenting the output to make it more readable, and can be used to
search+filter the JSON output from the command.
Examples
List every active Monero address on a newline:
monero-lws-admin list_accounts | jq -r '.active | .[] | .address'
Auto-accept every pending account creation request:
monero-lws-admin accept_requests create $(monero-lws-admin list_requests | jq -j '.create? | .[]? | .address?+" "')
Debugging
monero-lws-admin
has a debug mode that dumps everything stored in the
database, except the blockchain hashes are always truncated and viewkeys are
omitted by default (a command-line flag can enable viewkey output). Most of
the array outputs are sorted to accelerate jq
filtering and search queries.
Indexes
- blocks_by_id - array of objects sorted by block height.
- accounts_by_status,id - A single object where account status names are keys. Each value is an array of objects sorted by account id.
- accounts_by_address - A single object where account addresses are keys.
Each value is an object containing the status and account id for the account
for lookup in
accounts_by_status,id
. The majority of account lookups should be done by this id (an integer). - accounts_by_height,id - An array of objects sorted by block height. These objects contain another array of objects sorted by account id.
- outputs_by_account_id,block_id,tx_hash,output_id - An object where keys are account ids. Each value is an array of objects sorted by block height, transaction hash, then by output number.
- spends_by_account_id,block_id,tx_hash,image - An object where keys are account ids. Each value is an array of objects sorted by block height, transaction hash, then by key image.
- requests_by_type,address - An object where keys are request type, and each value is an array of objects sorted by address.
Examples
List every key-image associated with every account:
monenero-lws-admin debug_database | jq '."spends_by_account_id,block_id,tx_hash,output_id" | map_values([.[] | .image])'
will output something like:
{"1":["image1", "image2",...],"2":["image1","image2"...],...}
List every account that received XMR in a given transaction hash:
monenero-lws-admin debug_database | jq '."outputs_by_account_id,block_id,tx_hash,output_id" | map_values(select([.[] | .tx_hash == "hash"] | any)) | keys'
will output somethng like:
{"1",...}
Add total received XMR for every account:
monenero-lws-admin debug_database | jq '."outputs_by_account_id,block_id,tx_hash,output_id" | map_values([.[] | .amount] | add)'
will output something like:
{"1":6346,"2":45646}
Extending Administration in monero-lws
JSON via stdin
Some commands take sensitive information such as private view keys, and
therefore reading arguments from stdin
via JSON array would also be useful for
those situations. This should be a relatively straightforward adaptation given
the design of the positional arguments.
Administration via ZeroMQ
The LMDB database does account lookups by view-public only, so that CurveZMQ (which uses curve25519) can be used to authenticate an administration account without additional protocol overhead. The parameters to administration commands can be sent via JSON or MsgPack array since the functions already use positional arguments.