Wallet connects to a [full node](/interacting/monerod-reference) to scan the blockchain for your transaction outputs and to send your transactions out to the network.
| `--log-level <arg>` | `0-4` with `0` being minimal logging and `4` being full tracing. Defaults to `0`. These are general presets and do not directly map to severity levels. For example, even with minimal `0`, you may see some most important `INFO` entries.
| `--max-log-file-size <arg>` | Soft limit in bytes for the log file (=104850000 by default, which is just under 100MB). Once log file grows past that limit, monero creates the next log file with a UTC timestamp postfix `-YYYY-MM-DD-HH-MM-SS`.<br><br>In production deployments, you would probably prefer to use established solutions like logrotate instead. In that case, set `--max-log-file-size 0` to prevent monero from managing the log files.
| `--max-log-files <arg>` | Limit on the number of log files (=50 by default). The oldest log files are removed. In production deployments, you would probably prefer to use established solutions like logrotate instead.
#### Full node connection
Wallet depends on a full node for all non-local operations. The following options define how to connect to [`monerod`](/interacting/monerod-reference):
| `--daemon-host <arg>` | Use `monerod` instance at host `<arg>` instead of localhost.
| `--daemon-port <arg>` | Use `monerod` instance at port `<arg>` instead of 18081.
| `--daemon-login <arg>` | Specify `username[:password]` for `monerod` RPC API. It is based on HTTP Basic Auth. Mind that connections are by default unencrypted. Authentication only makes sense if you establish a secure connection (maybe via Tor, or SSH tunneling, or reverse proxy w/ TLS).
| `--trusted-daemon` | Enable commands and behaviors which rely on `monerod` instance being trusted. Default for localhost connection. The trust in this context concerns preserving your privacy. Only use this flag if you do control `monerod`. Trusted daemon allows for commands like `rescan_spent`, `start_mining`, `import_key_images` and behaviors like **not** warning about potential attack on transient problems with transaction sending.
| `--untrusted-daemon` | Disable commands and behaviors which rely on `monerod` instance being trusted. Default for a non-localhost connections. See `--trusted-daemon` for more details.
| `--do-not-relay` | The newly created transaction will not be relayed to the Monero network. Instead it will be dumped to a file in a raw hexadecimal format. Useful if you want to push the transaction through a gateway like [https://xmrchain.net/rawtx](https://xmrchain.net/rawtx). This may be easier to use over Tor than Monero wallet.
| `--allow-mismatched-daemon-version` | Allow communicating with `monerod` that uses a different RPC version.
| `--generate-new-wallet <arg>` | Create a new Monero wallet and save it to `<arg>` file. You will be asked for a password. The password is used to encrypt the wallet file but it is unrelated to your master spend key or mnemonic seed. Generate a very strong password with your password manager (~256 bits of entropy). Example:<br><br>`./monero-wallet-cli --stagenet --generate-new-wallet $HOME/.bitmonero/stagenet/wallets/MoneroExampleStagenetWallet`
| `--kdf-rounds <arg>` | Concerns encrypting the wallet file. The wallet file is encrypted with ChaCha stream cipher. The encryption key is derived from the user supplied password by hashing the password with CryptoNight. This option defines how many times the CryptoNight hashing will be applied. The default is `1` round of hashing. <br><br>Note this is **unrelated** to spend key generation. <br><br>The more rounds the longer you will wait to open the wallet or send transaction. But also the attacker will have it harder to brute force your wallet password. <br><br>**Note:** You will have to remember and provide the same `kdf-rounds` on every wallet access!<br><br>**Recommendation:** Do not change the default value. Instead generate a very strong wallet password with your password manager (256 bits of entropy).
| `--wallet-file <arg>` | Open existing wallet. Example: <br/><br/>`./monero-wallet-cli --stagenet --wallet-file $HOME/.bitmonero/stagenet/wallets/MoneroExampleStagenetWallet` <br><br/>This is only for wallet files generated with `monero-wallet-cli`, `monero-wallet-gui`, or `monero-wallet-rpc` tools. If you have other type of wallet then see importing options.
| `--password <arg>` | Provide wallet password as a parameter instead of interactively. Remember to escape/quote as needed. <br><br>**Not recommended** because the password will remain in your command history and will also be visible in the process table. For automation prefer `--password-file`. <br><br>The option also works in combination with `--generate-new-wallet`.
| `--password-file <arg>` | Provide password as a file in stead of interactively. Trailing `\n` are discarded when reading the password file. <br><br>Prefer this over `--password` if you automate wallet access. Make sure the password file is meaningfully separated from the wallet file. Otherwise it provides no security benefit. <br><br>The option also works in combination with `--generate-new-wallet`.
| `--generate-from-device <arg>` | Restore/generate a special wallet to work with a **hardware device** like [Ledger](https://www.ledger.com/) or [Trezor](https://trezor.io/) and save it to `<arg>` file. <br><br>:warning: **Note: `--subaddress-lookahead` can only be set during wallet creation or restore**<br><br>Example: <br>`./monero-wallet-cli --stagenet --generate-from-device MoneroExampleDeviceWallet --subaddress-lookahead 5:20` <br><br>This is a one-time action. Next time you simply [open the wallet](#open-existing-wallet).<br><br>By default the command expects Ledger hardware connected. For Trezor hardware add `--hw-device Trezor` (expected ~May 2019).<br><br>It will take **up to 25 minutes** with default settings. This is because hardware devices are slow to pre-generate subaddresses. To mitigate use low `--subaddress-lookahead 5:20`. <br><br>The local wallet will not have private spend key and will not be able to spend on its own. It serves as a user interface and a bridge for low-power hardware devices. Transaction signing with a private spend key always happens on the hardware device. <br><br>See the [complete guide to hardware wallet setup](https://www.reddit.com/r/Monero/comments/8op6cp/ledger_cli_guides_requires_cli_v01220/).
| `--generate-from-view-key <arg>` | Restore a view-only version of the wallet to track incoming transactions and save it to `<arg>` file. The wallet is created based on a **secret view key** and **standard address**. The secret view key is meant to be pasted as hexadecimal.
| `--generate-from-spend-key <arg>`| Restore a wallet from **secret spend key** and save it to `<arg>` file. The secret spend key is meant to be pasted as hexadecimal.
| `--restore-deterministic-wallet` | Restore a wallet from **secret mnemonic seed**. Use this to restore from your 25 words backup. <br><br>You will be asked for a password to encrypt the wallet file (once restored). Note this is **not** a passphrase to mnemonic seed. Mnemonic seeds generated by Monero official wallets are naked.
| `--restore-height <arg>` | Only scan for transactions later than specific blockchain height. The default is `0`. Raising the value makes wallet restoration **radically faster**. The optimal value should match the day you originally created the wallet (but cannot be later). The mapping between the block height and date/time is available on block explorers like [https://xmrchain.net](https://xmrchain.net/). For instance, if you created the wallet in 2019+ use `1730000`.
| `--generate-from-multisig-keys <arg>` | Create a standard wallet from multisig keys. This is useful to combine all multisig secret keys back into the standard wallet (when you no longer need the multisig). The wallet will then have control of the funds. It only supports providing all secret keys even if the multisig scheme allowed for less (only `N/N` not `N/M`).
| `--restore-multisig-wallet` | Restore a multisig wallet from **secret seed** that was earlier exported with the `seed` interactive command. This only restores your part of the wallet. Other multisig participants will still be necessary to sign the transaction.
| `--config-file <arg>` | Full path to the [configuration file](/interacting/monero-config-file). Note this should be a separate config than `monerod` uses because these tools accept different set of options.
| `--subaddress-lookahead <arg>` | :warning: **Note: This flag can only be set during wallet creation or restore**<br><br>Accepts `m:n`, by default `50:200`. The first value is the number of accounts and the second value is the number of subaddresses per account. <br><br>The wallet will not check for payments to subaddresses further than `n` away from the last received payment. This can happen if you generated unique subaddresses for `n` clients in a row but none of them paid. <br><br>On the other hand the more subaddresses you set to look ahead, the longer it takes to create your wallet, because they must be pre-computed. This is normally not a concern, except for hardware wallets. On the Ledger the default value of `50:200` can take over 20 minutes (one time on wallet creation)!
| `--mnemonic-language <arg>` | Language for mnemonic seed words. One of `english`, `english_old`, `esperanto`, `french`, `german`, `italian`, `japanese`, `lojban`, `portuguese`, `russian`, `spanish`. <br><br>It might be a good idea to stick to default English which is by far the most popular and well tested. It also avoids potential non-ASCII characters pitfalls or bugs.
| `--use-english-language-names` | If your display freezes, exit blind with ^C, then run again with `--use-english-language-names`. This can happen when Monero prompts for a language displaying language names in their natives alphabets.
| `--non-deterministic` | Generate legacy non-deterministic wallet. The view key will **not** be derived from the spend key. You would also have to backup the *.keys. To restore non-deterministic wallet (standard address) use `--generate-from-keys`. To restore fully you will need the *.keys file.
| `--generate-from-keys <arg>` | Restore legacy non-deterministic wallet by providing both spend and view keys and the standard address.
| `--shared-ringdb-dir <arg>` | Set shared ring database path. [No longer worthwhile](https://www.reddit.com/r/Monero/comments/9rtnpx/are_there_any_updated_blackball_databases/).
| `--create-address-file` | Has no effect. The `*.address.txt` file is created regardless of this option.
| `--electrum-seed <arg>` | Provide mnemonic seed as a commandline option for `--restore-deterministic-wallet` instead of interactively. This is not recommended b/c the seed will be saved in your command history and also visible in the process list.
`refresh` - force refresh the balance and transactions by pulling latest blocks from the full node; this is often useful because auto-refresh only kicks in once in 90 seconds
`show_transfers` - show all transactions on the current account; optionally provide a filter: `in` | `out` | `pending` | `failed` | `pool` | `coinbase`; optionally provide subaddress index for output selection
`incoming_transfers [available|unavailable] [verbose] [index=<N1>[,<N2>[,...]]]` - show the incoming transactions, all or filtered by availability and address index within current account; this will only show confirmed transactions; you will not see transactions awaiting in the mempool
`get_tx_note <txid>` - get a string note for transaction id
`export_transfers [in|out|all|pending|failed|pool|coinbase] [index=<N1>[,<N2>,...]] [<min_height> [<max_height>]] [output=<filepath>] [option=<with_keys>]` - exports a list of all transfer information to a CSV file. You can filter by type `[in|out|all|pending|failed|pool|coinbase]`, by index, by minimum and maximum block height, specify the output path for the CSV file, and optionally include the tx private keys (if available) with the export.
`encrypted_seed` - create mnemonic seed encrypted with the passphrase; you will need to remember or store the passphrase separately; restoring will not be possible without the passphrase
`sign <file>` -> `verify <filename> <address> <signature>` - prove ownership of the address; allows to verify the file was signed by the owner of specific Monero address
`export_outputs <file>` -> `import_outputs <file>` - helps with cold spending; export outputs from a view-wallet to the cold-wallet to make it aware of what had been sent to it
`mark_output_spent <amount>/<offset> | <filename> [add]` - "blackball"/mark an output known to be spent, so that it will no longer be selected as a decoy
`export_key_images <file>` -> `import_key_images <file>` - used to inform the view-only wallet about outgoing transactions so it can calculate the real balance; normally view-only wallets only learn about incoming transactions, not outgoing
`rescan_spent` - rescan the blockchain for spent outputs; sometimes, the wallet's idea of what outputs are spent and what outputs are not get out of sync with the blockchain. This can happen if you exit the wallet without saving after sending a tx, or if it crashes. This will look for the key images on the blockchain to make sure it's up to date.
### Cosmetics
`donate <amount>` - donate `<amount>` to development team