A fork of libsecp256k1 with support for advanced and experimental features such as Confidential Assets and MuSig2
Added features:
- Experimental module for ECDSA adaptor signatures.
- Experimental module for ECDSA sign-to-contract.
- Experimental module for MuSig2.
- Experimental module for Confidential Assets (Pedersen commitments, range proofs, and surjection proofs).
- Experimental module for Bulletproofs++ range proofs.
- Experimental module for address whitelisting.
Experimental features are made available for testing and review by the community. The APIs of these features should not be considered stable.
libsecp256k1-zkp is built using autotools:
$ ./autogen.sh
$ ./configure
$ make
$ make check # run the test suite
$ sudo make install # optional
To compile optional modules (such as Schnorr signatures), you need to run ./configure
with additional flags (such as --enable-module-schnorrsig
). Run ./configure --help
to see the full list of available flags. For experimental modules, you will also need --enable-experimental
as well as a flag for each individual module, e.g. --enable-module-musig
.
Usage examples can be found in the examples directory. To compile them you need to configure with --enable-examples
.
To compile the Schnorr signature, ECDH and MuSig examples, you need to enable the corresponding module by providing a flag to the configure
script, for example --enable-module-schnorrsig
.
This library aims to have full coverage of the reachable lines and branches.
To create a test coverage report, configure with --enable-coverage
(use of GCC is necessary):
$ ./configure --enable-coverage
Run the tests:
$ make check
To create a report, gcovr
is recommended, as it includes branch coverage reporting:
$ gcovr --exclude 'src/bench*' --print-summary
To create a HTML report with coloured and annotated source code:
$ mkdir -p coverage
$ gcovr --exclude 'src/bench*' --html --html-details -o coverage/coverage.html
If configured with --enable-benchmark
(which is the default), binaries for benchmarking the libsecp256k1-zkp functions will be present in the root directory after the build.
To print the benchmark result to the command line:
$ ./bench_name
To create a CSV file for the benchmark result :
$ ./bench_name | sed '2d;s/ \{1,\}//g' > bench_name.csv
See SECURITY.md