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eip title description author discussions-to status type category created requires
2255
Wallet Permissions System
An interface to restrict access to sensitive methods
Dan Finlay (@danfinlay), Erik Marks (@rekmarks), Gavin John (@Pandapip1)
Final
Standards Track
Interface
2019-08-22
1193

Abstract

This EIP adds two new wallet-namespaced RPC endpoints, wallet_getPermissions and wallet_requestPermissions, providing a standard interface for requesting and checking permissions.

Motivation

Wallets are responsible for mediating interactions between untrusted applications and users' keys through appropriate user consent. Today, wallets always prompt the user for every action. This provides security at the cost of substantial user friction. We believe that a single permissions request can achieve the same level of security with vastly improved UX.

The pattern of permissions requests (typically using Oauth2) is common around the web, making it a very familiar pattern:

Facebook Permissions

Log in With Apple

Many web3 applications today begin their sessions with a series of repetitive requests:

  • Reveal your wallet address to this site.
  • Switch to a preferred network.
  • Sign a cryptographic challenge.
  • Grant a token allowance to our contract.
  • Send a transaction to our contract.

Many of these (and possibly all), and many more (like decryption), could be generalized into a set of human-readable permissions prompts on the original sign-in screen, and additional permissions could be requested only as needed:

Sample prompt screenshot

Each of these permissions could be individually rejected, or even attenuated--adjusted to meet the user's terms (for example, a sign-in request could have a user-added expiration date, and a token allowance could be adjusted by the user when it is requested).

Specification

The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119.

This proposal adds two new methods to a wallet's web3 provider API: wallet_getPermissions and wallet_requestPermissions.

wallet_getPermissions

The wallet_getPermissions method is used for getting an array of current permissions (empty by default). It takes no parameters and returns an array of Permission objects.

wallet_getPermissions Returns

The format of the returned permissions MUST be an array of Permission objects, which are defined as follows:

interface Caveat {
  type: string;
  value: any;
}

interface Permission {
  invoker: string;
  parentCapability: string;
  caveats: Caveat[];
}

The invoker is a URI used to identify the source of the current dapp (e.g. https://your-site.com/). The term parentCapability refers to the method that is being permitted (e.g. eth_accounts). The caveats array represents the specific restrictions applied to the permitted method. The type of a Caveat is a string, and the value is an arbitrary JSON value. The value of a Caveat is only meaningful in the context of the type of the Caveat.

wallet_requestPermissions

The wallet_requestPermissions method is used for an application to request additional permissions. It MUST take a single parameter, a PermissionRequest object, and MUST return an array of RequestedPermission objects.

wallet_requestPermissions Parameters

The wallet_requestPermissions method takes a single parameter, a PermissionRequest object, which is defined as follows:

interface PermissionRequest {
  [methodName: string]: {
    [caveatName: string]: any;
  };
}

The methodName is the name of the method for which the permission is being requested (e.g. eth_accounts). The caveatName is the name of the caveat being applied to the permission (e.g. requiredMethods). The caveat value is the value of the caveat (e.g. ["signTypedData_v3"]).

Attempted requests to a restricted method must fail with an error, until a wallet_requestPermissions request is made and accepted by the user.

If a wallet_requestPermissions request is rejected, it should throw an error with a code value equal to 4001 as per EIP-1193.

wallet_requestPermissions Returns

The wallet_requestPermissions method returns an array of RequestedPermission objects, which are defined as follows:

interface RequestedPermission {
  parentCapability: string;
  date?: number;
}

The parentCapability is the name of the method for which the permission is being requested (e.g. eth_accounts). The date is the timestamp of the request, in Unix time, and is optional.

Rationale

While the current model of getting user consent on a per-action basis has high security, there are huge usability gains to be had bo getting more general user consent which can cover broad categories of usage, which can be expressed in a more human-readable way. This pattern has a variety of benefits to offer different functions within a web3 wallet.

The requestPermissions method can be expanded to include other options related to the requested permissions, for example, sites could request accounts with specific abilities. For example, a website like an exchange that requires signTypedData_v3 (which is not supported by some hardware wallets), might want to specify that requirement. This would allow wallets to display only compatible accounts, while preserving the user's privacy and choice regarding how they are storing their keys.

Test Cases

Requesting permissions

The following example should prompt the user to approve the eth_accounts permission, and return the permission object if approved.

provider.request({
  method: 'requestPermissions',
  params: [
    {
      'eth_accounts': {
        requiredMethods: ['signTypedData_v3']
      }
    }
  ]
});

Getting permissions

The following example should return the current permissions object.

provider.request({
  method: 'getPermissions'
});

Security Considerations

Server-Side Request Forgery (SSRF)

This consideration is applicable if the favicon of a website is to be displayed.

Wallets should be careful about making arbitrary requests to URLs. As such, it is recommended for wallets to sanitize the URI by whitelisting specific schemes and ports. A vulnerable wallet could be tricked into, for example, modifying data on a locally-hosted redis database.

Copyright

Copyright and related rights waived via CC0.