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Create Development Wallet

Wallets are repositories of public-private key pairs. Private keys are needed to sign operations performed on the blockchain. Wallets are accessed using cleos.

Step 1: Create a Wallet

The first step is to create a wallet. Use cleos wallet create to create a new "default" wallet using the option --to-console for simplicity. If using cleos in production, it's wise to instead use --file so your wallet password is not in your bash history. For development purposes and because these are development and not production keys --to-console poses no security threat.

cleos wallet create --to-console

cleos will return a password, save this password somewhere as you will likely need it later in the tutorial.

Creating wallet: default
Save password to use in the future to unlock this wallet.
Without password imported keys will not be retrievable.
"PW5Kewn9L76X8Fpd....................t42S9XCw2"
About Wallets

A common misconception in cryptocurrency regarding wallets is that they store tokens. However, in reality, a wallet is used to store private keys in an encrypted file to sign transactions. Wallets do not serve as a storage medium for tokens.

A user builds a transaction object, usually through an interface, sends that object to the wallet to be signed, the wallet then returns that transaction object with a signature which is then broadcast to the network. When/if the network confirms that the transaction is valid, it is included into a block on the blockchain.

Step 2: Open the Wallet

Wallets are closed by default when starting a keosd instance, to begin, run the following

cleos wallet open

Run the following to return a list of wallets.

cleos wallet list

and it will return

Wallets:
[
"default"
]

Step 3: Unlock it

The keosd wallet(s) have been opened, but is still locked. Moments ago you were provided a password, you're going to need that now.

cleos wallet unlock

You will be prompted for your password, paste it and press enter.

Now run the following command

cleos wallet list

It should now return

Wallets:
[
"default *"
]

Pay special attention to the asterisk (*). This means that the wallet is currently unlocked

Step 4: Import keys into your wallet

Generate a private key, cleos has a helper function for this, just run the following.

cleos wallet create_key

It will return something like..

Created new private key with a public key of: "EOS8PEJ5FM42xLpHK...X6PymQu97KrGDJQY5Y"

Step 5: Follow this tutorial series more easily

Enter the public key provided in the last step in the box below. It will persist the development public key you just generated throughout the documentation.

Step 6: Import the Development Key

Every new Antelope chain has a default "system" user called "eosio". This account is used to setup the chain by loading system contracts that dictate the governance and consensus of the Antelope chain. Every new Antelope chain comes with a development key, and this key is the same. Load this key to sign transactions on behalf of the system user (eosio)

cleos wallet import

You'll be prompted for a private key, enter the eosio development key provided below

5KQwrPbwdL6PhXujxW37FSSQZ1JiwsST4cqQzDeyXtP79zkvFD3
Important

Never use the development key for a production account! Doing so will most certainly result in the loss of access to your account, this private key is publicly known.

Wonderful, you now have a default wallet unlocked and loaded with a key, and are ready to proceed.

What's Next?