A typescript library for encrypting data which can only be decrypted at a set time in the future using drand.
tlock-js uses AGE to symmetrically encrypt a payload, and encrypts the symmetric key using pairing-based cryptography ensuring that it can only be decrypted when the drand's threshold network has generated randomness at a future point.
npm install
npm run compile
npm test
npm run lint:fix
npm install tlock-js
npm install drand-client
Note: early versions of node may need to pull in a fetch
polyfill; versions 17+ have fetch
already, but it may be behind the --experimental-modules
flag.
We have a live web-demo relying on this library to allow you to test Timelock encryption/decryption directly in your browser now by visiting Timevault. Everything is done locally in your browser and it only fetches the drand beacons it needs to decrypt your ciphertexts, nothing else, no logging, no nothing.
timelockEncrypt
This encrypts a payload that can only be decrypted when the roundNumber
has been reached.
The time of this roundNumber
depends on the genesis and round frequency of the network you connect to.
By default, the drand testnet HTTP client will be used, but you can implement your own and pass it in here.
The output ciphertext should be compatible with any of the drand tlock implementations
timelockDecrypt
This takes a payload that has been encrypted with any of the drand tlock implementations, reads the roundNumber
from it and attempts to decrypt it.
If the round number has not yet been reached by the network, an error will be thrown.
It accepts both armored and unarmored payloads.
roundForTime
Given a NetworkInfo
object, it calculates what the latest-emitted round will have been at that time
timeForRound
Given a NetworkInfo
object, it calculates the approximate time the given round
will be emitted at (approximate because the network must work together to create the randomness).
fetch
polyfill on some versions of node, e.g. isomorphic fetch. You can provide your own DrandHttpClientOptions
to the DrandHttpClient
if you don't want to use fetch, but it may be necessary to declare a fake fetch
somewhere for compilationexport default {
build: { target: "es2020" },
optimizeDeps: {
esbuildOptions: { target: "es2020", supported: { bigint: true } },
},
};
The github actions create a dist
folder and move the package.json and some other bits in order to do some packaging, thus running npm pack
in the root dir will not give the expected results. Similarly, the main
, module
and types
keys in the package.json
are relative to the dist
dir.
This project is licensed using the Permissive License Stack which means that all contributions are available under the most permissive commonly-used licenses, and dependent projects can pick the license that best suits them.
Therefore, the project is dual-licensed under Apache 2.0 and MIT terms: