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Shannon Appelcline 2020-07-15 11:33:48 -10:00 committed by GitHub
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@ -28,7 +28,7 @@ Once you've gotten Bitcoin Standup running on your local machine, you'll want to
We will be using a Macintosh and Testnet for the examples in this section.
### Creating an Alias for Bitcoin-CLI
### Create an Alias for Bitcoin-CLI
Create an alias that runs `bitcoin-cli` from the correct directory with any appropriate flags.
@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ _The following instructions again assume a Mac, and you can again skip this subs
HWI is a Bitcoin Core program available in python that can be used to interact with hardware wallets.
### Installing Python
### Install Python
Because HWI is written in `python`, you'll need to install that as well as a few auxilliary programs.
@ -70,7 +70,7 @@ $ brew install python
$ brew install libusb
```
### Installing HWI
### Install HWI
You're now ready to install HWI, which requires cloning a GitHub repo and running an install script.
@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ $ cd HWI
HWI$ python3 setup.py install
```
### Creating an Alias for HWI
### Create an Alias for HWI
You'll want to create an alias here too, varied by your actual install location:
```
@ -126,7 +126,7 @@ Interacting with a hardware wallet usually comes in two parts: watching for fund
You can watch for funds by importing addresses from your hardware wallet to your full node, using HWI and `bitcoin-cli`.
### Creating a Wallet
### Create a Wallet
To use your hardware wallet with `bitcoin-cli`, you'll want to create a specific named wallet in Bitcoin Core, using the `createwallet` RPC, which is a command we haven't previously discussed.
```
@ -150,7 +150,7 @@ $ bitcoin-cli listwallets
```
Because you've created a second wallet, some commands will now require a `-rpcwallet=` flag, to specify which one you're using
### Importing the Keys
### Import the Keys
You now have to import a watch-list of addresses from the hardware wallet. This is done with HWI's `getkeypool` command:
```