Combine DV Private Key Shares
Reconstituting Distributed Validator private key shares into a standard validator private key is a security risk, and can potentially cause your validator to be slashed.
Only combine private keys as a last resort and do so with extreme caution.
Combine distributed validator private key shares into an Ethereum validator private key.
Pre-requisites
- Ensure you have the
.charon
directories of at least a threshold of the cluster's node operators. - Ensure you have docker installed.
- Make sure
docker
is running before executing the commands below.
Step 1. Set up the key combination directory tree
Rename each cluster node operator .charon
directory in a different way to avoid folder name conflicts.
We suggest naming them clearly and distinctly, to avoid confusion.
At the end of this process, you should have a tree like this:
$ tree ./cluster
cluster/
├── node0
│ ├── charon-enr-private-key
│ ├── cluster-lock.json
│ ├── deposit-data.json
│ └── validator_keys
│ ├── keystore-0.json
│ ├── keystore-0.txt
│ ├── keystore-1.json
│ └── keystore-1.txt
├── node1
│ ├── charon-enr-private-key
│ ├── cluster-lock.json
│ ├── deposit-data.json
│ └── validator_keys
│ ├── keystore-0.json
│ ├── keystore-0.txt
│ ├── keystore-1.json
│ └── keystore-1.txt
├── node2
│ ├── charon-enr-private-key
│ ├── cluster-lock.json
│ ├── deposit-data.json
│ └── validator_keys
│ ├── keystore-0.json
│ ├── keystore-0.txt
│ ├── keystore-1.json
│ └── keystore-1.txt
...
└── nodeN
├── charon-enr-private-key
├── cluster-lock.json
├── deposit-data.json
└── validator_keys
├── keystore-0.json
├── keystore-0.txt
├── keystore-1.json
└── keystore-1.txt
Make sure to never mix the various .charon
directories with one another.
Doing so can potentially cause the combination process to fail.
Step 2. Combine the key shares
Run the following command:
# Combine a clusters private keys
docker run --rm -v "$(pwd):/opt/charon" obolnetwork/charon:v1.2.0 combine --cluster-dir /opt/charon/cluster --output-dir /opt/charon/combined
This command will store the combined keys in the output-dir
, in this case a folder named combined
.
$ tree combined
combined
├── keystore-0.json
├── keystore-0.txt
├── keystore-1.json
└── keystore-1.txt
We can verify that the directory names are correct by looking at the lock file:
$ jq .distributed_validators[].distributed_public_key cluster/node0/cluster-lock.json
"0x822c5310674f4fc4ec595642d0eab73d01c62b588f467da6f98564f292a975a0ac4c3a10f1b3a00ccc166a28093c2dcd"
"0x8929b4c8af2d2eb222d377cac2aa7be950e71d2b247507d19b5fdec838f0fb045ea8910075f191fd468da4be29690106"
The generated private keys are in the standard EIP-2335 format, and can be imported in any Ethereum validator client that supports it.
Ensure your distributed validator cluster is completely shut down before starting a replacement validator or you are likely to be slashed.