Miscellaneous
Execute Commands Running Docker
In order to interact with the node's CLI commands, you need to be authenticated. This means that you need to access a shell within the Chainlink node's running container first. You can obtain the running container's NAME
by running:
docker ps
The output will look similar to:
CONTAINER ID IMAGE COMMAND CREATED STATUS PORTS NAMES
436882efd51d smartcontract/chainlink "./chainlink-launche…" 33 minutes ago Up 21 minutes 6688/tcp, 0.0.0.0:6688->6688/tcp chainlink
The last item, chainlink
, is the name of the running container (using --name chainlink
in your docker run
command will give you a common name). Accessing a shell for this container is accomplished by running:
docker exec -it chainlink /bin/bash
This changes the prompt to something similar to:
root@436882efd51d:~#
You can now log in by running:
chainlink admin login
You will be prompted to enter your API Email and Password, and if successful, the prompt will simply appear again. You can check that you are authenticated by running:
chainlink jobs list
If no jobs have been added, you will receive the following output, otherwise, the list of added jobs will be returned:
╔ Jobs
╬════╬════════════╬════════════╬═══════╬
║ ID ║ CREATED AT ║ INITIATORS ║ TASKS ║
╬════╬════════════╬════════════╬═══════╬
Transfer funds from node wallet.
To transfer funds from the node wallet to another address, use the following CLI command:
chainlink txs create <amount> <your-cl-node-address> <send-to-address>
This method is the preferred way to interact with your node wallet. Using other methods to manually interact with the node wallet can cause nonce issues.
Change your API password
In order to change your password, you first need to log into the CLI by running:
chainlink admin login
Use your API email and old password in order to authenticate.
Then run the following in order to update the password:
chainlink admin chpass
It will ask for your old password first, then ask for the new password and a confirmation.
Once complete, you should see a message "Password updated."
Multi-user and Role Based Access Control (RBAC)
See the Roles and Access Control page.
Key management
In this section, ensure you log into the CLI by executing the following command:
chainlink admin login
Authenticate using your API email and password.
List ETH keys
To list available Ethereum accounts along with their ETH & LINK balances, nonces, and other metadata, execute the following command:
chainlink keys eth list
Example:
🔑 ETH keys
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Address: 0x2d4f5FBD00E5A4fD53D162cE7EDFdb5b7664C542
EVM Chain ID: 11155111
Next Nonce: 0
ETH: 0.000000000000000000
LINK: 0
Disabled: false
Created: 2023-04-26 08:12:51.340348 +0000 UTC
Updated: 2023-04-26 08:12:51.340348 +0000 UTC
Create a new ETH Key
To create a key in the node's keystore alongside the existing keys, run the following command:
chainlink keys eth create
Example:
ETH key created.
🔑 New key
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Address: 0xd31961E1f62A2FaB824AC3C1A7a332daF8B11eE0
EVM Chain ID: 11155111
Next Nonce: 0
ETH: 0.000000000000000000
LINK: 0
Disabled: false
Created: 2023-04-26 08:28:36.52974 +0000 UTC
Updated: 2023-04-26 08:28:36.52974 +0000 UTC
Max Gas Price Wei: 115792089237316195423570985008687907853269984665640564039457584007913129639935
Export an ETH key
To export an Ethereum key to a JSON file, run the following command:
chainlink keys eth export [address] [command options]
where:
-
address
: The EVM account address for which you want to export the private key. -
Options:
--newpassword FILE, -p FILE FILE
: A file containing the password to encrypt the key.--output value, -o value
: The path where the JSON file will be saved.
Example:
chainlink keys eth export 0xd31961E1f62A2FaB824AC3C1A7a332daF8B11eE0 --newpassword .chainlink/pass --output privatekey.json
🔑 Exported ETH key 0xd31961E1f62A2FaB824AC3C1A7a332daF8B11eE0 to privatekey.json
Delete an ETH key
To remove an Ethereum key, run the following command:
chainlink keys eth delete [address] [command options]
where:
-
address
: The EVM account address that you want to remove. -
Options:
--yes, -y
: Skip the confirmation prompt.
Example:
$ chainlink keys eth delete 0xd31961E1f62A2FaB824AC3C1A7a332daF8B11eE0 --yes
Deleted ETH key: 0xd31961E1f62A2FaB824AC3C1A7a332daF8B11eE0
Import an ETH key
To import an Ethereum key from a JSON file, run the following command:
chainlink keys eth import [JSON file] [command options]
where:
-
JSON file
: The path where the JSON file containing the ETH key is saved. -
Options:
--oldpassword FILE, -p FILE
: FILE containing the password used to encrypt the key in the JSON file.--evmChainID value
: Chain ID for the key. If left blank, default chain will be used.
Example:
$ chainlink keys eth import privatekey.json --oldpassword .chainlink/pass
🔑 Imported ETH key
-------------------------------------------------------------
Address: 0xd31961E1f62A2FaB824AC3C1A7a332daF8B11eE0
EVM Chain ID: 11155111
Next Nonce: 0
ETH: 0.000000000000000000
LINK: 0
Disabled: false
Created: 2023-04-26 08:51:02.04186 +0000 UTC
Updated: 2023-04-26 08:51:02.04186 +0000 UTC
Max Gas Price Wei: <nil>
Full example in detached mode
cd ~/.chainlink-sepolia && docker run --restart=always -p 6688:6688 -d --name sepolia-primary -v ~/.chainlink-sepolia:/chainlink -it --env-file=.env smartcontract/chainlink:1.0.0 node start -p /chainlink/.password