Files
seedPass/docs/nostr_setup.md
2025-08-06 10:09:05 -04:00

1.6 KiB
Raw Blame History

Nostr Setup

This guide explains how SeedPass uses the Nostr protocol for encrypted vault backups and how to configure relays.

Relay Configuration

SeedPass communicates with the Nostr network through a list of relays. You can manage these relays from the CLI:

seedpass nostr list-relays      # show configured relays
seedpass nostr add-relay <url>  # add a relay URL
seedpass nostr remove-relay <n> # remove relay by index

At least one relay is required for publishing and retrieving backups. Choose relays you trust to remain online and avoid those that charge high fees or aggressively ratelimit connections.

Manifest and Delta Events

Backups are published as parameterised replaceable events:

  • Kind 30070 Manifest: describes the snapshot and lists chunk IDs. The optional delta_since field stores the UNIX timestamp of the latest delta event.
  • Kind 30071 Snapshot Chunk: each 50 KB fragment of the compressed, encrypted vault.
  • Kind 30072 Delta: captures changes since the last snapshot.

When restoring, SeedPass downloads the most recent manifest and applies any newer delta events.

Troubleshooting

  • No events found: ensure the relays are reachable and that the correct fingerprint is selected.
  • Connection failures: some relays only support WebSocket over TLS; verify you are using wss:// URLs where required.
  • Stale data: if deltas accumulate without a fresh snapshot, run seedpass nostr sync to publish an updated snapshot.

Increasing log verbosity with --verbose can also help diagnose relay or network issues.