{ "subject": "Re: JSON-RPC password", "content": { "format": "html", "body": "<div class=\"post\">So you drop a settings file in the ~/.bitcoin directory, that sounds better. &nbsp;In the \"no password is set\" warning, it could tell you where the file is and what to do.<br/><br/>What is the most popular and common settings file format?<br/><br/>HTTP basic authentication should be considered. &nbsp;In actual practice though, it's more work for web developers to figure out how to specify the password through some extra parameter in the HTTP or JSON-RPC wrapper than to just stick an extra parameter at the beginning of the parameter list. &nbsp;What do you think? &nbsp;Does HTTP basic authentication get us any additional benefits?&nbsp; Moving it off the parameter list but then you still have to specific it in a more esoteric place I'm not sure is a net win. <br/><br/><div class=\"quoteheader\"><a href=\"https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=461.msg4215#msg4215\">Quote from: gavinandresen on July 19, 2010, 12:02:39 PM</a></div><div class=\"quote\">I was confused for a bit because the password is given LAST on the command line, but FIRST in the JSON-RPC params list. &nbsp;I agree that reading the command-line password from a file would be more convenient and more secure.<br/></div>You're also confusing me, what do you mean? &nbsp;Did I do something unintended?</div>" }, "source": { "name": "Bitcoin Forum", "url": "https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=461.msg4268#msg4268" }, "date": "2010-07-19T16:20:50Z" }
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