SSKR shards a seed to create shares that can then be distributed to other parties for later retrieval. The following example offers a test vector of a seed and shows its SSKR equivalents.
This example is built from the seed:
59f2293a5bce7d4de59e71b4207ac5d2
This seed can be stored in Gordian SeedTool, which can reveal other info about the seed, such as how to back it up with either Blockchain Commons' ByteWords or traditional BIP39 words:
The ByteWords for 59f2293a5bce7d4de59e71b4207ac5d2
are:
hawk whiz diet fact help taco kiwi gift view noon
jugs quiz crux kiln silk tied omit keno lung jade
The BIP39 words are:
fly mule excess resource treat plunge nose soda reflect adult ramp planet
If you'd like to test the seed yourself, download Gordian SeedTool for iOS and click the "QR" icon at the top to scan a QR code. Point it to the QR code above and you'll load this Test Vector into your own phone!
SSKR uses Shamir's Secret Sharing to shard a secret, such as the DPAL Test seed, so that the secret can be restored using some threshold of those secrets.
A traditional use of Shamir's Secret Sharing might shard a secret into three shares, and then allow the secret to be restored from two of those shares.
The following shows a set of 2-of-3 shares generated by Gordian SeedTool and exported as ByteWords:
tuna acid epic gyro jury jump able acid able flap rust king
roof item vast real hang plus free menu good plus keno vast
gray maze oval whiz tomb
tuna acid epic gyro jury jump able acid acid kiln main tuna
keno able view plus gush body nail silk girl ruin visa curl
yell loud rock jury fuel
tuna acid epic gyro jury jump able acid also exam high dark
echo ruin wand lazy gray swan visa fish jazz logo gift kick
atom wall yank atom many
The following shows that same 2-of-3 share exported as a Uniform Resource (UR):
ur:crypto-sskr/gojyjpaeadaefprtkgrfimvtrlhgpsfemugdpskovtgybagtiomh
ur:crypto-sskr/gojyjpaeadadknmntakoaevwpsghbynlskglrnvaclylcmgdvyad
ur:crypto-sskr/gojyjpaeadaoemhhdkeornwdlygysnvafhjzlogtkkamkockmuso
A UR uses the minimal bytewords form, meaning that it shows only the first and last letter of each word. This means that "go" is "gyro", "jy" is "jury", "jp" is "jump", "ae" is "able", etc. You can see that the "UR" form of the three shares thus precisely matches the ByteWords except that the first three words ("tuna acid epic"), identifying it as an SSKR, has been omitted, and this changes the checksum, which is the last four words.
⚠️ WARNING. SSKR is non-deterministic. There is a random factor introduced when the shares are created, which means that every time you generate shares, they will be different. This is an expected and correct result.
One of the advantages of SSKR is that it can support arbitrary groups, where you can then reconstruct a secret by using some number of shares from some number of groups.
One example is a two-of-three two-of-three (grouped four-of-nine) SSKR. Three groups are created, each of which has three shares. Reconstructing the secret requires a threshold of two shares from a threshold of two groups. In other words, the secret can be reconstructed from four of the nine shares, provided that they are two each from two of the groups.
For a more complex SSKR such as this, you might want to use Gordian SeedTool's print function, rather than cutting and pasting SSKRs or URs:
This example is built from the seed:
e3955cda304771c0031895637f55c3abe45153c87abd81c51ed14e8aafa1af13
This seed can be stored in Gordian SeedTool, which can reveal other info about the seed, such as how to back it up with either Blockchain Commons' ByteWords or traditional BIP39 words:
The ByteWords for 59f2293a5bce7d4de59e71b4207ac5d2
are:
vial mild high twin duty fuel jugs rust apex cats
mild idea lamb gyro scar play vibe gray guru soap
kiln ruby lazy silk cook tent girl love pose obey
pose brew exit gray king iced
The BIP39 words are:
toe priority custom gauge jacket theme arrest bargain gloom wide ill fit eagle prepare capable fish limb cigar reform other priority speak rough imitate
If you'd like to test the seed yourself, download Gordian SeedTool for iOS and click the "QR" icon at the top to scan a QR code. Point it to the QR code above and you'll load this Test Vector into your own phone!
A traditional use of Shamir's Secret Sharing might shard a secret into three shares, and then allow the secret to be restored from two of those shares.
The following shows a set of 2-of-3 shares generated by Gordian SeedTool and exported as ByteWords:
tuna acid epic hard data love wolf able acid able
duty surf belt task judo legs ruby cost belt pose
ruby logo iron vows luck bald user lazy tuna belt
guru buzz limp exam obey kept task cash saga pool
love brag roof owls news junk
tuna acid epic hard data love wolf able acid acid
barn peck luau keys each duty waxy quad open bias
what cusp zaps math kick dark join nail legs oboe
also twin yank road very blue gray saga oboe city
gear beta quad draw knob main
tuna acid epic hard data love wolf able acid also
fund able city road whiz zone claw high frog work
deli slot gush cats kiwi gyro numb puma join fund
when math inch even curl rich vows oval also unit
brew door atom love gyro figs
The following shows that same 2-of-3 share exported as a Uniform Resource (UR):
ur:crypto-sskr/hddalewfaeadaedysfbttkjolsryctbtperyloinvslkbdurlytabtgubzlpemoykttkchsapllebgvdgleedp
ur:crypto-sskr/hddalewfaeadadbnpkluksehdywyqdonbswtcpzsmhkkdkjnnllsoeaotnykrdvybegysaoecygrbavssktbti
ur:crypto-sskr/hddalewfaeadaofdaecyrdwzzecwhhfgwkdistghcskigonbpajnfdwnmhihenclrhvsolaoutbwdrhliazcia
A UR uses the minimal bytewords form, meaning that it shows only the first and last letter of each word. This means that "go" is "gyro", "jy" is "jury", "jp" is "jump", "ae" is "able", etc. You can see that the "UR" form of the three shares thus precisely matches the ByteWords except that the first three words ("tune acid epic"), identifying it as an SSKR, has been omitted, and this changes the checksum, which is the last four words.
⚠️ WARNING. SSKR is non-deterministic. There is a random factor introduced when the shares are created, which means that every time you generate shares, they will be different. This is an expected and correct result.
One of the advantages of SSKR is that it can support arbitrary groups, where you can then reconstruct a secret by using some number of shares from some number of groups.
One example is a two-of-three two-of-three (grouped four-of-nine) SSKR. Three groups are created, each of which has three shares. Reconstructing the secret requires a threshold of two shares from a threshold of two groups. In other words, the secret can be reconstructed from four of the nine shares, provided that they are two each from two of the groups.
For a more complex SSKR such as this, you might want to use Gordian SeedTool's print function, rather than cutting and pasting SSKRs or URs:
SSKR is a powerful way to back up digital secrets. This example demonstrates a specific seed and how it can be used to generate SSKR shares using two different groupings.
See SSKR Cold Storage for an example of how to store this test vector by etching it in metal.