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I need to give payment ETH address to my customers for deposit ETH their accounts. I want to use a HD ETH wallet for this and I am using Ledger Nano S now. But Ledger showing me only 1 receive address so I need ETH wallet's XPub for generate many address from it for distribute to users.

If Ledger support HD, How can I export XPub? If ledger does not support, Which wallet can usable for this purpose.

Any suggestions.

1 Answer 1

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You can't export the xpub directly from a ledger nano s with the default bitcoin or ethereum apps.

But you can construct an xpub using the data you can extract from the ledger.

What you need is the public key and chaincode for the bip32 path you're interested in and the public key of the parent of that path.

In the ethereum app you would use getaddress (currently there is a restriction to m/44/60', m/44'/61', and m/44'/1' and below for this app (I have an issue here to hopefully remove that restriction). In the bitcoin app you would use getwalletpublickey. There is no bip32 path restrictions in the bitcoin app.

Once you have the two public keys and the chain code, you can construct the xpub. Here is a chunk of python that can accomplish this. It uses the un-maintained pybitcointools, so user-beware.

#!/usr/bin/env python

import sys
import binascii
from bitcoin import bin_hash160
from bitcoin import bip32_serialize
from bitcoin import compress

def main(parent_pubkey, pubkey, chaincode, depth, index, network):
    if (network.lower() == "main"):
        network_bytes = b'\x04\x88\xb2\x1e'
    elif (network.lower() == "test"):
        network_bytes = b'\x04\x35\x87\xcf'
    else:
        sys.exit("network must be either main or test")

    compressed_pubkey_bytes = binascii.unhexlify(compress(pubkey))
    fingerprint_bytes =  bin_hash160(binascii.unhexlify(compress(parent_pubkey)))[:4]
    chaincode_bytes = binascii.unhexlify(chaincode)

    deserialized = (network_bytes, int(depth), fingerprint_bytes, int(index), chaincode_bytes, compressed_pubkey_bytes)
    xpub = bip32_serialize(deserialized)
    print(xpub)

if __name__ == '__main__':
    if (len(sys.argv) < 7):
        sys.exit("USAGE: generate_xpub PARENT_PUBLICKEY PUBLICKEY CHAINCODE DEPTH INDEX (MAIN|TEST)")
    main(sys.argv[1], sys.argv[2], sys.argv[3], sys.argv[4], sys.argv[5], sys.argv[6])
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  • Alternatively, you could just use the public key and chaincode from any node and pretend that this is a new master public key at m (set the fingerprint to 0x00000000, depth to 0). This should give you a valid xpub that you could derive new addresses from, you'd just need to remember to convert the paths back the the actual bip32 paths you'd need for signing later.
    – Destry
    May 22, 2018 at 23:32

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