AccountSet
An AccountSet transaction modifies the properties of an account in Xahau.
[Source]
Example
ClearFlag
Number
UInt32
(Optional) Unique identifier of a flag to disable for this account.
Domain
String
Blob
(Optional) The domain that owns this account, as a string of hex representing the ASCII for the domain in lowercase. Cannot be more than 256 bytes in length.
EmailHash
String
Hash128
(Optional) An arbitrary 128-bit value. Conventionally, clients treat this as the md5 hash of an email address to use for displaying a Gravatar image.
MessageKey
String
Blob
(Optional) Public key for sending encrypted messages to this account. To set the key, it must be exactly 33 bytes, with the first byte indicating the key type: 0x02
or 0x03
for secp256k1 keys, 0xED
for Ed25519 keys. To remove the key, use an empty value.
NFTokenMinter
String
Blob
(Optional) Another account that can mint NFTokens for you. (Added by the [NonFungibleTokensV1_1 amendment][].)
SetFlag
Number
UInt32
(Optional) Integer flag to enable for this account.
TransferRate
Number
UInt32
(Optional) The fee to charge when users transfer this account's tokens, represented as billionths of a unit. Cannot be more than 2000000000
or less than 1000000000
, except for the special case 0
meaning no fee.
TickSize
Number
UInt8
(Optional) Tick size to use for offers involving a currency issued by this address. The exchange rates of those offers is rounded to this many significant digits. Valid values are 3
to 15
inclusive, or 0
to disable. (Added by the [TickSize amendment][])
WalletLocator
String
Hash256
(Optional) An arbitrary 256-bit value. If specified, the value is stored as part of the account but has no inherent meaning or requirements.
WalletSize
Number
UInt32
(Optional) Not used. This field is valid in AccountSet transactions but does nothing.
If none of these options are provided, then the AccountSet transaction has no effect (beyond destroying the transaction cost). See Cancel or Skip a Transaction for more details.
Domain
The Domain
field is represented as the hex string of the lowercase ASCII of the domain. For example, the domain example.com would be represented as "6578616D706C652E636F6D"
.
To remove the Domain
field from an account, send an AccountSet with the Domain set to an empty string.
You can put any domain in your account's Domain
field. To prove that an account and domain belong to the same person or business, you need a "two-way link":
Accounts you own should have a domain you own in the
Domain
field.At that domain, host an xah-ledger.toml file listing accounts you own, and optionally other information about how you use Xahau.
AccountSet Flags
There are several options which can be either enabled or disabled for an account. Account options are represented by different types of flags depending on the situation:
The
AccountSet
transaction type has several "AccountSet Flags" (prefixedasf
) that can enable an option when passed as theSetFlag
parameter, or disable an option when passed as theClearFlag
parameter. Newer options have only this style of flag. You can enable up to oneasf
flag per transaction, and disable up to oneasf
flag per transaction.The
AccountSet
transaction type has several transaction flags (prefixedtf
) that can be used to enable or disable specific account options when passed in theFlags
parameter. You can enable and disable a combination of settings in one transaction using multipletf
flags, but not all settings havetf
flags.The
AccountRoot
ledger object type has several ledger-state-flags (prefixedlsf
) which represent the state of particular account options within a particular ledger. These settings apply until a transaction changes them.
To enable or disable Account Flags, use the SetFlag
and ClearFlag
parameters of an AccountSet transaction. AccountSet flags have names that begin with asf
.
All flags are disabled by default.
The available AccountSet flags are:
asfAccountTxnID
5
(None)
Track the ID of this account's most recent transaction. Required for AccountTxnID
asfAuthorizedNFTokenMinter
10
(None)
Enable to allow another account to mint non-fungible tokens (NFTokens) on this account's behalf. Specify the authorized account in the NFTokenMinter
field of the AccountRoot object. To remove an authorized minter, enable this flag and omit the NFTokenMinter
field. (Added by the [NonFungibleTokensV1_1 amendment][].)
asfDefaultRipple
8
lsfDefaultRipple
Enable rippling on this account's trust lines by default.
asfDepositAuth
9
lsfDepositAuth
Enable Deposit Authorization on this account. (Added by the [DepositAuth amendment][].)
asfDisableMaster
4
lsfDisableMaster
Disallow use of the master key pair. Can only be enabled if the account has configured another way to sign transactions, such as a Regular Key or a Signer List.
asfDisallowIncomingCheck
13
lsfDisallowIncomingCheck
Block incoming Checks. Added by the [DisallowIncoming amendment][].
asfDisallowIncomingNFTokenOffer
12
lsfDisallowIncomingNFTokenOffer
Block incoming NFTokenOffers. Added by the [DisallowIncoming amendment][].
asfDisallowIncomingPayChan
14
lsfDisallowIncomingPayChan
Block incoming Payment Channels. Added by the [DisallowIncoming amendment][].
asfDisallowIncomingTrustline
15
lsfDisallowIncomingTrustline
Block incoming trust lines.Added by the [DisallowIncoming amendment][].
asfDisallowIncomingRemit
16
lsfDisallowIncomingRemit
Block incoming Remit txn.Added by the [Remit amendment][].
asfDisallowXRP
3
lsfDisallowXRP
XAH should not be sent to this account. (Advisory; not enforced by Xahau protocol.)
asfGlobalFreeze
7
lsfGlobalFreeze
Freeze all assets issued by this account.
asfNoFreeze
6
lsfNoFreeze
Permanently give up the ability to freeze individual trust lines or disable Global Freeze. This flag can never be disabled after being enabled.
asfRequireAuth
2
lsfRequireAuth
Require authorization for users to hold balances issued by this address. Can only be enabled if the address has no trust lines connected to it.
asfRequireDest
1
lsfRequireDestTag
Require a destination tag to send transactions to this account.
asfTshCollect
11
lsfTshCollect
The TSH pays for the execution of their own Hook Chain. Added by the [Hooks amendment][].
To enable the asfDisableMaster
or asfNoFreeze
flags, you must authorize the transaction by signing it with the master key pair. You cannot use a regular key pair or a multi-signature. You can disable asfDisableMaster
(that is, re-enable the master key pair) using a regular key pair or multi-signature.
The following Transaction flags (tf
flags), specific to the AccountSet transaction type, serve the same purpose. Due to limited space, some settings do not have associated tf
flags, and new tf
flags are not being added to the AccountSet
transaction type. You can use a combination of tf
and asf
flags to enable multiple settings with a single transaction.
tfRequireDestTag
0x00010000
65536
asfRequireDest
(SetFlag
)
tfOptionalDestTag
0x00020000
131072
asfRequireDest
(ClearFlag
)
tfRequireAuth
0x00040000
262144
asfRequireAuth
(SetFlag
)
tfOptionalAuth
0x00080000
524288
asfRequireAuth
(ClearFlag
)
tfDisallowXRP
0x00100000
1048576
asfDisallowXRP
(SetFlag
)
tfAllowXRP
0x00200000
2097152
asfDisallowXRP
(ClearFlag
)
Caution: The numeric values of tf
and asf
flags in transactions do not match up with the values they set in the accounts "at rest" in the ledger. To read the flags of an account in the ledger, see AccountRoot
flags.
Blocking Incoming Transactions
Incoming transactions with unclear purposes may be an inconvenience for financial institutions, who would have to recognize when a customer made a mistake, and then potentially refund accounts or adjust balances depending on the mistake. The asfRequireDest
and asfDisallowXRP
flags are intended to protect users from accidentally sending funds in a way that is unclear about the reason the funds were sent.
For example, a destination tag is typically used to identify which hosted balance should be credited when a financial institution receives a payment. If the destination tag is omitted, it may be unclear which account should be credited, creating a need for refunds, among other problems. By using the asfRequireDest
tag, you can ensure that every incoming payment has a destination tag, which makes it harder for others to send you an ambiguous payment by accident.
You can protect against unwanted incoming payments for non-XAH currencies by not creating trust lines in those currencies. Since XAH does not require trust, the asfDisallowXRP
flag is used to discourage users from sending XAH to an account. However, this flag is not enforced in Xahau protocol because it could potentially cause accounts to become unusable if they run out of XAH. Instead, client applications should disallow or discourage XAH payments to accounts with the asfDisallowXRP
flag enabled.
If you want to block all incoming payments, you can enable Deposit Authorization. This prevents any transaction from sending money to you, even XAH, unless your account is below the reserve requirement.
If the [DisallowIncoming amendment][] :not_enabled: is enabled, you also have the option to block all incoming Checks, NFTokenOffers, Payment Channels, and trust lines. It is generally harmless to be on the receiving end of these objects, but they can block you from deleting your account and it can be confusing to have objects you didn't expect mixed in with the list of objects you created. To block incoming objects, use one or more of these account flags:
asfDisallowIncomingCheck
- for Check objectsasfDisallowIncomingNFTOffer
- for NFTokenOffer objectsasfDisallowIncomingPayChan
- for PayChannel objectsasfDisallowIncomingTrustline
- for RippleState (trust line) objects
When a transaction would create one of these ledger entries, if the destination account has the corresponding flag enabled, the transaction fails with the result code tecNO_PERMISSION
. Unlike Deposit Authorization, these settings do not prevent you from receiving payments in general. Also, enabling this setting doesn't stop you from creating these types of objects yourself (unless the destination of your transaction is also using the setting, of course).
TransferRate
The TransferRate
field specifies a fee to charge whenever counterparties transfer the currency you issue.
In the HTTP and WebSocket APIs, the transfer fee is represented as an integer, the amount that must be sent for 1 billion units to arrive. For example, a 20% transfer fee is represented as the value 1200000000
. The value cannot be less than 1000000000. (Less than that would indicate giving away money for sending transactions, which is exploitable.) You can specify 0
as a shortcut for 1000000000
, meaning no fee.
See Transfer Fees for more information.
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