Background
Some years in the past (2017) I should have discovered a method to ‘serialise’ my pockets, as a result of I saved the next in my password supervisor:
- Title: “Bitcoin pockets”
- Password: (typical generated password)
- Technology seed: (typical passphrase, e.g. record of random phrases)
- Receiving handle: (typical bitcoin handle)
- Notes: (seems like base64 information, about 3000 characters in size)
I vaguely bear in mind having the Bitcoin-Qt consumer put in.
Query
What methodology did I exploit to serialise (or export, or back-up) my pockets in 2017?
Further info
What I attempted thus far:
- Copied the information to textual content file
- Ran bitcoin-cli importwallet “/path/to/file.txt” (by way of Bitcoin-Qt’s console). Received the error “Solely legacy wallets are supported by this command (code -4)”.
- Decoded the textual content file utilizing
cat /path/to/file.txt > base64 -d > /path/to/file.dat
and ran bitcoin-cli importwallet “/path/to/file.dat”. Received the error “Solely legacy wallets are supported by this command (code -4)”. - In Bitcoin-Qt chosen File, Restore Pockets…, and chosen the .dat file. Received “Pockets file verification failed. Didn’t load database path ‘~/Library/Software Help/Bitcoin/wallets/Check’. Knowledge is just not in acknowledged format.”
- Ran
file /path/to/file.dat
and acquiredfile.dat: information
(I hoped it could be recognized as Berkeley DB, since I learn right here that pockets.dat information are BerkeleyDB database information). - Checked the hyperlinks within the reply to this query in regards to the ‘pockets export’ format, but it surely seems like that’s only a method to encode a non-public key, which might not outcome within the type of information I’ve saved in my password supervisor.
What I didn’t do but:
- Set up the model of Bitcoin-Qt present in 2017, and try to revive the .dat file.