@blacket.js/2fa

1.0.0 • Public • Published

@blacket/2fa

Once installed, this will add two commands to the terminal:

  • blacket2fa
    • Allows you to set up an OTP instance.
    • This will provide you with a secret that can be used as seen below.
    • You should never share this secret, as it can be used to give others access to your account.
  • blacketcode
    • This allows you to generate a code with an OTP secret for Blacket.
    • It is simply used by typing blacketcode YOUR_OTP_SECRET_HERE.
    • This is useful if you want to manually log into a bot account, or disable 2fa.

You should never lose your OTP secret, or you will lose access to your account.

Example of using @blacket/bot with @blacket/2fa:

import bot from '@blacket/bot';
import otp from '@blacket/2fa';

const Bot = new bot();

await Bot.login({
    username: 'BLACKET_USERNAME',
    password: 'BLACKET_PASSWORD',
    code: otp('2FA_SECRET_HERE_DO_NOT_SHARE')
});

This will then start a bot with 2FA enabled, and you don't need to do anything!

What if I already have 2fa enabled?

It's easiest for you to just disable it and use the blacket2fa tool to get the secret directly.
If you don't want to do this, you can usually back up your 2FA information and find it in the backup file.

Can I use blacket2fa and an authenticator app?

Yes! The secret you get is actually the standardized secret for authenticator apps.
Most apps have an option for 'Manual Entry', which lets you insert a secret and an issuer. Issuer is anything, secret is...well...

Copyright (C) 2024 xthonk.

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npm i @blacket.js/2fa

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  • xthonk