Freeze Features

The Ripple Consensus Ledger gives addresses the ability to freeze non-XRP balances, which can be useful to meet regulatory requirements, or while investigating suspicious activity. There are three settings related to freezes:

  • Individual Freeze - Freeze one counterparty.
  • Global Freeze - Freeze all counterparties.
  • No Freeze - Permanently give up the ability to freeze individual counterparties, as well as the ability to end a global freeze.

Because no party has a privileged place in the Ripple Consensus Ledger, the freeze feature cannot prevent a counterparty from conducting transactions in XRP or funds issued by other counterparties. No one can freeze XRP.

All freeze settings can be enacted regardless of whether the balance(s) to be frozen are positive or negative. Either the currency issuer or the currency holder can freeze a trust line; however, the effect of a currency holder freezing an issuer is minimal.

Individual Freeze

The Individual Freeze feature is a setting on a trust line. When an issuing address enables the Individual Freeze setting, the following rules apply:

  • Payments can still occur directly between the two parties of the frozen trust line.
  • The counterparty of that trust line can no longer decrease its balance on the frozen trust line, except in direct payments to the issuer. The counterparty can only send the frozen issuances directly to the issuer.
  • The counterparty can still receive payments from others on the frozen trust line.
  • The counterparty's offers to sell the currency issued on the frozen trust line are considered unfunded.

A financial institution can freeze the trust line linking it to a counterparty if that counterparty shows suspicious activity or violates the financial institution's terms of use. The financial institution should also freeze the counterparty in any other systems the financial institution operates that are connected to the Ripple Consensus Ledger. (Otherwise, an address might still be able to engage in undesired activity by sending payments through the financial institution.)

An individual address can freeze its trust line to a financial institution. This has no effect on transactions between the institution and other users. It does, however, prevent other addresses, including operational addresses, from sending that financial institution's issuances to the individual address. This type of individual freeze has no effect on offers.

The Individual Freeze applies to a single currency only. To freeze multiple currencies with a particular counterparty, the address must enable Individual Freeze on the trust lines for each currency individually.

An address cannot enable the Individual Freeze setting if it has enabled the No Freeze setting.

Global Freeze

The Global Freeze feature is a setting on an address. When an issuing address enables the Global Freeze feature, the following rules apply:

  • All counterparties of the frozen issuing address can no longer decrease the balances in their trust lines to the frozen address, except in direct payments to the issuer. (This also affects any operational addresses.)
  • Counterparties of the frozen issuing address can still send and receive payments directly to and from the issuing address.
  • All offers to sell currencies issued by the frozen address are considered unfunded.

It can be useful to enable Global Freeze on a financial institution's issuing address if the secret key to an operational address is compromised, even after regaining control of a such an address. This stops the flow of funds, preventing attackers from getting away with any more money or at least making it easier to track what happened. Besides enacting a Global Freeze in the Ripple Consensus Ledger, a financial institution should also suspend activities in its connectors to outside systems.

It can also be useful to enable Global Freeze if a financial institution intends to migrate to a new issuing address, or if the financial institution intends to cease doing business. This locks the funds at a specific point in time, so users cannot trade them away for other currencies.

Global Freeze applies to all currencies issued and held by the address. You cannot enable Global Freeze for only one currency. If you want to have the ability to freeze some currencies and not others, you should use different addresses for each currency.

An address can always enable the Global Freeze setting. However, if the address has enabled the No Freeze setting, it can never disable Global Freeze.

No Freeze

The No Freeze feature is a setting on an address that permanently gives up the ability to freeze counterparties. A business can use this feature to treat its issued funds as "more like physical money" in the sense that the business cannot interfere with customers trading it among themselves. The NoFreeze setting has two effects:

  • The issuing address can no longer enable Individual Freeze on trust lines to any counterparty.
  • The issuing address can still enable Global Freeze to enact a global freeze, but the address cannot disable Global Freeze.

The Ripple Consensus Ledger cannot force a financial institution to honor the obligations that its issued funds represent, so giving up the ability to enable a Global Freeze cannot protect customers. However, giving up the ability to disable a Global Freeze ensures that the Global Freeze feature is not used unfairly against some customers.

The No Freeze setting applies to all currencies issued to and from an address. If you want to be able to freeze some currencies but not others, you should use different addresses for each currency.

You can only enable the No Freeze setting with a transaction signed by your address's master key secret. You cannot use a Regular Key or a multi-signed transaction to enable No Freeze.

Technical Details

Enabling or Disabling Individual Freeze

Using rippled

To enable or disable Individual Freeze on a specific trust line, send a TrustSet transaction. Use the tfSetFreeze flag to enable a freeze, and the tfClearFreeze flag to disable it. The fields of the transaction should be as follows:

Field Value Description
Account String The Ripple address to enable or disable the freeze.
TransactionType String TrustSet
LimitAmount Object Object defining the trust line to freeze.
LimitAmount.currency String Currency of the trust line
LimitAmount.issuer String The Ripple address of the counterparty to freeze
LimitAmount.value String The amount of currency you trust this counterparty to issue to you, as a quoted number. From the perspective of a financial institution, this is typically "0".
Flags Number To enable a freeze, use a value with the bit 0x00100000 (tfSetFreeze) enabled. To disable a freeze, use a value with the bit 0x00200000 (tfClearFreeze) enabled instead.

Set the Fee, Sequence, and LastLedgerSequence parameters in the typical way.

Example of submitting a TrustSet transaction to enable an individual freeze using the WebSocket API:

{
  "id": 12,
  "command": "submit",
  "tx_json": {
    "TransactionType": "TrustSet",
    "Account": "rf1BiGeXwwQoi8Z2ueFYTEXSwuJYfV2Jpn",
    "Fee": "12000",
    "Flags": 1048576,
    "LastLedgerSequence": 18103014,
    "LimitAmount": {
      "currency": "USD",
      "issuer": "rsA2LpzuawewSBQXkiju3YQTMzW13pAAdW",
      "value": "110"
    },
    "Sequence": 340
  },
  "secret": "s████████████████████████████",
  "offline": false,
  "fee_mult_max": 1000
}

Caution: Never send your secret key to an untrusted server or over an insecure channel.

Using RippleAPI

To enable or disable Individual Freeze on a specific trust line, prepare a Trustline transaction using the prepareTrustline method. The fields of the trustline parameter should be set as follows:

Field Value Description
currency String The currency of the trust line to freeze
counterparty String The Ripple address of the counterparty
limit String The amount of currency you trust this counterparty to issue to you, as a quoted number. From the perspective of a financial institution, this is typically "0".
frozen Boolean true to enable Individual Freeze on this trust line. false to disable Individual Freeze.

The rest of the transaction flow is the same as any other transaction.

Example JavaScript (ECMAScript 6) code to enable Individual Freeze on a trust line:

const {RippleAPI} = require('ripple-lib');

const api = new RippleAPI({
  server: 'wss://s1.ripple.com' // Public rippled server
});
api.on('error', (errorCode, errorMessage) => {
  console.log(errorCode + ': ' + errorMessage);
});

const issuing_address = 'rf1BiGeXwwQoi8Z2ueFYTEXSwuJYfV2Jpn';
const issuing_secret = 's████████████████████████████';
    // Best practice: get your secret from an encrypted
    //  config file instead
const address_to_freeze = 'rUpy3eEg8rqjqfUoLeBnZkscbKbFsKXC3v';
const currency_to_freeze = 'USD';

api.connect().then(() => {

  // Look up current state of trust line
  const options = {counterparty: address_to_freeze,
                 currency: currency_to_freeze};
  console.log('looking up', currency_to_freeze, 'trust line from',
              issuing_address, 'to', address_to_freeze);
  return api.getTrustlines(issuing_address, options);

}).then(data => {

  // Prepare a trustline transaction to enable freeze
  let trustline = {};
  if (data.length !== 1) {
    console.log('trustline not found, making a default one');
    trustline = {
      currency: currency_to_freeze,
      counterparty: address_to_freeze,
      limit: 0
    };
  } else {
    trustline = data[0].specification;
    console.log('trustline found. previous state:', trustline);
  }

  trustline.frozen = true;

  console.log('preparing trustline transaction for line:', trustline);
  return api.prepareTrustline(issuing_address, trustline);

}).then(prepared_tx => {

  // Sign and submit the trustline transaction
  console.log('signing tx:', prepared_tx.txJSON);
  const signed1 = api.sign(prepared_tx.txJSON, issuing_secret);
  console.log('submitting tx:', signed1.id);

  return api.submit(signed1.signedTransaction);
}).then(() => {
  return api.disconnect();
}).catch(console.error);

Enabling or Disabling Global Freeze

Using rippled

To enable Global Freeze on an address, send an AccountSet transaction with the asfGlobalFreeze flag value in the SetFlag field. To disable Global Freeze, put the asfGlobalFreeze flag value in the ClearFlag field instead.

Example of submitting an AccountSet transaction to enable Global Freeze using the WebSocket API:

{
  "id": 12,
  "command": "submit",
  "tx_json": {
    "TransactionType": "AccountSet",
    "Account": "rf1BiGeXwwQoi8Z2ueFYTEXSwuJYfV2Jpn",
    "Fee": "12000",
    "Flags": 0,
    "SetFlag": 7,
    "LastLedgerSequence": 18122753,
    "Sequence": 349
  },
  "secret": "s████████████████████████████",
  "offline": false,
  "fee_mult_max": 1000
}

Caution: Never send your secret key to an untrusted server or over an insecure channel.

Using RippleAPI

To enable or disable Global Freeze on an address, prepare a Settings transaction using the prepareSettings method. The settings parameter should be an object set as follows:

Field Value Description
globalFreeze Boolean true to enable a Global Freeze on this address. false to disable Global Freeze.

The rest of the transaction flow is the same as any other transaction.

Example JavaScript (ECMAScript 6) code to enable Global Freeze on an address:

const {RippleAPI} = require('ripple-lib');

const api = new RippleAPI({
  server: 'wss://s1.ripple.com' // Public rippled server
});
api.on('error', (errorCode, errorMessage) => {
  console.log(errorCode + ': ' + errorMessage);
});

const issuing_address = 'rf1BiGeXwwQoi8Z2ueFYTEXSwuJYfV2Jpn';
const issuing_secret = 's████████████████████████████';
    // Best practice: get your secret from an encrypted
    //  config file instead

api.connect().then(() => {

  // Prepare a settings transaction to enable global freeze
  const settings = {
    'globalFreeze': true
  };

  console.log('preparing settings transaction for account:',
              issuing_address);
  return api.prepareSettings(issuing_address, settings);

}).then(prepared_tx => {

  // Sign and submit the settings transaction
  console.log('signing tx:', prepared_tx.txJSON);
  const signed1 = api.sign(prepared_tx.txJSON, issuing_secret);
  console.log('submitting tx:', signed1.id);

  return api.submit(signed1.signedTransaction);

}).then(() => {
  return api.disconnect();
}).catch(console.error);

Enabling No Freeze

Using rippled

To enable No Freeze on an address, send an AccountSet transaction with the asfNoFreeze flag value in the SetFlag field. You must sign this transaction using the master key. Once enabled, you cannot disable No Freeze.

Example of submitting an AccountSet transaction to enable No Freeze using the WebSocket API:

WebSocket request:

{
  "id": 12,
  "command": "submit",
  "tx_json": {
    "TransactionType": "AccountSet",
    "Account": "raKEEVSGnKSD9Zyvxu4z6Pqpm4ABH8FS6n",
    "Fee": "12000",
    "Flags": 0,
    "SetFlag": 6,
    "LastLedgerSequence": 18124917,
    "Sequence": 4
  },
  "secret": "s████████████████████████████",
  "offline": false,
  "fee_mult_max": 1000
}

Caution: Never send your secret key to an untrusted server or over an insecure channel.

Using RippleAPI

To enable No Freeze on an address, prepare a Settings transaction using the prepareSettings method. Once enabled, you cannot disable No Freeze. The settings parameter should be an object set as follows:

Field Value Description
noFreeze Boolean true

You must sign this transaction using the master key. The rest of the transaction flow is the same as any other transaction.

Example JavaScript (ECMAScript 6) code to enable No Freeze on an address:

const {RippleAPI} = require('ripple-lib');

const api = new RippleAPI({
  server: 'wss://s1.ripple.com' // Public rippled server
});
api.on('error', (errorCode, errorMessage) => {
  console.log(errorCode + ': ' + errorMessage);
});

const issuing_address = 'rUpy3eEg8rqjqfUoLeBnZkscbKbFsKXC3v';
const issuing_secret = 'snnDVkSW3aV6jvMJTPdCiE2Qxv1RW';
    // Best practice: get your secret from an encrypted
    //  config file instead

api.connect().then(() => {

  // Prepare a settings transaction to enable no freeze
  const settings = {
    'noFreeze': true
  };

  console.log('preparing settings transaction for account:',
              issuing_address);
  return api.prepareSettings(issuing_address, settings);

}).then(prepared_tx => {

  // Sign and submit the settings transaction
  console.log('signing tx:', prepared_tx.txJSON);
  const signed1 = api.sign(prepared_tx.txJSON, issuing_secret);
  console.log('submitting tx:', signed1.id);

  return api.submit(signed1.signedTransaction);
}).then(() => {
  return api.disconnect();
}).catch(console.error);

Checking for Individual Freeze

Using rippled

To see if a trust line has an Individual Freeze enabled, use the account_lines method with the following parameters:

Field Value Description
account String The Ripple address of the issuer
peer String The Ripple address of the counterparty
ledger_index String Use validated to get the most recently validated information.

The response contains an array of trust lines, for each currency in which the issuing address and the counterparty are linked. Look for the following fields in each trust line object:

Field Value Description
freeze Boolean (May be omitted) true if the issuing address has frozen this trust line. If omitted, that is the same as false.
freeze_peer Boolean (May be omitted) true if the counterparty has frozen this trust line. If omitted, that is the same as false.

Example WebSocket request to check for individual freeze:

{
  "id": 15,
  "command": "account_lines",
  "account": "rf1BiGeXwwQoi8Z2ueFYTEXSwuJYfV2Jpn",
  "ledger": "validated",
  "peer": "rsA2LpzuawewSBQXkiju3YQTMzW13pAAdW"
}

Example WebSocket response:

{
  "id": 15,
  "status": "success",
  "type": "response",
  "result": {
    "account": "rf1BiGeXwwQoi8Z2ueFYTEXSwuJYfV2Jpn",
    "lines": [
      {
        "account": "rsA2LpzuawewSBQXkiju3YQTMzW13pAAdW",
        "balance": "10",
        "currency": "USD",
        "freeze": true,
        "limit": "110",
        "limit_peer": "0",
        "peer_authorized": true,
        "quality_in": 0,
        "quality_out": 0
      }
    ]
  }
}

The field "freeze": true indicates that rf1BiGeXwwQoi8Z2ueFYTEXSwuJYfV2Jpn has enabled Individual Freeze on the USD trust line to rsA2LpzuawewSBQXkiju3YQTMzW13pAAdW. The lack of a field "freeze_peer": true indicates that the counterparty has not frozen the trust line.

Using RippleAPI

To see if a trust line has an Individual Freeze enabled, use the getTrustlines method with the following parameters:

Field Value Description
address String The Ripple address of the issuer
options.counterparty String The Ripple address of the counterparty

The response contains an array of trust lines, for each currency in which the issuing address and the counterparty are linked. Look for the following fields in each trust line object:

Field Value Description
specification.frozen Boolean (May be omitted) true if the issuing address has frozen the trust line.
counterparty.frozen Boolean (May be omitted) true if the counterparty has frozen the trust line.

Example JavaScript (ECMAScript 6) code to check whether a trust line is frozen:

const {RippleAPI} = require('ripple-lib');

const api = new RippleAPI({
  server: 'wss://s1.ripple.com' // Public rippled server
});
api.on('error', (errorCode, errorMessage) => {
  console.log(errorCode + ': ' + errorMessage);
});

const my_address = 'rf1BiGeXwwQoi8Z2ueFYTEXSwuJYfV2Jpn';
const counterparty_address = 'rUpy3eEg8rqjqfUoLeBnZkscbKbFsKXC3v';
const frozen_currency = 'USD';

api.connect().then(() => {

  // Look up current state of trust line
  const options = {counterparty: counterparty_address,
                   currency: frozen_currency};
  console.log('looking up', frozen_currency, 'trust line from',
              my_address, 'to', counterparty_address);
  return api.getTrustlines(my_address, options);

}).then(data => {

  if (data.length !== 1) {
    throw 'should only be 1 trust line per counterparty+currency pair';
  }

  const trustline = data[0];
  console.log('Trust line frozen from our side?',
              trustline.specification.frozen === true);
  console.log('Trust line frozen from counterparty\'s side?',
              trustline.counterparty.frozen === true);

}).then(() => {
  return api.disconnect();
}).catch(console.error);

Checking for Global Freeze and No Freeze

Using rippled

To see if an address has enabled Global Freeze, No Freeze, or both, use the account_info method with the following parameters:

Field Value Description
account String The Ripple address of the issuing address
ledger_index String Use validated to get the most recently validated information.

Check the value of the account_data.Flags field of the response using the bitwise-AND operator:

  • If Flags AND 0x00400000 (lsfGlobalFreeze) is nonzero: Global Freeze is enabled.
  • If Flags AND 0x00200000 (lsfNoFreeze) is nonzero: No Freeze is enabled.

Example WebSocket request:

{
  "id": 1,
  "command": "account_info",
  "account": "rf1BiGeXwwQoi8Z2ueFYTEXSwuJYfV2Jpn",
  "ledger_index": "validated"
}

WebSocket response:

{
  "id": 4,
  "status": "success",
  "type": "response",
  "result": {
    "account_data": {
      "Account": "rf1BiGeXwwQoi8Z2ueFYTEXSwuJYfV2Jpn",
      "AccountTxnID": "41320138CA9837B34E82B3B3D6FB1E581D5DE2F0A67B3D62B5B8A8C9C8D970D0",
      "Balance": "100258663",
      "Domain": "6D64756F31332E636F6D",
      "EmailHash": "98B4375E1D753E5B91627516F6D70977",
      "Flags": 12582912,
      "LedgerEntryType": "AccountRoot",
      "MessageKey": "0000000000000000000000070000000300",
      "OwnerCount": 4,
      "PreviousTxnID": "41320138CA9837B34E82B3B3D6FB1E581D5DE2F0A67B3D62B5B8A8C9C8D970D0",
      "PreviousTxnLgrSeq": 18123095,
      "Sequence": 352,
      "TransferRate": 1004999999,
      "index": "13F1A95D7AAB7108D5CE7EEAF504B2894B8C674E6D68499076441C4837282BF8",
      "urlgravatar": "http://www.gravatar.com/avatar/98b4375e1d753e5b91627516f6d70977"
    },
    "ledger_hash": "A777B05A293A73E511669B8A4A45A298FF89AD9C9394430023008DB4A6E7FDD5",
    "ledger_index": 18123249,
    "validated": true
  }
}

In the above example, the Flags value is 12582912. This indicates that has the following flags enabled: lsfGlobalFreeze, lsfDefaultRipple, as demonstrated by the following JavaScript code:

var lsfGlobalFreeze = 0x00400000;
var lsfNoFreeze = 0x00200000;

var currentFlags = 12582912;

console.log(currentFlags & lsfGlobalFreeze); //4194304
//therefore, Global Freeze is enabled

console.log(currentFlags & lsfNoFreeze); //0
//therefore, No Freeze is not enabled

Using RippleAPI

To see if an address has enabled Global Freeze, No Freeze, or both, use the getSettings method with the following parameters:

Field Value Description
address String The Ripple address of the issuing address

Look for the following values in the response object:

Field Value Description
noFreeze Boolean (May be omitted) true if No Freeze is enabled.
globalFreeze Boolean (May be omitted) true if Global Freeze is enabled.

Example JavaScript (ECMAScript 6) code to check whether an address has Global Freeze or No Freeze enabled:

const {RippleAPI} = require('ripple-lib');

const api = new RippleAPI({
  server: 'wss://s1.ripple.com' // Public rippled server
});
api.on('error', (errorCode, errorMessage) => {
  console.log(errorCode + ': ' + errorMessage);
});

const my_address = 'rf1BiGeXwwQoi8Z2ueFYTEXSwuJYfV2Jpn';

api.connect().then(() => {
  // Look up settings object
  return api.getSettings(my_address);
}).then(settings => {
  console.log('Got settings for address', my_address);
  console.log('Global Freeze enabled?',
              (settings.globalFreeze === true));
  console.log('No Freeze enabled?', (settings.noFreeze === true));

}).then(() => {
  return api.disconnect();
}).catch(console.error);

See Also