@canvas-js/cli
Canvas provides a command line interface for running applications inside
Node.js.
This package lets you run individual application servers that join the
peer-to-peer network.
Installation
To install the CLI, run:
npm install -g @canvas-js/cli
Usage
canvas <command>
Commands:
canvas init <path> Initialize a new application
canvas info <path> Show the model schema and action names in a contract
canvas run <path> Run a Canvas application
canvas export <path> Export the action log as dag-json to stdout
canvas import <path> Import an action log from stdin
Options:
--version Show version number [boolean]
--help Show help [boolean]
Running an application
The main command is canvas run <path>
. This will start a libp2p node, SQLite database, QuickJS VM for processing actions, and an HTTP API server. Use the --help
flag to learn more.
Joining the libp2p mesh
In the likely case that your machine is behind a NAT layer, you have to provide the CLI with both an internal port bind a WebSocket server using the --listen
option, and a public external address using the --announce
option. Both of these must be formatted as multiaddrs, the generic composable network address format used by libp2p.
For example, this tells the CLI to listen on port 4444 and advertise wss://foobar.com:8000
as the public address:
$ canvas run ./myapp --listen /ip4/0.0.0.0/tcp/4444/ws --announce /dns4/foobar.com/tcp/443/wss
This assumes that you've configured your server to handle incoming secure websocket connections over TLS on port 443
, do TLS termination, and proxy the connection to your internal port 4444
.
A few things to note:
- You can pass as many
--announce
addresses as you want, but only one --listen
address. - You don't have to use TLS, but if you don't, browsers running embedded Canvas apps won't be able to talk to your peer.
- If you'd prefer to announce on a public static IP instead of a DNS name, announce on
/ip4/{publicIP}/tcp/{port}/wss
. - If your DNS name has IPv6
AAAA
records, you can use /dns6
in addition to /dns4
. - You can pass a
--listen
address without an --announce
address to delegate to libp2p's autonat and identify services, which are works in progress. It's best to provide a public address if you have one.
Almost always, --listen
will be of the form /ip4/0.0.0.0/tcp/${port}/ws
, and --announce
will be of the form /dns4/${hostname}/tcp/{port}/wss
.
HTTP API
Running a Canvas app with canvas run
will serve an HTTP API at http://127.0.0.1:8000/api/
by default. You can change the port with the --port
option.
The basic routes are:
GET /api
- get application metadataGET /api/models/:model
- get model recordsGET /api/models/:model/:key
- get a model record by primary keyGET /api/clock
- get the next logical clock value from the logGET /api/messages
- query ranges of log messagesGET /api/messages/:id
- get a message from the logPOST /api/messages
- apply a signed messageGET /api/connections
- current libp2p connectionsGET /api/peers
- current libp2p pubsub peersPOST /api/ping/:peerId
- ping a peer via libp2p
Exposing optional endpoints
Some optional API endpoints are disabled by default, since they should't be exposed publicly.
--metrics
- serve Prometheus metrics at /metrics
The metrics reported to Prometheus include default NodeJS metric, internal libp2p metrics, and some additional metrics specific to Canvas Core
.
canvas_sync_time
A histogram of MST sync times.
label name | type |
---|
topic | string |
duration | number |
peer | string |
canvas_messages
A counter of messages applied
label name | type | description |
---|
topic | string | |
type | string | "action" or "session" |
Serving static content alonside the API
--static [directory]
can be used to serve a static directory alongside the application API. This is the easiest way to bundle a frontend that uses Canvas as a backend. If the --static
flag is provided, the root path /
serves the files in [directory]
.