xrpl.js
A JavaScript/TypeScript library for interacting with the XRP Ledger
This is the recommended library for integrating a JavaScript/TypeScript app with the XRP Ledger, especially if you intend to use advanced functionality such as IOUs, payment paths, the decentralized exchange, account settings, payment channels, escrows, multi-signing, and more.
See the full reference documentation on the XRP Ledger Dev Portal.
What is xrpl.js used for? The applications on the list linked above use xrpl.js
. Open a PR to add your app or project to the list!
Features
- Connect to a
rippled
server from Node.js or a web browser - Helpers for creating requests and parsing responses for the rippled API
- Listen to events on the XRP Ledger (transactions, ledger, validations, etc.)
- Sign and submit transactions to the XRP Ledger
- Type definitions for TypeScript
Requirements
- Node.js v14 is recommended. Other versions may work but are not frequently tested.
- npm is recommended.
yarn
may work but we use package-lock.json
.
Getting Started
See also: RippleAPI Beginners Guide
In an existing project (with package.json
), install xrpl.js
:
$ npm install xrpl@beta
Then see the documentation.
Using xrpl.js with React Native
If you want to use xrpl.js
with React Native you will need to have some of the NodeJS modules available. To help with this you can use a module like rn-nodeify.
-
Install dependencies (you can use npm
as well):
npm install react-native-crypto
npm install xrpl@beta
# install peer deps
npm install react-native-randombytes
# install latest rn-nodeify
npm install rn-nodeify@latest --dev
-
After that, run the following command:
# install node core shims and recursively hack package.json files
# in ./node_modules to add/update the "browser"/"react-native" field with relevant mappings
./node_modules/.bin/rn-nodeify --hack --install
-
Enable crypto
:
rn-nodeify
will create a shim.js
file in the project root directory.
Open it and uncomment the line that requires the crypto module:
require('crypto')
-
Import shim
in your project (it must be the first line):
import './shim'
...
Using xrpl.js with Deno
Until official support for Deno is added, you can use the following work-around to use xrpl.js
with Deno:
import xrpl from 'https://dev.jspm.io/npm:xrpl';
(async () => {
const api = new (xrpl as any).RippleAPI({ server: 'wss://s.altnet.rippletest.net:51233' });
const address = 'rH8NxV12EuV...khfJ5uw9kT';
api.connect().then(() => {
api.getBalances(address).then((balances: any) => {
console.log(JSON.stringify(balances, null, 2));
});
});
})();
Documentation
Mailing Lists
We have a low-traffic mailing list for announcements of new xrpl.js releases. (About 1 email per week)
If you're using the XRP Ledger in production, you should run a rippled server and subscribe to the ripple-server mailing list as well.
Development
To build the library for Node.js and the browser:
$ npm run build
The TypeScript compiler will output the resulting JS files in ./dist/npm/
.
webpack will output the resulting JS files in ./build/
.
For details, see the scripts
in package.json
.
Running Tests
Unit Tests
- Clone the repository
cd
into the repository and install dependencies with npm install
npm test
Linting
Run npm run lint
to lint the code with eslint
.
Generating Documentation
Update the documentation by running npm run docgen
.
More Information