Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

@solana/rpc-transport-http

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
15
Versions
936
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

@solana/rpc-transport-http

An RPC transport that uses HTTP requests

  • 2.0.0-experimental.b08a3a2
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
20K
decreased by-5.45%
Maintainers
15
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

npm npm-downloads semantic-release
code-style-prettier

@solana/rpc-transport-http

This package allows developers to create custom RPC transports. With this library, one can implement highly specialized functionality for leveraging multiple transports, attempting/handling retries, and more.

Functions

createHttpTransport()

Call this to create a function that conforms to the RpcTransport interface (see @solana/rpc-spec). You can use that function in your programs to make POST requests with headers suitable for sending JSON data to a server.

import { createHttpTransport } from '@solana/rpc-transport-http';

const transport = createHttpTransport({ url: 'https://api.mainnet-beta.solana.com' });
const response = await transport({
    payload: { id: 1, jsonrpc: '2.0', method: 'getSlot' },
});
Config
dispatcher_NODE_ONLY

In Node environments you can tune how requests are dispatched to the network. Use this config parameter to install a undici.Dispatcher in your transport.

import { createHttpTransport } from '@solana/rpc-transport-http';
import { Agent, BalancedPool } from 'undici';

// Create a dispatcher that, when called with a special URL, creates a round-robin pool of RPCs.
const dispatcher = new Agent({
    factory(origin, opts) {
        if (origin === 'https://mypool') {
            const upstreams = [
                'https://api.mainnet-beta.solana.com',
                'https://mainnet.helius-rpc.com',
                'https://several-neat-iguana.quiknode.pro',
            ];
            return new BalancedPool(upstreams, {
                ...opts,
                bodyTimeout: 60e3,
                headersTimeout: 5e3,
                keepAliveTimeout: 19e3,
            });
        } else {
            return new Pool(origin, opts);
        }
    },
});
const transport = createHttpTransport({
    dispatcher_NODE_ONLY: dispatcher,
    url: 'https://mypool',
});
let id = 0;
const balances = await Promise.allSettled(
    accounts.map(account =>
        transport({
            payload: {
                id: ++id,
                jsonrpc: '2.0',
                method: 'getBalance',
                params: [account],
            },
        }),
    ),
);
headers

An object of headers to set on the request. Avoid forbidden headers. Additionally, the headers Accept, Content-Length, and Content-Type are disallowed.

import { createHttpTransport } from '@solana/rpc-transport-http';

const transport = createHttpTransport({
    headers: {
        // Authorize with the RPC using a bearer token
        Authorization: `Bearer ${process.env.RPC_AUTH_TOKEN}`,
    },
    url: 'https://several-neat-iguana.quiknode.pro',
});
url

A string representing the target endpoint. In Node, it must be an absolute URL using the http or https protocol.

Augmenting Transports

Using this core transport, you can implement specialized functionality for leveraging multiple transports, attempting/handling retries, and more.

Round Robin

Here’s an example of how someone might implement a “round robin” approach to distribute requests to multiple transports:

import { RpcTransport } from '@solana/rpc-spec';
import { createHttpTransport } from '@solana/rpc-transport-http';

// Create a transport for each RPC server
const transports = [
    createHttpTransport({ url: 'https://mainnet-beta.my-server-1.com' }),
    createHttpTransport({ url: 'https://mainnet-beta.my-server-2.com' }),
    createHttpTransport({ url: 'https://mainnet-beta.my-server-3.com' }),
];

// Create a wrapper transport that distributes requests to them
let nextTransport = 0;
async function roundRobinTransport<TResponse>(...args: Parameters<RpcTransport>): Promise<TResponse> {
    const transport = transports[nextTransport];
    nextTransport = (nextTransport + 1) % transports.length;
    return await transport(...args);
}

Sharding

Another example of a possible customization for a transport is to shard requests deterministically among a set of servers. Here’s an example:

Perhaps your application needs to make a large number of requests, or needs to fan request for different methods out to different servers. Here’s an example of an implementation that does the latter:

import { RpcTransport } from '@solana/rpc-spec';
import { createHttpTransport } from '@solana/rpc-transport-http';

// Create multiple transports
const transportA = createHttpTransport({ url: 'https://mainnet-beta.my-server-1.com' });
const transportB = createHttpTransport({ url: 'https://mainnet-beta.my-server-2.com' });
const transportC = createHttpTransport({ url: 'https://mainnet-beta.my-server-3.com' });
const transportD = createHttpTransport({ url: 'https://mainnet-beta.my-server-4.com' });

// Function to determine which shard to use based on the request method
function selectShard(method: string): RpcTransport {
    switch (method) {
        case 'getAccountInfo':
        case 'getBalance':
            return transportA;
        case 'getTransaction':
        case 'getRecentBlockhash':
            return transportB;
        case 'sendTransaction':
            return transportC;
        default:
            return transportD;
    }
}

async function shardingTransport<TResponse>(...args: Parameters<RpcTransport>): Promise<TResponse> {
    const payload = args[0].payload as { method: string };
    const selectedTransport = selectShard(payload.method);
    return await selectedTransport(...args);
}

Retry Logic

The transport library can also be used to implement custom retry logic on any request:

import { RpcTransport } from '@solana/rpc-spec';
import { createHttpTransport } from '@solana/rpc-transport-http';

// Set the maximum number of attempts to retry a request
const MAX_ATTEMPTS = 4;

// Create the default transport
const defaultTransport = createHttpTransport({ url: 'https://mainnet-beta.my-server-1.com' });

// Sleep function to wait for a given number of milliseconds
function sleep(ms: number): Promise<void> {
    return new Promise(resolve => setTimeout(resolve, ms));
}

// Calculate the delay for a given attempt
function calculateRetryDelay(attempt: number): number {
    // Exponential backoff with a maximum of 1.5 seconds
    return Math.min(100 * Math.pow(2, attempt), 1500);
}

// A retrying transport that will retry up to `MAX_ATTEMPTS` times before failing
async function retryingTransport<TResponse>(...args: Parameters<RpcTransport>): Promise<TResponse> {
    let requestError;
    for (let attempts = 0; attempts < MAX_ATTEMPTS; attempts++) {
        try {
            return await defaultTransport(...args);
        } catch (err) {
            requestError = err;
            // Only sleep if we have more attempts remaining
            if (attempts < MAX_ATTEMPTS - 1) {
                const retryDelay = calculateRetryDelay(attempts);
                await sleep(retryDelay);
            }
        }
    }
    throw requestError;
}

Failover

Here’s an example of some failover logic integrated into a transport:

import { RpcTransport } from '@solana/rpc-spec';
import { createHttpTransport } from '@solana/rpc-transport-http';

// Create a transport for each RPC server
const transports = [
    createHttpTransport({ url: 'https://mainnet-beta.my-server-1.com' }),
    createHttpTransport({ url: 'https://mainnet-beta.my-server-2.com' }),
    createHttpTransport({ url: 'https://mainnet-beta.my-server-2.com' }),
];

// A failover transport that will try each transport in order until one succeeds before failing
async function failoverTransport<TResponse>(...args: Parameters<RpcTransport>): Promise<TResponse> {
    let requestError;

    for (const transport of transports) {
        try {
            return await transport(...args);
        } catch (err) {
            requestError = err;
            console.error(err);
        }
    }
    throw requestError;
}

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 06 Mar 2024

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc