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

@solana/rpc-types

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
0
Versions
1046
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

@solana/rpc-types

Type definitions for values used in the Solana RPC, and helper functions for working with them

  • 2.0.0-canary-20240805092356
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
9.6K
increased by21.88%
Maintainers
0
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

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

@solana/rpc-types

This package defines types for values used in the Solana JSON-RPC and a series of helpers for working with them. It can be used standalone, but it is also exported as part of the Solana JavaScript SDK @solana/web3.js@rc.

Types

Commitment

A type that enumerates the possible commitment statuses – each a measure of the network confirmation and stake levels on a particular block. Read more about the statuses themselves, here.

LamportsUnsafeBeyond2Pow53Minus1

This type represents an integer value denominated in Lamports (ie. $1 \times 10^{-9}$ ◎).

Note: Despite the fact that this type is represented as a bigint in client code and a u64 in server code, the JSON-RPC implementation represents Lamports as an IEEE 754 floating point number. This means that you can only safely send or receive values up to $2^{53} - 1$ between the client and the RPC server. See https://github.com/solana-labs/solana/issues/30741 for more detail.

StringifiedBigInt

This type represents a bigint which has been encoded as a string for transit over a transport that does not support bigint values natively. The JSON-RPC is such a transport.

StringifiedNumber

This type represents a number which has been encoded as a string for transit over a transport where loss of precision when using the native number type is a concern. The JSON-RPC is such a transport.

UnixTimestamp

This type represents a number in the range $[-8.64 \times 10^{15}, 8.64 \times 10^{15}]$. See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Date#the_epoch_timestamps_and_invalid_date

Functions

assertIsLamports()

Lamport values returned from the RPC API conform to the type LamportsUnsafeBeyond2Pow53Minus1. You can use a value of that type wherever a quantity of Lamports is expected.

From time to time you might acquire a number that you expect to be a quantity of Lamports, from an untrusted network API or user input. To assert that such an arbitrary number is usable as a quantity of Lamports, use the assertIsLamports function.

import { assertIsLamports } from '@solana/rpc-types';

// Imagine a function that creates a transfer instruction when a user submits a form.
function handleSubmit() {
    // We know only that what the user typed conforms to the `number` type.
    const lamports: number = parseInt(quantityInput.value, 10);
    try {
        // If this type assertion function doesn't throw, then
        // Typescript will upcast `lamports` to `LamportsUnsafeBeyond2Pow53Minus1`.
        assertIsLamports(lamports);
        // At this point, `lamports` is a `LamportsUnsafeBeyond2Pow53Minus1` that can be used anywhere Lamports are expected.
        await transfer(fromAddress, toAddress, lamports);
    } catch (e) {
        // `lamports` turned out not to validate as a quantity of Lamports.
    }
}

assertIsStringifiedBigInt()

Large integers returned from the RPC API encoded as strings conform to the type StringifiedBigInt.

From time to time you might acquire a string that you suspect might validate as a StringifiedBigInt, from an untrusted network API or user input. To assert that such an arbitrary string is usable as a StringifiedBigInt, use the assertIsStringifiedBigInt function.

See assertIsLamports() for an example of how to use an assertion function.

assertIsStringifiedNumber()

Large numbers returned from the RPC API encoded as strings conform to the type StringifiedNumber.

From time to time you might acquire a string that you suspect might validate as a StringifiedNumber, from an untrusted network API or user input. To assert that such an arbitrary string is usable as a StringifiedNumber, use the assertIsStringifiedNumber function.

See assertIsLamports() for an example of how to use an assertion function.

assertIsUnixTimestamp()

Timestamps returned from the RPC API conform to the type UnixTimestamp.

From time to time you might acquire a number that you suspect might validate as a UnixTimestamp, from an untrusted network API or user input. To assert that such an arbitrary number is usable as a UnixTimestamp, use the assertIsUnixTimestamp function.

See assertIsLamports() for an example of how to use an assertion function.

commitmentComparator()

A function that accepts two Commitments as input, and returns -1 if the first is lower than the second, 0 if they are the same, and 1 if the second is higher than the first. You can use this comparator to sort items by commitment, or to determine an upper/lower bound on a level of commitment given two options.

import { commitmentComparator } from '@solana/rpc-types';

transactions.sort((a, b) => commitmentComparator(a.confirmationStatus, b.confirmationStatus));

isLamports()

This is a type guard that accepts a bigint as input. It will both return true if the integer conforms to the LamportsUnsafeBeyond2Pow53Minus1 type and will refine the type for use in your program.

import { isLamports } from '@solana/rpc-types';

if (isLamports(lamports)) {
    // At this point, `lamports` has been refined to a
    // `LamportsUnsafeBeyond2Pow53Minus1` that can be used anywhere Lamports are expected.
    await transfer(fromAddress, toAddress, lamports);
} else {
    setError(`${ownerAddress} is not an address`);
}

isStringifiedBigInt()

This is a type guard that accepts a string as input. It will both return true if the string can be parsed as a bigint and will refine the type for use in your program.

See isLamports() for an example of how to use a type guard.

isStringifiedNumber()

This is a type guard that accepts a string as input. It will both return true if the string can be parsed as a JavaScript Number and will refine the type for use in your program.

See isLamports() for an example of how to use a type guard.

isUnixTimestamp()

This is a type guard that accepts a number as input. It will both return true if the number is in the Unix timestamp range and will refine the type for use in your program.

See isLamports() for an example of how to use a type guard.

lamports()

This helper combines asserting that a number is a possible number of Lamports with coercing it to the LamportsUnsafeBeyond2Pow53Minus1 type. It's best used with untrusted input.

import { lamports } from '@solana/rpc-types';

await transfer(address(fromAddress), address(toAddress), lamports(100000n));

stringifiedBigInt()

This helper combines asserting that a string represents a bigint with coercing it to the StringifiedBigInt type. It's best used with untrusted input.

stringifiedNumber()

This helper combines asserting that a string parses as a JavaScript Number with coercing it to the StringifiedNumber type. It's best used with untrusted input.

unixTimestamp()

This helper combines asserting that a number is in the Unix timestamp range with coercing it to the UnixTimestamp type. It's best used with untrusted input.

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 05 Aug 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