XMTP JS client library
The XMTP SDK bundles the core code libraries, components, tools, documentation, and guides that developers require in order to build client experiences on top of the XMTP protocol and network.
Usage
The API revolves around a network Client that allows retrieving and sending messages to other network participants. A Client must be connected to a wallet on startup. If this is the very first time the Client is created, the client will generate a key bundle that is used to encrypt and authenticate messages. The key bundle persists encrypted in local storage using a wallet signature. The public side of the key bundle is also regularly advertised on the network to allow parties to establish shared encryption keys. All this happens transparently, without requiring any additional code.
import { Client } from 'xmtp-js'
import { Wallet } from 'ethers'
const wallet = Wallet.createRandom()
const xmtp = await Client.create(wallet)
const conversation = await xmtp.conversations.newConversation(
'0xd8dA6BF26964aF9D7eEd9e03E53415D37aA96045'
)
const messages = await conversation.messages()
await conversation.send('gm')
for await (const message of conversation.streamMessages()) {
console.log(`[${message.senderAddress}]: ${message.text}`)
}
Creating a Client
A Client is created with Client.create(wallet: ethers.Signer): Promise<Client>
that requires passing in a connected Wallet. The Client will request a wallet signature in 2 cases:
- To sign the newly generated key bundle, this happens only the very first time when key bundle is not found in storage
- To sign a random salt used to encrypt the key bundle in storage, this happens every time the Client is started (including the very first time)
The Client will connect to XMTP testnet by default. CreateOptions can be used to override this and other parameters of the network connection.
Note that currently the Client uses browser's local storage, so starting it on a different device or browser and connecting to the same wallet will create a "split identity" situation where only one of the clients will be able to decrypt given incoming message depending on which of the advertised key bundles the sender chose to use. Similarly if local storage is cleared for whatever reason and a new key bundle is created, older messages encrypted with older bundles cannot be decrypted anymore and will cause the client to throw.
import { Client } from 'xmtp-js'
const xmtp = await Client.create(wallet)
Conversations
Most of the time, when interacting with the network, you'll want to do it through conversations
.
import { Client } from 'xmtp-js'
const xmtp = await Client.create(wallet)
const conversations = xmtp.conversations
List existing conversations
You can get a list of all conversations that have had 1 or more messages exchanged in the last 30 days.
const allConversations = await xmtp.conversations.list()
for (const conversation of allConversations) {
console.log(`Saying GM to ${conversation.peerAddress}`)
await conversation.send('gm')
}
Listen for new conversations
You can also listen for new conversations being started in real-time. This will allow applications to display incoming messages from new contacts.
Warning: this stream will continue infinitely. To end the stream you can either break from the loop, or call await stream.return()
const stream = xmtp.conversations.stream()
for await (const conversation of stream) {
console.log(`New conversation started with ${conversation.peerAddress}`)
await conversation.send('Hi there!')
break
}
Start a new conversation
You can create a new conversation with any Ethereum address on the XMTP network.
const newConversation = await xmtp.conversations.newConversation(
'0xd8dA6BF26964aF9D7eEd9e03E53415D37aA96045'
)
Sending messages
To be able to send a message, the recipient must have already started their Client at least once and consequently advertised their key bundle on the network. Messages are addressed using wallet addresses. Message payload is a string but neither the SDK nor the network put any constraints on its contents or interpretation.
const conversation = await xmtp.conversations.newConversation(
'0xd8dA6BF26964aF9D7eEd9e03E53415D37aA96045'
)
await conversation.send('Hello world')
List messages in a conversation
You can receive the complete message history by calling conversation.messages()
for (const conversation of await xmtp.conversations.list()) {
const opts = {
startTime: new Date(new Date().setDate(new Date().getDate() - 1)),
endTime: new Date(),
}
const messagesInConversation = await conversation.messages(opts)
}
Listen for new messages in a conversation
You can listen for any new messages (incoming or outgoing) in a conversation by calling conversation.streamMessages()
.
A successfully received message (that makes it through the decoding and decryption without throwing) can be trusted to be authentic, i.e. that it was sent by the owner of the message.senderAddress
wallet and that it wasn't modified in transit. The message.sent
timestamp can be trusted to have been set by the sender.
The Stream returned by the stream
methods is an asynchronous iterator and as such usable by a for-await-of loop. Note however that it is by its nature infinite, so any looping construct used with it will not terminate, unless the termination is explicitly initiated (by breaking the loop or by an external call to Stream.return()
)
const conversation = await xmtp.conversations.newConversation(
'0xd8dA6BF26964aF9D7eEd9e03E53415D37aA96045'
)
for await (const message of conversation.streamMessages()) {
if (message.senderAddress === xmtp.address) {
continue
}
console.log(`New message from ${message.senderAddress}: ${message.text}`)
}
Under the hood
Using xmtp.conversations
hides the details of this, but for the curious this is how sending a message on XMTP works. The first message and first response between two parties is sent to three separate topics:
- Sender's introduction topic
- Recipient's introduction topic
- Conversation topic shared by the sender and the recipient
This is used to establish a shared secret and negotiate a topic to communicate on. Any following messages are sent to the conversation topic only.
The introduction topics allow the participants to reconstruct the list of conversations that they participate(d) in.
The conversation topics carry the contents of the conversations.
Developing
Auto-releasing and commit conventions
A new version of this package will be automatically published whenever there is a merge to the main
branch. Specifically, new GitHub releases and tags will be created, and a new NPM package version will be published. The release version increment type is derived from the commits that were bundled in the merge to main
, using semantic-release commit message conventions.
The table below shows example commits and the resulting release type:
Commit message | Release type |
---|
fix(pencil): stop graphite breaking when too much pressure applied | Patch Fix Release |
feat(pencil): add 'graphiteWidth' option | Minor Feature Release |
perf(pencil): remove graphiteWidth option
BREAKING CHANGE: The graphiteWidth option has been removed.
The default graphite width of 10mm is always used for performance reasons. | Major Breaking Release (Note that the BREAKING CHANGE: token must be in the footer of the commit) |
This is currently configured to use the Angular Commit Message Conventions.
Prerequisites
Node
Please make sure you have a Node version compatible with that specified in the root .nvmrc
file. We recommend using nvm
to manage local node versions - find install instructions appropriate for your system here.