BitGo JavaScript SDK
The BitGo Platform and SDK makes it easy to build multi-signature crypto-currency applications today with support for Bitcoin, Ethereum and many other coins.
The SDK is fully integrated with the BitGo co-signing service for managing all of your BitGo wallets.
Included in the SDK are examples for how to use the API to manage your multi-signature wallets.
Please email us at support@bitgo.com if you have questions or comments about this API.
Installation
Please make sure you are running at least Node version 8 (the latest LTS release is recommended) and NPM version 6.
We recommend using nvm
, the Node Version Manager, for setting your Node version.
npm install --save bitgo
Full Documentation
Please see our SDK Documentation for detailed information about the TypeScript SDK and functionality.
For more general information about the BitGo API, please see our REST API Documentation.
Release Notes
You can find the complete release notes (since version 4.44.0) here.
Example Usage
Initialize SDK
Create an access token by logging into your bitgo account, going to the API access tab in the settings area and making a developer token.
const BitGo = require('bitgo');
const bitgo = new BitGo.BitGo({ accessToken: ACCESS_TOKEN });
const result = await bitgo.session();
console.dir(result);
Create Wallet
const params = {
"passphrase": "replaceme",
"label": "firstwallet"
};
const { wallet } = await bitgo.coin('tbtc').wallets().generateWallet(params);
console.dir(wallet);
Create new address
const address = await wallet.createAddress();
console.dir(address);
View wallet transfers
const transfers = await wallet.transfers();
Send coins
const result = await wallet.sendCoins({
address: "2NEe9QhKPB2gnQLB3hffMuDcoFKZFjHYJYx",
amount: 0.01 * 1e8,
walletPassphrase: "replaceme"
});
console.dir(result);
More examples
Further demos and examples in both JavaScript and TypeScript can be found in the example directory.
Enabling additional debugging output
bitgo
uses the debug
package to emit extra information, which can be useful when debugging issues with BitGoJS or BitGo Express.
When using the bitgo
npm package, the easiest way to enable debug output is by setting the DEBUG
environment variable to one or more of the debug namespaces in the table below. Multiple debug namespaces can be enabled by giving a comma-separated list or by using *
as a wildcard. See the debug package documentation for more details.
Available Debug Namespaces
Namespace | Description |
---|
bitgo:index | Core BitGo object. Currently only constant fetch failures and HMAC response failures will emit debug information for this namespace. |
bitgo:v1:txb | Version 1 (legacy) transaction builder |
bitgo:v2:pendingapprovals | Pending approval operations. Currently only wallet fetch errors will emit debug information for this namespace. |
bitgo:v2:wallet | Wallet operations including transaction prebuild, sendMany calls and consolidation transactions |
bitgo:v2:utxo | Low level operations for UTXO coins, including transaction parsing, verification, signing and explanations |
bitgo:v2:eth | Ethereum specific output. Currently only failures to require the optional Ethereum libraries are reported |
bitgo:v2:util | SDK utilities specific output. Currently only failures to require the optional Ethereum libraries are reported |
Another debug namespace which is not provided by BitGoJS but is helpful nonetheless is the superagent
namespace, which will output all HTTP requests and responses (only the URL, not bodies).
Example
To run an SDK script with debug output enabled, export the DEBUG environment variable before running.
export DEBUG='bitgo:*' # enable all bitgo debug namespaces
node myScript.js
To set debug namespaces in the browser, you should set localStorage.debug
property instead of the DEBUG
environment variable using your browser's development tools console.
localStorage.debug = 'bitgo:*';
Using with TypeScript
bitgo
is not yet compatible with the noImplicitAny
compiler option. If you want to use this option in your project (and we recommend that you do), you must set the skipLibCheck
option to supress errors about missing type definitions for dependencies of bitgo
.
Usage in Browser
Since version 6, bitgo
includes a minified, browser-compatible bundle by default at dist/browser/BitGoJS.min.js
. It can be copied from there directly into your project.
BitGoJS can also be bundled with any module bundler. There is a Webpack configuration file already included, which can be triggered with package scripts.
For a production build: npm run-script compile
For a development (non-minified) build: npm run-script compile-dbg
To build the test suite into a single test file: npm run-script compile-test