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The best way to interact with the weave, without having to write any GQL and trying to remember param names!
The best way to interact with the weave, without having to write any GQL and trying to remember param names!
ArDB is well typed and with the basic functions anyone will need to run and execute any request.
Plus, coming soon, we are planing to release an easy way to add or update data to Arwaeve right from ArDB!
First you'll need to add ardb to your project:
yarn add ardb
Import it into your project file:
import ArDB from 'ardb';
const ardb = new ArDB(arweaveInstance, logLevel? = LOG.ARWEAVE); // logLevel is optional and respects Arweave's logging by default.
Initialisation
// arweave is Arweave Client instance
const ardb = new ArDB(arweave);
And now we are ready to play with it!
Examples:
// Get a single transaction
const tx = await ardb.search('transaction').id('A235HBk5p4nEWfjBEGsAo56kYsmq7mCCyc5UZq5sgjY').findOne();
// Get an array of transactions, in this case it will be of length 1 since
// we asked to find only 1.
const txs = await ardb.search('transactions').appName('SmartWeaveAction').findOne();
// This is the same as doing:
const txs = await ardb.search('transactions').tag('App-Name', 'SmartWeaveAction').limit(1).find();
// Search for multiple transactions
const txs = await ardb.search('transactions').from('BPr7vrFduuQqqVMu_tftxsScTKUq9ke0rx4q5C9ieQU').find();
// You can then keep going and searching for more by doing:
const newTxs = await ardb.next();
// Or you could get everything at once by doing:
const txs = await ardb.search('blocks').id('BkJ_h-GGIwfek-cJd-RaJrOXezAc0PmklItzzCLIF_aSk36FEjpOBuBDS27D2K_T').findAll();
search(type: 'transaction' | 'transactions' | 'block' | 'blocks' = 'transactions')
search()
before any other method.transactions
.id(id: string)
ids(ids: string[])
block
or transaction
, and you set ids(['TXID'])
, the first ID in the array will be selected as the search value.appName(name: string)
App-Name
tag and set it's value to name
.tag('App-Name', name)
or find({tags: [{name: 'App-Name', values: [name]}]})
but much shorter.type(type: string)
Content-Type
tag and set it's value to type
.tags(tags: {name: string, values: string|string[]})
tags([{name: 'app', values: ['myval']}, {name: 'date', values: ['yesterday', 'today']}])
.tag(name: string, values: string|string[])
tag('app', 'myval')
or tag('date', ['yesterday', 'today'])
.from(owners: string|string[])
to(recipients: string|string[])
min(min: number)
max(max: number)
only(fields: string|string[])
exclude(fields: string|string[])
limit(limit: number)
limit
. Default is 10
.sort(sort: 'HEIGHT_DESC' | 'HEIGHT_ASC')
desc
or asc
based on the block height.HEIGHT_DESC
.cursor(cursor: string)
transactions
or blocks
at a certain cursor, you can use the cursor()
method to set it before doing the request.After we complete our request with the previous methods, we can go ahead and find the items.
findOne(options: GlobalOptions = {})
transactions
and blocks
it set the limit to 1
automatically, even if a limit()
is set.find(options: GlobalOptions = {})
limit()
, if not set, limit is at the default 10
.findAll(options: GlobalOptions = {})
next()
find()
it returns one item. Else, it returns an array of items.run(query: string)
runAll(query: string)
export interface IBlock {
id?: string;
timestamp?: number;
height?: number;
previous?: string;
}
export interface IBlockFilter {
min?: number;
max?: number;
}
export interface ITransactionOptions {
id?: string;
}
export interface ITransactionsOptions {
ids?: string[];
owners?: string[];
recipients?: string[];
tags?: { name: string; values: string[] }[];
block?: IBlockFilter;
first?: number;
after?: string;
sort?: 'HEIGHT_DESC' | 'HEIGHT_ASC';
}
export interface IBlockOptions {
id?: string;
}
export interface IBlocksOptions {
id?: string;
height?: IBlockFilter;
after?: string;
sort?: 'HEIGHT_DESC' | 'HEIGHT_ASC';
}
export interface IGlobalOptions extends ITransactionOptions, ITransactionsOptions, IBlockOptions, IBlocksOptions {}
export type AmountType = string | { winston?: string; ar?: string }; // string = ar
export type OwnerType = string | { address?: string; key?: string }; // string = address
export type DataType = string | { size: string; type: string }; // string = type
export type RequestType = 'transaction' | 'block' | 'transactions' | 'blocks';
FAQs
The best way to interact with the weave, without having to write any GQL and trying to remember param names!
The npm package ardb receives a total of 47 weekly downloads. As such, ardb popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that ardb demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
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.
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