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

connectest

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
1
Versions
20
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

connectest

Substrate-connect to Smoldot clients. Using either substrate extension with predefined clients or an internal smoldot client based on chainSpecs provided.

  • 0.1.13
  • unpublished
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
0
Maintainers
1
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

@substrate/connect

Using @substrate/connect through the PolkadotJS RPC Provider

The recommended way to use @substrate/connect is to use PolkadotJS, which provides a higher-level API built on top of it. Unless you are writting your own library, you probably want to use the PolkadotJS RPC provider.

Provide a well-known chain name ('polkadot', 'ksmcc3', 'westend2', 'rococo_v2_2'):

Note these names are the "real" names of the chains rather than the friendly names (e.g. "kusama" or "rococo"). 'ksmcc3' is the name for kusama. This matters for chains which have been hard forked. I.e. rococo - "rococo_v2" and "rococo_v2_2" are two completely unrelated chains.

import { ApiPromise } from "@polkadot/api";
import {
  ScProvider,
  WellKnownChain,
} from "@polkadot/rpc-provider/substrate-connect";

const provider = new ScProvider(WellKnownChain.polkadot);
await provider.connect();
const polkadotApi = await ApiPromise.create({ provider });
await polkadotApi.rpc.chain.subscribeNewHeads((lastHeader) => {
  console.log(lastHeader.number.toString());
});

...or provide your custom Substrate chain's specification:

import { ApiPromise } from "@polkadot/api";
import { ScProvider } from "@polkadot/rpc-provider/substrate-connect";
import myJsonSubstrateChainSpec from './mySubstrateChainSpec.json';

const mySubstrateChainSpec = JSON.stringify(myJsonSubstrateChainSpec);

const provider = new ScProvider(mySubstrateChainSpec);
await provider.connect();
const polkadotApi = await ApiPromise.create({ provider });
await polkadotApi.rpc.chain.subscribeNewHeads((lastHeader) => {
  console.log(lastHeader.number.toString());
});

In order to connect to a parachain, you must first instantiate the ScProvider corresponding to the relay chain, then pass this ScProvider as the second argument of the constructor of the parachain ScProvider. The following example connects to a parachain of the Westend test network:

import { ApiPromise } from "@polkadot/api";
import {
  ScProvider,
  WellKnownChain,
} from "@polkadot/rpc-provider/substrate-connect";
import jsonParachainSpec from './myParaChainSpec.json';

const parachainSpec = JSON.stringify(jsonParachainSpec);

const relayProvider = new ScProvider(WellKnownChain.westend2);
const provider = new ScProvider(parachainSpec, relayProvider);

await provider.connect();

const polkadotApi = await ApiPromise.create({ provider });
await polkadotApi.rpc.chain.subscribeNewHeads((lastHeader) => {
  console.log(lastHeader.number.toString());
});

Using @substrate/connect for library authors

Provide a well-known chain name ('polkadot', 'ksmcc3', 'westend2', 'rococo_v2_2'):

import { createScClient, WellKnownChain } from '@substrate/connect';

const scClient = createScClient();
const chain = await scClient.addWellKnownChain(
  WellKnownChain.westend2,
  function jsonRpcCallback(response) {
    console.log("response", response);
  }
);

chain.sendJsonRpc(
  '{"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":"1","method":"system_health","params":[]}'
);

...or provide your custom substrate chain's name and chainspec:

import { createScClient } from '@substrate/connect';
import myJsonChainSpec from './mySubstrateChainSpec.json';

const myChainSpec = JSON.stringify(myJsonChainSpec);

const scClient = createScClient();
const chain = await scClient.addChain(
  myChainSpec,
  function jsonRpcCallback(response) {
    console.log("response", response);
  }
);

chain.sendJsonRpc(
  '{"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":"1","method":"system_health","params":[]}'
);

In order to connect to a parachain, you must first instantiate the relay chain this parachain is connected to, then instantiate the parachain on the same ScClient. The following example connects to a parachain of the Westend test network:

import { createScClient, WellKnownChain } from '@substrate/connect';
import jsonParachainSpec from './myParaChainSpec.json';

const parachainSpec = JSON.stringify(jsonParachainSpec);

const scClient = createScClient();
await scClient.addWellKnownChain(WellKnownChain.westend2)
const parachain = await scClient.addChain(
  parachainSpec,
  function jsonRpcCallback(response) {
    console.log("response", response);
  }
);

parachain.sendJsonRpc(
  '{"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":"1","method":"system_health","params":[]}'
);

Scripts

  • yarn test to run the unit tests
  • yarn build to build @substrate-connect
  • yarn lint to run linter for @substrate-connect

FAQs

Package last updated on 18 Jul 2022

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