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

ethereum-client-binaries

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
1
Versions
14
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

ethereum-client-binaries

Download Ethereum client binaries for your OS

  • 1.0.1
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
4
decreased by-88.24%
Maintainers
1
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

ethereum-client-binaries

Build Status NPM module Twitter URL

Download Ethereum client binaries for your OS.

When you wish to run a local Ethereum client node it would be beneficial to first scan for existing node client binaries on the machine and then download appropriate client binaries if none found. This package does both.

It is structured so that it can be optionally be used in conjunction with a UI, e.g. if one wishes to allow a user to select the client software they wish to download.

Features:

  • Configurable client types (Geth, Eth, Parity, etc)
  • Configurable sanity checks
  • Can scan and download to specific folders
  • Logging can be toggled on/off at runtime
  • Can be integrated into Electron.js apps

Installation

npm install --save ethereum-client-binaries

Usage

Config object

First a config object needs to be defined. This specifies the possible clients and the platforms they support.

For example, a config object which specifies the Geth client for only 64-bit Linux platforms and the Parity client for only 32-bit Windows platforms might be:

const config = {
  "clients": {
    "Geth": {
      "platforms": {
        "linux": {
          "x64": {
            "download": {
              "url": "https://geth.com/latest.tgz",
              "type": "tar"
            },
            "bin": "geth",
            "commands": {
              "sanity": {
                "args": ["version"],
                "output": [ "Geth", "1.4.12" ]
              }                
            }
          },
        }
      }
    },
    "Parity": {
      "platforms": {
        "win": {
          "ia32": {
            "download": {
              "url": "https://parity.com/latest.zip",
              "type": "zip"
            },
            "bin": "parity",
            "commands": {
              "sanity": {
                "args": ["version"],
                "output": [ "Parity", "11.0" ]
              }                
            }
          },
        }
      }      
    }
  }
}

Every client must specify one or more platforms, each of which must specify one or more architectures. Supported platforms are as documented for Node's process.platform except that mac is used instead of darwin and win is used instead of win32. Supported architectures are as documented for Node's process.arch.

Each platform-arch entry needs to specify a bin key which holds the name of the executable on the system, a download key which holds info on where the binary can be downloaded from if needed, and a commands key which holds information on different kinds of commands that can be run against the binary.

The sanity command is mandatory and is a way to check a found binary to ensure that is is actually a valid client binary and not something else. In the above config the sanity command denotes that running geth version should return output containing both Geth and 1.4.12.

Now we can construct a Manager with this config:

const Manager = require('ethereum-client-binaries').Manager;

// construct
const mgr =  new Manager(config);

Note: If no config is provided then the default config (src/config.json) gets used.

Scanning for binaries

Initialising a manager tells it to scan the system for available binaries:

// initialise (scan for existing binaries on system)
mgr.init()
.then(() => {
  console.log( 'Client config: ', mgr.clients );
})
.catch(process.exit);

Let's say the current platform is linux with an x64 architecture, and that geth has been resolved successfully to /usr/local/bin/geth, the mgr.clients property will look like:

/*
[
  {
    id: 'Geth',
    state: {
      available: true,
    },
    platforms: { .... same as original ... }
    activeCli: {
      "download": {
        "url": "https://geth.com/latest.tgz",
        "type": "tar"
      },
      "bin": "geth",
      "commands": {
        "sanity": {
          "args": ["version"],
          "output": [ "Geth", "1.4.12" ]
        }                
      },
      fullPath: '/usr/local/bin/geth'
    }
  }
]
*/

The state.available property is the key property to check. If false then state.failReason will also be set. There are currently two possible values for state.failReason:

  1. notFound - a binary with matching name (geth in above example) could not be found.
  2. sanityCheckFail - a binary with matching name was found, but it failed the sanity check when executed.

The activeCli.fullPath property denotes the full path to the resolved client binary - this is only valid if state.available is true.

NOTE: The Parity client isn't present in mgr.clients shown above because there is no linux-x64 entry specified in the Parity config shown earlier. Thus, only possible clients (as per the original config) will be present in mgr.clients.

Scan additional folders

By default the manager only scan the system PATH for available binaries, i.e. it doesn't do a full-disk scan. You can specify additional folders to scan using the folders option:

mgr.init({
  folders: [
    '/path/to/my/folder/1',
    '/path/to/my/folder/2'
  ]
})
.then(...)
.catch(...)

This features is useful if you have previously downloaded the client binaries elsewhere or you already know that client binaries will be located within specific folders.

Download client binaries

Client binaries can be downloaded whether already available on the system or not. The downloading mechanism supports downloading and unpacking ZIP and TAR files.

The initial config object specifies where a package can be downloaded from, e.g:

"download": {
  "url": "https://geth.com/latest.tgz",
  "type": "tar"
},

To perform the download, specify the client id:

mgr.download("Geth")
.then(console.log)
.catch(console.error);

The returned result will be an object which looks like:

{
  downloadFolder: /* where archive got downloaded */,
  downloadFile: /* the downloaded archive file */,
  unpackFolder: /* folder archive was unpacked to */,
  client: {
    id: 'Geth',
    state: {...},
    platforms: {...},
    activeCli: {...},
  }
}

The client entry in the returned info will be the same as is present for the given client within the mgr.clients property (see above).

After downloading and unpacking the client binary the sanity check is run against it to check that it is indeed the required binary, which means that the client's state.available and state.failReason keys will be updated with the results.

Download to specific folder

By default the client binary archive will be downloaded to a temporarily created folder. But you can override this using the downloadFolder option:

mgr.download("Geth", {
  downloadFolder: '/path/to/my/folder'
})
.then(...)
.catch(...)

If download and unpacking is successful the returned object will look something like:

{
  downloadFolder: '/path/to/my/folder',
  downloadFile: '/path/to/my/folder/archive.tgz',
  unpackFolder: '/path/to/my/folder/unpacked',  
}

The next time you initialise the manager you can pass in /path/to/my/folder/unpacked as an additional folder to scan for binaries in:

mgr.init({ 
  folders: [
    `/path/to/my/folder/unpacked`
  ]
});

### Logging

By default internal logging is silent. But you can turn on logging at any time by setting the logger property:

mgr.logger = console;    /* log everything to console */

The supplied logger object must have 3 methods: info, warn and error. If any one of these methods isn't provided then the built-in method (i.e. silent method) get used. For example:

// let's output only the error messages
mgr.logger = {
  error: console.error.bind(console)
}

Development

To build and run the tests:

$ npm install
$ npm test

Contributions

Contributions welcome - see CONTRIBUTING.md

License

MIT - see LICENSE.md

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 25 Sep 2016

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