Isomorphic-Rpc
Exposes a Javascript object that maps all methods to RPC calls using Promises
"
For Ethereum Applications
In general this should support any RPC application, but I made it to simplify my ethereum applications and I've only used/tested it on the same.
Web3.js Has Some Issues
- Mostly it's huge
- It doesn't follow the spec (i.e. spec has
eth_getBlockByHash
, web3 has only getBlock
) - It randomly prints some values as hex
string
("0x1234") while others come back as number
and for some odd reason block.difficulty
is returned as a string
of decimal digits (lol WAHT?) - New RPC methods like
getProof
are not supported (in web3 or other libraries) until each piece of software in the chain publishes a feature update to support it.
Solution
Using Ecmascript's new Proxy
functionality you can create an object such that when you call a missing method on it, it instead calls a "handler" function that has access to the method name called.
The library uses this to automatically create an RPC request from any method name given. So any brand new or experimental RPC method your client software supports will be exposed.
Extremely Lightweight
The module is 37 lines of code. There is only 1 dependency (which branches into 3 small packages). It's only there to enables the library to be isomorphic.
Isomorphism
The use of this library should work identically in both Node and all desktop/mobile Browsers (except Internet Explorer because bill gates is busy curing malaria)
Also
This should probably work on all Javascript RPC applications because of its agnosticism to the actual methods being called.
But I haven't tried that yet so let me know!
Seems to be a good pattern because refactoring my code to use isomorphic-rpc is making tons of lines disappear.
Use
npm install iso-rpc
const Rpc = require('./iso-rpc')
let rpc = new Rpc('http://localhost:8545')
rpc.web3_sha3("0x").then((hash)=>{ console.log(hash) }).catch((e)=>{console.log(e)})
or within an async
function:
let hash = await rpc.web3_sha3("0x")
Docs
The JSON-RPC Page is the most up to date list of supported Ethereum RPC calls.
Also the RPC 2.0 Specification could be useful in updating this package. If a PR will help it better supports the RPC spec, I'll merge it in.