XDR, for Javascript
Read/write XDR encoded data structures (RFC 4506)
XDR is an open data format, specified in
RFC 4506. This library provides a way
to read and write XDR data from javascript. It can read/write all of the
primitive XDR types and also provides facilities to define readers for the
compound XDR types (enums, structs and unions)
Installation
via npm:
npm install --save js-xdr
Usage
You can find some examples here.
First, let's import the library:
var xdr = require('js-xdr');
Now, let's look at how to decode some primitive types:
xdr.Bool.fromXDR([0, 0, 0, 0]);
xdr.Bool.fromXDR([0, 0, 0, 1]);
xdr.Bool.toXDR(true);
xdr.Int.fromXDR([0xff, 0xff, 0xff, 0xff]);
xdr.UnsignedInt.fromXDR([0xff, 0xff, 0xff, 0xff]);
var result = xdr.Hyper.fromXDR([0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]);
result.toString();
var ten = result.add(10);
var minusone = result.subtract(1);
var big = xdr.Hyper.fromString('1099511627776');
big.toXDR();
Caveats
There are a couple of caveats to be aware of with this library:
- We do not support quadruple precision floating point values. Attempting to
read or write these values will throw errors.
- NaN is not handled perfectly for floats and doubles. There are several forms
of NaN as defined by IEEE754 and the browser polyfill for node's Buffer
class seems to handle them poorly.
Code generation
js-xdr by itself does not have any ability to parse XDR IDL files and produce a
parser for your custom data types. Instead, that is the responsibility of
xdrgen. xdrgen will take your .x files and
produce a javascript file that target this library to allow for your own custom
types.
See js-stellar-base for an example
(check out the src/generated directory)
Contributing
Please see CONTRIBUTING.md for details.
To develop and test js-xdr itself
- Clone the repo
git clone https://github.com/stellar/js-xdr.git
- Install dependencies inside js-xdr folder
cd js-xdr
npm install
- Install Node 6.14.0
Because we support earlier versions of Node, please install and develop on Node
6.14.0 so you don't get surprised when your code works locally but breaks in CI.
Here's out to install nvm
if you haven't: https://github.com/creationix/nvm
nvm install
# if you've never installed 6.14.0 before you'll want to re-install yarn
npm install -g yarn
If you work on several projects that use different Node versions, you might it
helpful to install this automatic version manager:
https://github.com/wbyoung/avn
4. Observe the project's code style
While you're making changes, make sure to run the linter-watcher to catch any
linting errors (in addition to making sure your text editor supports ESLint)
```shell
node_modules/.bin/gulp watch
If you're working on a file not in src
, limit your code to Node 6.16 ES! See
what's supported here: https://node.green/ (The reason is that our npm library
must support earlier versions of Node, so the tests need to run on those
versions.)