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require(esm) Backported to Node.js 20, Paving the Way for ESM-Only Packages
require(esm) backported to Node.js 20, easing the transition to ESM-only packages and reducing complexity for developers as Node 18 nears end-of-life.
stellar-sdk
Advanced tools
js-stellar-sdk is a Javascript library for communicating with a Stellar Horizon server. It is used for building Stellar apps either on Node.js or in the browser.
It provides:
stellar-sdk is a high-level library that serves as client-side API for Horizon. stellar-base is lower-level library for creating Stellar primitive constructs via XDR helpers and wrappers.
Most people will want stellar-sdk instead of stellar-base. You should only use stellar-base if you know what you're doing!
If you add stellar-sdk
to a project, do not add stellar-base
! Mis-matching
versions could cause weird, hard-to-find bugs. stellar-sdk
automatically
installs stellar-base
and exposes all of its exports in case you need them.
Important! The Node.js version of the
stellar-base
(stellar-sdk
dependency) package uses thesodium-native
package as an optional dependency.sodium-native
is a low level binding to libsodium, (an implementation of Ed25519 signatures). If installation ofsodium-native
fails, or it is unavailable,stellar-base
(andstellar-sdk
) will fallback to using thetweetnacl
package implementation.If you are using
stellar-sdk
/stellar-base
in a browser you can ignore this. However, for production backend deployments you should be usingsodium-native
. Ifsodium-native
is successfully installed and working theStellarSdk.FastSigning
variable will returntrue
.
Using npm to include js-stellar-sdk in your own project:
npm install --save stellar-sdk
Alternatively, you can use cdnjs in a browser:
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/stellar-sdk/{version}/stellar-sdk.js"></script>
npm install --save stellar-sdk
var StellarSdk = require('stellar-sdk');
bower install stellar-sdk
<script src="./bower_components/stellar-sdk/stellar-sdk.js"></script>
<script>
console.log(StellarSdk);
</script>
If you don't want to use or install Bower, you can copy built JS files from the bower-js-stellar-sdk repo.
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/stellar-sdk/{version}/stellar-sdk.js"></script>
<script>
console.log(StellarSdk);
</script>
Note that this method relies using a third party to host the JS library. This may not be entirely secure.
Make sure that you are using the latest version number. They can be found on the releases page in Github.
git clone https://github.com/stellar/js-stellar-sdk.git
cd js-stellar-sdk
npm install
Because we support the latest maintenance version of Node, please install and develop on Node 14 so you don't get surprised when your code works locally but breaks in CI.
Here's how to install nvm
if you haven't: https://github.com/creationix/nvm
nvm install
# if you've never installed 14 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
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)
node_modules/.bin/gulp watch
yarn rn-nodeify --install url,events,https,http,util,stream,crypto,vm,buffer --hack --yarn
yarn add -D rn-nodeify
require('crypto')
on shim.jsreact-native link react-native-randombytes
rn-cli.config.js
module.exports = {
resolver: {
extraNodeModules: require("node-libs-react-native"),
},
};
import "./shim";
to the top of index.js
yarn add stellar-sdk
There is also a sample that you can follow.
yarn rn-nodeify --install process,url,events,https,http,util,stream,crypto,vm,buffer --hack --yarn
yarn add -D rn-nodeify
import "./shim";
to the your app's entry point (by default ./App.js
)yarn add stellar-sdk
expo install expo-random
At this point, the stellar SDK will work, except that StellarSdk.Keypair.random()
will throw an error. So to work around this you can create your own method to generate a random keypair like this:
import * as Random from 'expo-random';
import StellarSdk from 'stellar-sdk';
const generateRandomKeypair = () => {
const randomBytes = Random.getRandomBytes(32);
return StellarSdk.Keypair.fromRawEd25519Seed(Buffer.from(randomBytes));
};
For information on how to use js-stellar-sdk, take a look at the documentation, or the examples.
There is also Horizon REST API Documentation here.
To run all tests:
gulp test
To run a specific set of tests:
gulp test:node
gulp test:browser
To generate and check the documentation site:
# install the `serve` command if you don't have it already
npm install -g serve
# generate the docs files
npm run docs
# get these files working in a browser
cd jsdoc && serve .
# you'll be able to browse the docs at http://localhost:5000
Documentation for this repo lives in Developers site.
For information on how to contribute, please refer to our contribution guide.
npm version [<newversion> | major | minor | patch | premajor | preminor | prepatch | prerelease]
A new version will be published to npm and Bower by GitHub actions.
npm >= 2.13.0 required. Read more about npm version.
js-stellar-sdk is licensed under an Apache-2.0 license. See the LICENSE file for details.
FAQs
A library for working with the Stellar network, including communication with the Horizon and Soroban RPC servers.
The npm package stellar-sdk receives a total of 17,938 weekly downloads. As such, stellar-sdk popularity was classified as popular.
We found that stellar-sdk demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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