Creating equitable access to the global financial system
js-stellar-sdk
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:
- a networking layer API for Horizon endpoints.
- facilities for building and signing transactions, for communicating with a
Stellar Horizon instance, and for submitting transactions or querying network
history.
stellar-sdk vs stellar-base
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 the sodium-native
package as
an optional dependency. sodium-native
is
a low level binding to libsodium,
(an implementation of Ed25519 signatures).
If installation of sodium-native
fails, or it is unavailable, stellar-base
(and stellar-sdk
) will
fallback to using the tweetnacl
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
using sodium-native
. If sodium-native
is successfully installed and working the
StellarSdk.FastSigning
variable will return true
.
Quick start
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>
Install
To use as a module in a Node.js project
- Install it using npm:
npm install --save stellar-sdk
- require/import it in your JavaScript:
var StellarSdk = require('stellar-sdk');
To self host for use in the browser
- Install it using bower:
bower install stellar-sdk
- Include it in the browser:
<script src="./bower_components/stellar-sdk/stellar-sdk.js"></script>
<script>
console.log(StellarSdk);
</script>
If you don't want to use install Bower, you can copy built JS files from the
bower-js-stellar-sdk repo.
To use the cdnjs hosted script in the browser
- Instruct the browser to fetch the library from
cdnjs, a 3rd party service that
hosts js libraries:
<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.
To develop and test js-stellar-sdk itself
- Clone the repo:
git clone https://github.com/stellar/js-stellar-sdk.git
- Install dependencies inside js-stellar-sdk folder:
cd js-stellar-sdk
npm install
- Install Node 10.16.3
Because we support earlier versions of Node, please install and develop on Node
10.16.3 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 10.16.3 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
- 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)
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.)
How to use with React-Native
- Add the following postinstall script:
yarn rn-nodeify --install url,events,https,http,util,stream,crypto,vm,buffer --hack --yarn
yarn add -D rn-nodeify
- Uncomment
require('crypto')
on shim.js react-native link react-native-randombytes
- Create file
rn-cli.config.js
module.exports = {
resolver: {
extraNodeModules: require("node-libs-react-native"),
},
};
- Add
import "./shim";
to the top of index.js
yarn add stellar-sdk
There is also a sample that you can follow.
Usage
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.
Testing
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
Documentation for this repo lives in
Developers site.
Contributing
For information on how to contribute, please refer to our
contribution guide.
Publishing to npm
npm version [<newversion> | major | minor | patch | premajor | preminor | prepatch | prerelease]
A new version will be published to npm and Bower by Travis CI.
npm >=2.13.0 required. Read more about
npm version.
License
js-stellar-sdk is licensed under an Apache-2.0 license. See the
LICENSE file
for details.