This repo is provides core functionality to all clients in a cross-platform typescript library. This can be used to build cli/gui clients, automated scripts, or help build bcp-proxy apps.
Main functionality provided:
- Solid crypto library with HD support for ed25519 (following SLIP-0010, ledger compatible)
- Secure private key management, including encrypted local storage for both browser and node
- Generic, type-safe adaptor to read/write on tendermint rpc server (with http/s and ws/s support)
- Adaptor to query / create transactions for IOV's testnet of the BNS blockchain
- Adaptor for key management using IOV's BNS ledger app
- High level controller for managing multiple user profiles and various key material
- High level controller for managing read/write connections to multiple blockchains (CoreWriter)
- Integration with REPL environment for quick prototyping for developers
This is still in pre-alpha state and will evolve quickly as we add support for multiple blockchains, more transactions types, and better extensibility. However, all attempts have been made that the foundational code is quite solid. A security audit and stable release will occur along with the timeline of IOV's mainnet launch, but developers looking for client-side libraries can do initial prototypes with the current state.
We are actively building out multiple clients on top of this library and shaking out usability issues in the API.
The compiled code from this package, which is published on npm, should work on any modern (2018) browser, and node 8+. The development environment has been tested on node 8.7.0 LTS and node 10.x.
Yarn not Npm Please npm install -g yarn
and use yarn install
, yarn build
, etc.
Developers who installed with npm i
have reported problems in compiling, so wipe out node_modules
and enjoy yarn
.
CI Tests:
- Linux: node 8, chrome, (electron manually)
- OSX: node 8, chrome, firefox, safari, (electron manually)
- Windows: node 8, (edge, electron manually)
(Node 10 tested on many dev machines)
The best way to learn about code is to use it. You can read some examples in @iov/core. And you can use a REPL to interactively try the code.
Once you understand the basics, you can dig in deeper with the API documentation.
Documentation is published at https://iov-one.github.io/iov-core-docs/.
To build the documentation locally, run yarn install && yarn build && yarn docs
in this repository. This will generate a ./docs
directory in each package that you
can browse locally to see API docs on the various packages.
We are more than happy to accept open source contributions. However, please try to work on existing issues or create an issue and get feedback from one of the main contributors before starting on a PR. If you don't know where to start, we try to tag "good first issues" that provide a nice way to get started with the iov-core repo.
If you go into a subpackage and try to yarn build
or yarn test
, chances are it will fail.
The reason is that we only check in *.ts
files, while we need the compiled *.js
files
to import other packages. We push these to npm but do not check them into git to avoid commit noise.
To get started, please go to the root directory and run:
yarn install
yarn build
yarn test
Once that passes, you have the code built and can go into any subdirectory, edit code
and verify the changes with yarn test
on that one package.
There are a number of integration tests involving communication with tendermint
(in iov-tendermint-rpc
) and the bns blockchain (in iov-bns
) that require
a test server to run and are skipped by default. If you are working on those
packages, please run those tests. (They require docker to be installed and
executable by the current user)
./scripts/tendermint/start.sh
export TENDERMINT_ENABLED=1
cd packages/iov-tendermint-rpc
yarn test
cd ../..
unset TENDERMINT_ENABLED
./scripts/tendermint/stop.sh
./scripts/bnsd/start.sh
export BNSD_ENABLED=1
cd packages/iov-bns
yarn test
cd ../..
unset BNSD_ENABLED
./scripts/bnsd/stop.sh
If you are working on iov-lisk
, you can run the tests against a local
Lisk devnet. See scripts/lisk/README.md
how to start the Lisk devnet.
cd packages/iov-lisk
yarn test
The CI runs all code not only under node, but also in various browsers
These work almost all of the time, but if you CI test fails in the browser, or if you are just curious to see this work, you can run the browser tests locally with any of the following, in any package you are working on:
yarn test-chrome
yarn test-firefox
yarn test-safari # osx only
yarn test-edge # windows only
Most of the developers working on this project in windows are also using Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL), which should have maximum compatibility, as CI is linux and osx. However, we do attempt to ensure that this code also compiles on the normal windows shell, if you have set up git, node, yarn etc. correctly. (Note this has only be verified under windows 10, no guarantees for older versions).
All the code in the repo should use LF not the windows-specific CRLF as a line ending.
tsc
is currently set up to output properly. However, you should also make sure your editor
saves with LF
line endings rather than CRLF
.
A bigger issue is git
changing the endings upon commit. Here is a short workaround,
adapted from a stackoverflow discussion:
git config --global core.autocrlf false
git config --global core.eol lf
If you are running on linux, you may not have the proper dependencies installed. For ubuntu, try the
following: sudo apt-get install libudev-dev libusb-1.0-0 libusb-1.0-0-dev
.
These are needed to compile the usb driver.
Sometimes compiling native code with node-pre-gyp
causes issues in very
recent versions of Node.js. At the moment, Node.js 8, 10 and 11 should work.
Make sure you at least ran yarn test
in all the directories where you modified code.
The CI will reject any PR if type definitions change after compiling the code to ensure
it was build and committed prior to pushing.
This repository is licensed under the Apache License 2.0 (see NOTICE and LICENSE).