This library is a small abstraction layer on top of eosjs
which aims to assist EOS dApp (decentralized app) developers with wallet communication (signature verification and acceptance) by providing a simple and intuitive API.
Instead of focusing on supporting specific signature providers one by one, developers can support every one that has built a Transit plugin, allowing the user to use their signature provider of choice. This way, the best UX for signature providers wins and the developers can focus on building their dApp instead of setting up eosjs
and wallet connections.
👉🏻 Please see the "Quick Start" and thorough guide in the eos-transit
package docs
- Easy to use API.
- Managed wallet connection state tracking
- Easily pluggable wallet providers (and easy to write your own)
- TypeScript support
- Small footprint (core is just ~9Kb minified and around 2.7Kb gzipped)
This is a monorepo that is managed with lerna
.
Package | Version | Description |
---|---|---|
eos-transit |
3.0.x | Transit core package |
eos-transit-scatter-provider |
3.0.x | Wallet provider for Scatter app |
eos-transit-lynx-provider |
3.0.x | Wallet provider for Lynx app |
eos-transit-ledger-provider |
3.0.x | Wallet provider for Ledger app |
eos-transit-tokenpocket-provider |
3.0.x | Wallet provider for Token Pocket app |
eos-transit-meetone-provider |
3.0.x | Wallet provider for MEET.ONE app |
eos-transit-stub-provider |
3.0.x | Stub wallet provider that does nothing, for demo and testing only |
The below instructions only apply to developers wishing to build the transit project. In most cases developers will want to pull the NPM pakckages.
If you're wanting to USE eos-transit and plugins:
👉🏻 Please see the "Quick Start" and thorough guide in the eos-transit
package docs
If you are looking to build your own plugin, the Transit PLUGIN Developer Kit is a good place to start.
-
Make sure you have
yarn
installed. -
Install the dependencies with
$ yarn install
Note that before
eos-transit
,eos-transit-scatter-provider
andeos-transit-stub-provider
are published, they are managed bylerna
along with packages themselves. That means, before running the examples,lerna
should wire up all the dependencies and instead of runningyarn install
manually from this folder, the following commands should be run from the project root: -
Bootstrap the dependencies with
$ yarn bootstrap
This will make
lerna
install all the necessary dependencies for managed packages. -
Proceed with the development of a certain package (each package has its own set of commands to assist the development and build process).
To build all packages simultaneously, run the following command from the project root:
$ yarn build-packages
This will perform both TypeScript compilation into lib
folder and a minified production-ready UMD build into umd
folder for each managed package.
-
Make sure the current state of package folders is consistent and that packages which are about to be published are actually built (with
yarn build-packages
, see previous section). To make sure, you can runyarn pack
command to create atgz
tarball of the package and inspect its contents (but make sure that doesn't leak to a published package, so cleanup that before publishing). -
Make sure you're logged into
npm
registry by runningyarn login
. Please note that this won't ask you for a password (it will be asked upon publishing, sinceyarn
doesn't maintain authenticated sessions withnpm
registry): -
Since this monorepo is managed with
lerna
, the latter is responsible for publishing too, so run:$ lerna publish
possibly proividing additional options if needed.
Normally, this should guide you through version bumping process as well as creating and pushing new
git
version tags for each package that had been published.