This is a Nanocurrency remote procedure call (RPC) client written in Typescript with a singular dependency on axios.
Use this package to fetch Nanocurrency data from either a local Nano Node, a Nano Node Proxy server, or My Nano Ninja.
All RPC calls are defined in the Nano.org Docs.
npm install @dev-ptera/nano-node-rpc
or
yarn add @dev-ptera/nano-node-rpc
Typescript
import { NanoClient } from "@dev-ptera/nano-node-rpc";
/* Below are three potential nano clients; pick one. */
/* Localhost Nano Node */
const localClient = new NanoClient({url: "http://[::1]:7076"});
/* Web API */
const remoteClient = new NanoClient({url: "[URL]"});
/* My Nano Ninja */
const myNanoNinjaClient = new NanoClient({
url: "https://mynano.ninja/api/node",
requestHeaders: {
"Authorization": process.env.NINJA_API_KEY
}
});Javascript
const NanoClient = require("@dev-ptera/nano-node-rpc").NanoClient;
/* Same client configuration as typescript example. */import { NanoClient } from "@dev-ptera/nano-node-rpc";
import * as RPC from "@dev-ptera/nano-node-rpc/types"
import { AxiosError } from "axios";
const client = new NanoClient({ url: "http://localhost:7076" })
// Some methods do not require arguments:
client
.block_count()
.then((count: RPC.BlockCountReponse) => {
console.log(count);
/**
* {
* "count": "1826834",
* "unchecked": "3385205"
* }
*/
})
.catch((e: AxiosError) => {
// Deal with your errors here.
});
// Some methods require arguments:
client
.account_balance("nano_1ninja7rh37ehfp9utkor5ixmxyg8kme8fnzc4zty145ibch8kf5jwpnzr3r")
.then((balance: RPC.AccountBalanceResponse) => {
console.log(balance);
/**
* {
* "balance": "325586539664609129644855132177",
* "pending": "2309370929000000000000000000000000"
* }
*/
})
.catch((e: AxiosError) => {
// Deal with your errors here.
});All method calls return native NodeJS promises. You need to use the then() / catch() pattern shown above.
If the call was successful, the data will be passed to then(), otherwise the error will be passed to catch().
See examples.js file for more examples.
The method calls are the same as the original RPC actions defined on the Nano.org Docs.
E.g. the Nano block_count RPC method would be accessible via client.block_count().
If a method is not available as a method on NanoClient, you can use the _send method below:
client._send("block_info", {
"json_block": true,
"hash": "87434F8041869A01C8F6F263B87972D7BA443A72E0A97D7A3FD0CCC2358FD6F9"
}).then(block_info => {
console.log(block_info);
/**
* {
* "block_account": "nano_1ipx847tk8o46pwxt5qjdbncjqcbwcc1rrmqnkztrfjy5k7z4imsrata9est",
* "amount": "30000000000000000000000000000000000",
* "balance": "5606157000000000000000000000000000000",
* "height": "58",
* "local_timestamp": "0",
* "confirmed": "true",
* "contents": {
* ...
* },
* "subtype": "send"
* }
*/
})
.catch(e => {
// Deal with your errors here.
});Some RPC response types will change depending on the optional parameters included in the request.
peers is an example of a request that can conditionally include PeersResponseDetails when the flag peer_details is true.
yarn build > creates output in the /dist folder
yarn test > runs test suite; requires a local Banano node to pass
yarn prettier > run code formatting