@leekone/bnsjs
v1.1.4
Published
BNS javascript library for contract interaction
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The ultimate BNS javascript library, with ethers.js under the hood.
Features
- Dynamically load everything
- Super fast response times (1 call for most RPC calls)
- Easy call batchability
- Written in TypeScript
- Supports the most cutting edge ENS features
- More
Installation
Install @ensdomains/ensjs, alongside ethers.
npm installl @leekone/bnsjs ethers
Getting Started
All that's needed to get started is an ethers provider instance. Once you create a new ENS instance, you can pass it in using setProvider.
import { BNS } from '@leekone/bnsjs'
import { ethers } from 'ethers'
const provider = new ethers.providers.JsonRpcProvider(providerUrl)
const BNSInstance = new BNS()
await BNSInstance.setProvider(provider)
NOTE:
If using ENSjs with Node, you may need to pass the --experimental-specifier-resolution=node
flag.
node --experimental-specifier-resolution=node ./index.js
Batching Calls
The batch function is a large part of this library, and there are plenty of situations where you might want to use it.
Note that only functions with the GeneratedRawFunction
type can be batched together.
/* Batch functions can be called like so, with the function as the first item in an array, with the following items being the function's arguments */
const batched = await BNSInstance.batch(
BNSInstance.getText.batch('test.biu', 'foo'),
BNSInstance.getAddr.batch('test.biu'),
BNSInstance.getOwner.batch('test.biu'),
)
/* The response is formatted like so:
[
response1,
response2,
response3,
...etc,
]
*/
Using Custom Graph Node URIs
If you want to use your own graph-node URI, such as a local graph-node URI, you can pass it through when creating a new ENS instance.
Alternatively, if you don't want to use The Graph at all you can pass through null
.
import { BNS } from '@leekone/bnsjs'
/* If you want to use a custom URI */
const BNSInstance = new BNS({
graphURI: 'http://localhost:8000/subgraphs/name/graphprotocol/ens',
})
/* If you want to disable The Graph queries */
const BNSInstance = new BNS({ graphURI: null })
Single-use Providers
If you want to use a specific provider to make a single call occasionally, you can easily do so.
import { BNS } from '@leekone/bnsjs'
const BNSInstance = new BNS()
const callWithProvider = await BNSInstance.withProvider(otherProvider).getText(
'test.biu',
'foo',
)
Profiles
You can fetch almost all information about an ENS name (or address) using getProfile. If an address is used as the first argument, it will fetch the primary name and give the same response as a name would. It will automatically get all the records for a name, as well as get the resolver address for the name. Specific records can also be used as an input, if you only want to get certain ones. If an address is used as an input alongside this, you also save 1 RPC call.
NOTE:
The profile function will always request an ETH addr record.
For names, this means the address will always at the top level of the returned object.
For addresses, this means the "match" property (a boolean value for matching reverse/forward resolution) will always be at the top level of the returned object.
/* Normal profile fetching */
const profile = await BNSInstance.getProfile('test.biu')
/* Profile fetching from an address */
const profile = await BNSInstance.getProfile(
'0xeefB13C7D42eFCc655E528dA6d6F7bBcf9A2251d',
)
/* Get all records of a specific type (or multiple) */
const profile = await BNSInstance.getProfile('test.biu', {
texts: true,
coinTypes: true,
contentHash: true,
})
/* Get specific records */
const profile = await BNSInstance.getProfile('test.biu', {
texts: ['foo'],
coinTypes: ['ETH'],
})
Returns:
type RecordItem = {
key: string | number
type: 'addr' | 'text' | 'contentHash'
coin?: string
addr?: string
value?: string
}
type ProfileReturn = {
address?: string // ONLY RETURNED AT TOP-LEVEL FOR NAME QUERIES
name?: string // ONLY RETURNED AT TOP-LEVEL FOR ADDRESS QUERIES
records: {
contentHash?: ContentHashObject | null
texts?: RecordItem[]
coinTypes?: RecordItem[]
}
resolverAddress: string
}
Name History
Getting the history for a name is very simple and can be done in two ways. Not all data can be immediately fetched for the history of an ENS name, which is why there is multiple methods for doing so. Text records do not contain the string value of the changed record, only the key. The value needs to be derived from fetching the individual transaction hash. This can potentially be very slow if the name has a long history.
/* Normal Fetching, requires a second function for more details */
const history = await BNSInstance.getHistory('test.biu')
/* Details helper for history */
/* You'll need to implement custom logic to get the index if you want to use that parameter, it's not currently done in the function */
const detail = await BNSInstance.getHistoryDetailForTransactionHash(
transactionHash,
optionalIndex,
)
/* Fetching with all details upfront */
const historyWithDetail = await BNSInstance.getHistoryWithDetail('test.biu')
Ownership Levels
The getOwner
function returns not only an owner (and potentially a registrant), but also a ownershipLevel value.
This value essentially means the contract for the "real owner" of any given name. In most cases it means the NFT contract
of the name, but if there is no NFT then it's just the registry. This value is useful for input into the transferName
function, where a contract needs to be specified.
Wrapping Names
Wrapping names is very simple, you can wrap any name from the same function, with the exact contract to use being inferred. You can specify both the fuses and resolver address to use with the wrapped name, but it's entirely optional.
/* wrap a .biu name */
const tx = await BNSInstance.wrapName(
'test.biu', // Name to wrap
'0xeefB13C7D42eFCc655E528dA6d6F7bBcf9A2251d', // New owner of wrapped name
)
/* wrap any other name (e.g. a subname) */
const tx = await BNSInstance.wrapName(
'sub.test.biu',
'0xeefB13C7D42eFCc655E528dA6d6F7bBcf9A2251d',
)
Write Transaction Options
Currently, some write functions have an options
argument. While this may expand over time,
it currently just allows you to pass an address or index for an account array to ethers for specifying the signer of the transaction.
Internal Structure
Raw Functions
Raw functions are a crucial part of how ENSjs works. In the function file itself
a raw
and decode
function both need to be defined, with the export being an object with those properties.
This allows for the encoding and decoding of contract calls to be split, meaning that multiple calls can be batched together.
For calling a raw function by itself, the raw and decode functions are stitched together with a provider call. This is done
using importGenerator
which is explained below.
importGenerator
The importGenerator function generates a wrapped function for any given input. The result of the wrapped function obfuscates the processing that ENSjs does, and exposes a cleaner API to the user/developer. The reason we do this is to:
- Pass through all the required variables for the function
- Split individual functions from the main class
- Dynamically load functions and their dependencies
- Allow each function's dependencies to be imported regularly
- Remove duplicate code
- Make it easier to isolate errors
- Stitch
raw
anddecode
functions together
ContractManager
The contract manager is where all the contracts are dynamically loaded in and resolved based on the network. A new instance of ContractManager is created every time you switch providers.
GqlManager
The GQL manager is used as to separate the reliance of ENSjs from GQL. It only loads in GQL when it is needed, or not at all if specified in the constructor of the ENS class. Very simply, it just exposes the core functions needed for ENSjs which can then be accessed.
initialProvider
The initialProvider
, and similarly checkInitialProvider
are used when creating single-use class instances with withProvider
.
It allows withProvider
to act as a new ENS instance without having to await a promise, which simplifies the API.
checkInitialProvider
is run on every function call given that it's extremely lightweight.
Individual Functions
Utils
Utils can be imported at follows
import { encodeContenthash } from '@ensdomains/ensjs/utils/contentHash'
getFuses
Gets the fuses for a specified wrapped name.
Input:
name
: string- Target name
Output:
fuseObj
: object- Decoded known fuses
vulnerability
: string- Vulnerability for name
- Will be "Safe" if no vulnerability
vulnerableNode
: string | null- Node that is vulnerable in chain
rawFuses
: BigNumber- Unformatted fuse result
getHistory
Gets the history for a specified name.
Input:
name
: string- Target name
Output:
domain
: array- Domain event item
registration
: array- Registration event item
resolver
: array- Resolver event item
getHistoryWithDetail
Gets the history for a specified name with details.
Input:
name
: string- Target name
Output:
domain
: array- Domain event item
registration
: array- Registration event item
resolver
: array- Resolver event item
getHistoryDetailForTransactionHash
Gets the history details for a specified transaction hash.
Input:
hash
: string- Target transaction hash
indexInTransaction
: number?- Index of transaction out of same transaction type
Output:
- object | array
key
: string- Key for detail
value
: string- Value for detail
getName
Gets the primary name for a specified address.
Input:
address
: string- Target address
Output:
name
: string | null- Resolved name
match
: boolean- Forward resolved match check value
getOwner
Gets the owner of a specified name. See ownership levels for more details about the output.
Input:
name
: string- Target name
Output:
owner
: string- Controller of records for name
registrant
: string?- NFT Owner
ownershipLevel
: string- Level at which the ownership data is being read
getProfile
Gets the profile of a specified name or address, or just certain records if specified.
Input:
nameOrAddress
: string- Target name or address
options
: object?contentHash
: boolean?texts
: boolean? | string[]?- Array of keys, or true for all keys
coinTypes
: boolean? | string[]?- Array of keys, or true for all keys
Output:
resolverAddress
: string- Address of resolver
records
: object- matching records from input
contentHash
: object? | null?- Decoded content hash
texts
: array?key
: stringvalue
: string
coinTypes
: array?key
: numbercoin
: string- Coin name
value
: string- Decoded address
name
: string?- Only applicable for address inputs
- Resolved name
address
: string?- Only applicable for name inputs
- Resolved address
match
: boolean?- Only applicable for address inputs
- Forward resolved match check value
getResolver
Gets the resolver for a specified name.
Input:
name
: string- Target name
Output:
- string
- Resolver address
getContentHash
Gets the content hash record for a specified name.
Input:
name
: string- Target name
Output:
- object | null
- Decoded content hash
getText
Gets a text record for a specified name.
Input:
name
: string- Target name
key
: string- Target key
Output:
- string | null
- Text record value
getAddr
Gets an address record for a specified name.
Input:
name
: string- Target name
coinType
: string? | number?- Target coin
- Defaults to 60 (ETH) if undefined
Output:
- string | null
- Address record value
burnFuses
Creates a transaction to burn fuses on a specified wrapped name.
Input:
name
: string- Target name
fusesToBurn
: object- Object of fuses intended to be burned.
Output:
- transaction
createSubname
Creates a subname using the specified contract.
Input:
- object
name
: string- Target name
owner
: string- New owner of subname
contract
:registry
|nameWrapper
- Target contract
resolverAddress
: string?- Resolver address for name
shouldWrap
: boolean?- Only valid with NameWrapper contract
- Initial name wrapped state
fuses
: object?- Only valid with NameWrapper contract
- Initial fuses to be burned
Output:
- transaction
deleteSubname
Deletes a subname using the specified contract.
Input:
name
: string- Target name
contract
:registry
|nameWrapper
- Target contract
Output:
- transaction
transferSubname
Transfers a subname using the specified contract. Please note that transferring a wrapped name using this method will unwrap the name.
Input:
name
: string- Target name
contract
:registry
|nameWrapper
- Target contract
address
: string- Address to transfer name to
Output:
- transaction
setName
Sets the primary name for a specified address.
Input:
name
: string- Name to set
address
: string?- Setting other primary names requires authorisation
- Address to set name for
resolver
: string?- Setting other primary names requires authorisation
- Target resolver
Output:
- transaction
setRecords
Sets multiple records at once for the specified name.
Input:
name
: string- Target name
records
: objectcontentHash
: string?- Formatted and encoded content hash
texts
: array?- object
key
: string- Text key
value
: string- Text value
- object
coinTypes
: array?- object
key
: string- Coin name or ID
value
: string- Coin address
- object
Output:
- transaction
setResolver
Sets the resolver for the specified name, using the specified contract.
Input:
name
: string- Target Name
contract
:registry
|nameWrapper
- Target contract
resolver
: string?- Leaving this undefined will use the default public resolver
Output:
- transaction
transferName
Transfers a name, using the specified contract.
Input:
name
: string- Target name
newOwner
: string- Address to transfer name to
contract
:registry
|nameWrapper
|baseRegistrar
- Target contract
Output:
- transaction
wrapName
Wraps a name.
Input:
name
: string- Target name
wrappedOwner
: string- New owner of wrapped name
fuseOptions
: object?- Initial fuses to burn
resolverAddress
: string?- Initial resolver address
Output:
- transaction
unwrapName
Unwraps a name.
Input:
name
: string- Target name
newController
: string- New controller for name
newRegistrant
: string?- New registrant for name
Output:
- transaction
universalWrapper
Wraps a function so it is directed to the universal resolver instead of the default public resolver.
Input:
name
: string- Name to resolve
data
: string- Hex encoded function data
Output:
- object
data
: string- Hex encoded function result
resolver
: string- Used resolver address
Examples for universalWrapper can be found in getSpecificRecord
.
resolverMulticallWrapper
Wraps multiple resolver calls so they are made into a single resolver multicall.
Input:
- array
- object
to
: string- Placeholder for standard function calls, ignore this.
data
: string- Hex encoded function data
- object
Output:
- array
- string
- Hex encoded function result
- string
Examples for resolverMulticallWrapper can be found in getProfile
.