npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

@quarryprotocol/sol-wallet-adapter

v0.2.5-fix

Published

Library to allow Solana dApps to use third-party wallets to sign transactions

Downloads

2

Readme

npm (scoped) Build Status

sol-wallet-adapter

Library to allow Solana dApps to use third-party wallets to sign transactions.

Install

npm install --save @project-serum/sol-wallet-adapter

Usage

Sign a transaction

import { Connection, SystemProgram, Transaction, clusterApiUrl } from '@solana/web3.js';

let connection = new Connection(clusterApiUrl('devnet'));
let providerUrl = 'https://www.sollet.io';
let wallet = new Wallet(providerUrl);
wallet.on('connect', publicKey => console.log('Connected to ' + publicKey.toBase58()));
wallet.on('disconnect', () => console.log('Disconnected'));
await wallet.connect();

let transaction = new Transaction().add(
  SystemProgram.transfer({
    fromPubkey: wallet.publicKey,
    toPubkey: wallet.publicKey,
    lamports: 100,
  })
);
let { blockhash } = await connection.getRecentBlockhash();
transaction.recentBlockhash = blockhash;
transaction.feePayer = wallet.publicKey;
let signed = await wallet.signTransaction(transaction);
let txid = await connection.sendRawTransaction(signed.serialize());
await connection.confirmTransaction(txid);

See example/src/App.js for a full example.

Sign a message

const providerUrl = 'https://www.sollet.io';
const wallet = new Wallet(providerUrl);
wallet.on('connect', publicKey => console.log('Connected to ' + publicKey.toBase58()));
wallet.on('disconnect', () => console.log('Disconnected'));
await wallet.connect();

const message = "Please sign this message for proof of address ownership.";
const data = new TextEncoder().encode(message);
let { signature } = await wallet.sign(data, 'utf8');

Development

Run yarn start in the root directory, then run yarn start in the example directory.

See create-react-library for details.

Wallet Providers

Wallet providers are third-party webapps that provide an API to retrieve the user's accounts and sign transactions with it. sol-wallet-adapter opens wallet providers in a popup and communicates with it using JSON-RPC over postMessage.

See spl-token-wallet for an example wallet provider implementation.

The general flow is as follows:

  1. User selects a wallet provider to connect to, e.g. https://www.sollet.io
  2. dApp opens the wallet provider in a popup, passing it the origin of the dApp and the desired network in the URL hash.
    • e.g. https://www.sollet.io/#origin=https://www.example.com&network=mainnet-beta
  3. Wallet provider detects that window.opener is set and asks the user if they want to connect the wallet to the dApp.
    • The wallet UI should show the origin of the requesting dApp.
    • The origin can be retrieved from the URL hash using new URLSearchParams(window.location.hash.slice(1)).get('origin').
    • If the wallet provider supports multiple accounts, it should allow the user to select which account to use.
  4. If the user accepts, the wallet provider sends a connected message to the dApp via postMessage.
    • e.g. window.opener.postMessage({jsonrpc: '2.0', method: 'connected', params: {publicKey: 'EdWqEgu54Zezi4E6L72RxAMPr5SWAyt2vpZWgvPYQTLh'}}, 'https://www.example.com')'
    • To prevent origin spoofing, the postMessage call must set targetOrigin to the dApp origin that was shown to the user in step 3.
  5. When the dApp needs to send a transaction on behalf of the user, the dApp generates a transaction and sends it to the wallet provider as a signTransaction request using postMessage.
    • The wallet provider should listen for window.onmessage events.
    • Before processing a MessageEvent, the wallet provider should verify that event.origin matches the dApp origin and event.source === window.opener.
  6. The wallet provider decodes the transaction, presents it to the user, and asks the user if they would like to sign the transaction.
    • The wallet should inform the user about any potential effects of the transaction
    • For instructions that the wallet recognizes, the wallet can decode the instruction and show it to the user.
    • For instructions that the wallet does not recognize, the wallet can e.g. show the set of writable addresses included in the instruction and the programs to which those addresses belong.
    • The wallet should use the transaction blockhash to verify that the transaction will be broadcasted on the correct network.
  7. The wallet sends a JSON-RPC reply back to the dApp, either with a signature if the user accepted the request or an error if the user rejected the request.
  8. The dApp receives the signature, adds it to the transaction, and broadcasts it.

Wallet provider developers can use the example webapp to test their implementation.

URL hash parameters

  • origin - origin of the dApp. Should be included in all postMessage calls and should be checked against all received MessageEvents.
  • network - The network on which transactions will be sent. Can be any of mainnet-beta, devnet, testnet, or a custom URL, though wallets are free to reject any unsupported networks. Wallet providers should check that transaction blockhashes matches the network before signing the transaction.

The parameters can be parsed using

let params = new URLSearchParams(window.location.hash.slice(1));
let origin = params.get('origin');
let network = params.get('network');

Requests from the wallet provider to the dApp (sol-wallet-adapter)

connected

Sent by the wallet provider when the user selects an account to connect to the dApp.

Parameters
  • publicKey - Base-58 encoded public key of the selected account.
Example
window.opener.postMessage({
  jsonrpc: '2.0',
  method: 'connected',
  params: {
    publicKey: 'HsQhg1k93vEA326SXxnGj1sZrdupG7rj5T6g5cMgk1ed',
  },
}, origin);

disconnected

Sent by the wallet provider when the user no longer wishes to connect to the dApp, or if the user closes the popup (onbeforeunload).

Parameters

None.

Example
window.opener.postMessage({
  jsonrpc: '2.0',
  method: 'disconnected',
}, origin);

Requests from the dApp (sol-wallet-adapter) to the wallet provider

signTransaction

Sent by the dApp when it needs to send a transaction on behalf of the user.

Parameters
Results
  • signature - Base-58 encoded transaction signature, i.e. bs58.encode(nacl.sign.detached(message, account.secretKey)).
  • publicKey - Base-58 encoded public key of the account that provided the signature.
Example
let request = {
  jsonrpc: '2.0',
  method: 'signTransaction',
  params: {
    message: "QwE1mEmQpjGKTQz9U3N8xTJCqCry9kgvJff51kVv8h5AyVGh3L…NfV68ERMb2WsVAstN',
  },
  id: 1,
};

let response = {
  jsonrpc: '2.0',
  result: {
    signature: "2HT61qv1xxWUpx7DXZM3K878wU1JJx5eKNWw64cgeauwx6sZNKtDkSRrGvqZmsRwz6c1RwkUFnPj1LXkjNtsCd9o",
    publicKey: 'HsQhg1k93vEA326SXxnGj1sZrdupG7rj5T6g5cMgk1ed'
  },
  id: 1,
};