Robust hive client library that runs in both node.js and the browser.
Needs test net urls, chain id
note As of version 0.7.0 WebSocket support has been removed. The only transport provided now is HTTP(2). For most users the only change required is to swap wss:https://
to https://
in the address. If you run your own full node make sure to set the proper CORS headers if you plan to access it from a browser.
For node.js or the browser with browserify or webpack.
npm install @hiveio/dhive
Grab dist/dhive.js
from git and include in your html:
<script src="@hiveio/dhive.js"></script>
Or from the unpkg cdn:
<script src="https://unpkg.com/@hiveio/dhive@latest/dist/dhive.js"></script>
Make sure to set the version you want when including from the cdn, you can also use dhive@latest
but that is not always desirable. See unpkg.com for more information.
<script src="https://unpkg.com/@hiveio/dhive@latest/dist/dhive.js"></script>
<script>
var client = new dhive.Client(["https://api.hive.blog", "https://api.hivekings.com", "https://anyx.io", "https://api.openhive.network"]);
client.database
.getDiscussions("trending", { tag: "writing", limit: 1 })
.then(function(discussions) {
document.body.innerHTML += "<h1>" + discussions[0].title + "</h1>";
document.body.innerHTML += "<h2>by " + discussions[0].author + "</h2>";
document.body.innerHTML +=
'<pre style="white-space: pre-wrap">' + discussions[0].body + "</pre>";
});
</script>
See the demo source for an example on how to setup a livereloading TypeScript pipeline with wintersmith and browserify.
With TypeScript:
import { Client } from "@hiveio/dhive";
const client = new Client(["https://api.hive.blog", "https://api.hivekings.com", "https://anyx.io", "https://api.openhive.network"]);
for await (const block of client.blockchain.getBlocks()) {
console.log(`New block, id: ${block.block_id}`);
}
With JavaScript:
var dhive = require("@hiveio/dhive");
var client = new dhive.Client(["https://api.hive.blog", "https://api.hivekings.com", "https://anyx.io", "https://api.openhive.network"]);
var key = dhive.PrivateKey.fromLogin("username", "password", "posting");
client.broadcast
.vote(
{
voter: "username",
author: "almost-digital",
permlink: "dhive-is-the-best",
weight: 10000
},
key
)
.then(
function(result) {
console.log("Included in block: " + result.block_num);
},
function(error) {
console.error(error);
}
);
With ES2016 (node.js 7+):
const { Client } = require("@hiveio/dhive");
const client = new Client(["https://api.hive.blog", "https://api.hivekings.com", "https://anyx.io", "https://api.openhive.network"]);
async function main() {
const props = await client.database.getChainProperties();
console.log(`Maximum blocksize consensus: ${props.maximum_block_size} bytes`);
client.disconnect();
}
main().catch(console.error);
With node.js streams:
var dhive = require("@hiveio/dhive");
var es = require("event-stream"); // npm install event-stream
var util = require("util");
var client = new dhive.Client(["https://api.hive.blog", "https://api.hivekings.com", "https://anyx.io", "https://api.openhive.network"]);
var stream = client.blockchain.getBlockStream();
stream
.pipe(
es.map(function(block, callback) {
callback(null, util.inspect(block, { colors: true, depth: null }) + "\n");
})
)
.pipe(process.stdout);
The easiest way to bundle dhive (with browserify, webpack etc.) is to just npm install @hiveio/dhive
and require('@hiveio/dhive')
which will give you well-tested (see browser compatibility matrix above) pre-bundled code guaranteed to JustWork™. However, that is not always desirable since it will not allow your bundler to de-duplicate any shared dependencies dhive and your app might have.
To allow for deduplication you can require('@hiveio/dhive/lib/index-browser')
, or if you plan to provide your own polyfills: require('@hiveio/dhive/lib/index')
. See src/index-browser.ts
for a list of polyfills expected.
Share and Enjoy!