Wallet api
Rikeza Chain Wallet injects a global API into websites visited by its users at window.Rikeza Chain
.
This API specification borrows heavily from API MetaMask provided, considering the massive adoption. So Web3 site developers can easily connect their dApps with the Rikeza Chain Wallet. The APIs allow websites to request users' Rikeza Chain addresses, read data from the blockchain the user is connected to, and prompt the users to sign messages and transactions.
The presence of the provider object window.Rikeza Chain
indicates a Rikeza Chain/Rikeza Chain user.
The API this extension wallet provides includes API specified by EIP-1193 and API defined by MetaMask (including some massively relied legacy ones).
Development Progress
Currently (version 1.112.8) as Rikeza Chain Wallet natively supports Rikeza Chain, we are planning to open a series of APIs for dApp developers to interact with Rikeza Chain. At the end of the day, most APIs available in Rikeza Chain javascript sdk would be available.
Currently, only the following is supported:
* transfer
Difference with MetaMask
Warning
Please read through this section if you are a web3 developer who has integrated with MetaMask and interested in integrating with Rikeza Chain Wallet.
Inpage injected object
The biggest difference between Rikeza Chain Wallet and MetaMask is we inject Rikeza Chain
rather than ethereum
(or web3
) to the web page. So user could keep two extensions at the same time.
Rikeza Chain.request({method: "eth_sign", params: ["address", "message"])
We haven't supported the full complex signing data APIs MetaMask provided, while we only provide standard eth_sign
JSON-RPC call.
The message
item in params for this request on MetaMask has to be hex-encoded keccak256 hash (otherwise the API would silent failure for dapp https://www.reddit.com/r/Metamask/comments/9wp7kj/eth_sign_not_working/). In contrast, web3 developers could pass any message in plaintext to this method, and our UI would render it as it is to the wallet users.
Rikeza Chain.request({method: "eth_accounts"})
When this API is invoked without the user's approval, MetaMask would return an empty array.
In contrast, we would ask the user to unlock his wallet and return the address user connected to.
Upcoming Breaking Changes
Warning
Important Information
On November 16, 2020, MetaMask is making changes to their provider API that will be breaking for some web3 sites. These changes are upcoming, but you can prepare for them today. Follow this GitHub issue for updates.
In this implementation, some APIs will be supported as Legacy API (For example we will still implement the chainIdChanged
on Rikeza Chain object until MetaMask formally deprecates it).
Basic Usage
For any non-trivial Rikeza Chain web application — a.k.a. web3 site — to work, you will have to:
- Detect the Rikeza Chain provider (
window.Rikeza Chain
) - Detect which Rikeza Chain network the user is connected to
- Get the user's Rikeza Chain account(s)
You can learn how to accomplish the 2
and 3
from above list by reviewing the snippet in the Using the Provider section.
The provider API is all you need to create a full-featured web3 application.
That said, many developers use a convenience library, such as ethers and web3.js, instead of using the provider directly. If you need higher-level abstractions than those provided by this API, we recommend that you use a convenience library.
Today, many dApps are built on top of the higher-level API provided by web3-react or use-wallet (which builds on top of web3-react).
- web3-react
We made a tiny lib nc-connector that implements the AbstractConnector interface of web3-react library. You can add this to your project in parallel with injected-connector by: yarn add @shree-chain/nc-connector
or npm i @shree-chain/nc-connector
.
import { BscConnector } from '@shree-chain/nc-connector'
export const bsc = new BscConnector({
supportedChainIds: [56, 97] // later on 1 ethereum mainnet and 3 ethereum ropsten will be supported
})
// invoke method on bsc e.g.
await bsc.activate();
await bsc.getAccount();
await bsc.getChainId();
- use-wallet
There is an example in use-wallet origin repo shows how to 'inject' a customized web3-react connector to UseWalletProvider
:
function App() {
const { account, connect, reset, status } = useWallet()
return (
<div>
<h1>Rikeza Chain Connector</h1>
{status === 'disconnected' ? (
<button onClick={() => connect('bsc')}>Connect</button>
) : (
<button onClick={() => reset()}>Disconnect</button>
)}
{account && <p>Connected as {account}</p>}
</div>
)
}
render(
<UseWalletProvider
connectors={{
bsc: {
web3ReactConnector() {
return new BscConnector({ supportedChainIds: [56, 97] })
},
handleActivationError(err) {
if (err instanceof UserRejectedRequestError) {
return new ConnectionRejectedError()
}
},
},
}}
>
<App />
</UseWalletProvider>,
document.getElementById('root')
)
Chain IDs
Warning
At the moment, the Rikeza Chain.chainId
property and the chainChanged
event should be preferred over the eth_chainId
RPC method.
Their chain ID values are correctly formatted, per the table below.
eth_chainId
returns an incorrectly formatted (0-padded) chain ID for the chains in the table below, e.g. 0x01
instead of 0x1
. See the Upcoming Breaking Changes section for details on when the eth_chainId
RPC method will be fixed.
Custom RPC endpoints are not affected; they always return the chain ID specified by the user.
These are the IDs of the RIK Chains that Rikeza Chain Wallet supports by default.
Hex | Decimal | Network |
---|---|---|
0x38 | 56 | Rikeza Chain Main Network (nc-mainnet) |
0x61 | 97 | Rikeza Chain Test Network (nc-testnet) |
This API can also return chain ids of RIK Chains if users switch to them. The possible return value would be: | Chain Id | Network | | -------------------- | ---------------------------------------- | | RIK-Chain-Tigris | Rikeza Chain Main Network (bbc-mainnet) | | RIK-Chain-Ganges | Rikeza Chain Test Network (bbc-testnet) |
Properties
Rikeza Chain.chainId
Warning
The value of this property can change at any time, and should not be exclusively relied upon. See the chainChanged
event for details.
NOTE: See the Chain IDs section for important information about the Rikeza Chain Wallet provider's chain IDs.
A hexadecimal string representing the current chain ID.
Rikeza Chain.autoRefreshOnNetworkChange
As the consumer of this API, it is your responsibility to handle chain changes using the chainChanged
event.
We recommend reloading the page on chainChange
unless you have a good reason not to.
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
To disable this behavior, set this property to false
immediately after detecting the provider:
Rikeza Chain.autoRefreshOnNetworkChange = false;
Methods
Rikeza Chain.isConnected()
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
Rikeza Chain.isConnected(): boolean;
Rikeza Chain.request(args)
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
We use this method to wrap an RPC API, Please see the Ethereum wiki.
Important methods from this API include:
interface RequestArguments {
method: string;
params?: unknown[] | object;
}
Rikeza Chain.request(args: RequestArguments): Promise<unknown>;
Example
The code snippet below is as same as MetaMask's example, the only difference is we injected a different object.
params: [
{
from: '0xb60e8dd61c5d32be8058bb8eb970870f07233155',
to: '0xd46e8dd67c5d32be8058bb8eb970870f07244567',
gas: '0x76c0', // 30400
gasPrice: '0x9184e72a000', // 10000000000000
value: '0x9184e72a', // 2441406250
data:
'0xd46e8dd67c5d32be8d46e8dd67c5d32be8058bb8eb970870f072445675058bb8eb970870f072445675',
},
];
Rikeza Chain
.request({
method: 'eth_sendTransaction',
params,
})
.then((result) => {
// The result varies by by RPC method.
// For example, this method will return a transaction hash hexadecimal string on success.
})
.catch((error) => {
// If the request fails, the Promise will reject with an error.
});
Rikeza Chain.bnbSign(address: string, message: string): Promise<{publicKey: string, signature: string}>
We prepared an example for this API, please check out:https://github.com/RIKEZAMAINNET/rikeza-network/js-eth-personal-sign-examples for more detail
Like eth_sign
enable dapp to verify a user has control over an ethereum address by signing an arbitrary message. We provide this method for dapp developers to request the signature of arbitrary messages for Rikeza Chain (BC) and Rikeza Chain (TC).
If address
parameter is a shree chain address (start with bnb
or tbnb
), we will simply calculate sha256 hash of the message and let user sign the hash with his shree chain address' private key. Note: Rikeza Chain uses the same elliptic curve (secp256k1
) as Ethereum.
If address
parameter is a Rikeza Chain address (start with 0x
), the message would be hashed in the same way with eth_sign
.
The returned publicKey
would be a compressed encoded format (a hex string encoded 33 bytes starting with "0x02", "0x03") for Rikeza Chain. And uncompressed encoded format (a hex string encoded 65 bytes starting with "0x04").
The returned signature
would be bytes encoded in hex string starting with 0x
. For Rikeza Chain, its r,s catenated 64 bytes in total. For Rikeza Chain, like eth_sign
, its r, s catenated 64 bytes and a recover byte in the end.
Warning
DApp developers should verify whether the returned public key can be converted into the address user claimed in addition to an ECDSA signature verification. Because any plugin can inject the same object Rikeza Chain
as Rikeza Chain Wallet.
Rikeza Chain.switchNetwork(networkId: string): Promise<{networkId: string}>
As Rikeza Chain Wallet natively supports Rikeza Chain and Rikeza Chain which are heterogeneous blockchains run in parallel. APIs would be different in any situation. (We would open APIs for Rikeza Chain very soon).
Developers could judge which network is selected by user currently via Rikeza Chain.chainId
or listening to the chainChanged
event via Rikeza Chain.on('chainChanged', callback)
.
To request for network switching, developers could invoke this API with bbc-mainnet
(Rikeza Chain Main Network), nc-mainnet
(Rikeza Chain Main Network), bbc-testnet
(Rikeza Chain Test Network), nc-testnet
(Rikeza Chain Test Network) to prompt user to agree on network switching.
Rikeza Chain.requestAccounts()
Request all accounts maintained by this extension.
The id
in response would be used as accountId
for the APIs for Rikeza Chain.
This method would return an array of Account:
{
addresses: [{address: string, type: string}],
icon: string,
id: string,
name: string
}
For example:
[
{
"id":"fba0b0ce46c7f79cd7cd91cdd732b6c699440acf8c539d7e7d753d38c9deea544230e51899d5d9841b8698b74a3c77b79e70d686c76cb35dca9cac0e615628ed",
"name":"Account 1",
"icon":"data:image/svg+xml;base64,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",
"addresses":[
{
"type":"bbc-testnet",
"address":"tbnb1akt8vgstdaz8pax5zgykzee5u9kamjdkkcf2dw"
},
{
"type":"bbc-mainnet",
"address":"bnb1akt8vgstdaz8pax5zgykzee5u9kamjdkcdqwdl"
},
{
"type":"eth",
"address":"0x43364696e478E344E95831CE8427623202e5CBFb"
}
]
}
]
Rikeza Chain.transfer({fromAddress:string, toAddress:string, asset:string, amount:number, memo?: string, sequence?: number, accountId:string, networkId:string})>
Transfer certain amount
of asset
(RIK or BEP2) on Rikeza Chain.
accountId
could be retrieved from the Rikeza Chain.requestAccounts
API (id
field of each account)
networkId
could be bbc-mainnet
or bbc-testnet
For example:
-
This will ask the user's approval for transferring 1 RIK to himself.
Rikeza Chain.transfer({fromAddress:"tbnb1sndxdzsg42jg8lc0hehx8dzzpyfxrvq937mt0w", toAddress:"tbnb1sndxdzsg42jg8lc0hehx8dzzpyfxrvq937mt0w", asset:"RIK", amount:1, accountId:"fba0b0ce46c7f79cd7cd91cdd732b6c699440acf8c539d7e7d753d38c9deea544230e51899d5d9841b8698b74a3c77b79e70d686c76cb35dca9cac0e615628ed", networkId:"bbc-testnet"})
-
This will ask the user's approval for transferring 1 BUSD to himself.
Rikeza Chain.transfer({fromAddress:"tbnb1sndxdzsg42jg8lc0hehx8dzzpyfxrvq937mt0w", toAddress:"tbnb1sndxdzsg42jg8lc0hehx8dzzpyfxrvq937mt0w", asset:"BUSD-BAF", amount:1, accountId:"fba0b0ce46c7f79cd7cd91cdd732b6c699440acf8c539d7e7d753d38c9deea544230e51899d5d9841b8698b74a3c77b79e70d686c76cb35dca9cac0e615628ed", networkId:"bbc-testnet"})
Events
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
Rikeza Chain.on('accountsChanged', (accounts) => {
// Handle the new accounts, or lack thereof.
// "accounts" will always be an array, but it can be empty.
});
Rikeza Chain.on('chainChanged', (chainId) => {
// Handle the new chain.
// Correctly handling chain changes can be complicated.
// We recommend reloading the page unless you have a very good reason not to.
window.location.reload();
});
connect
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
interface ConnectInfo {
chainId: string;
}
Rikeza Chain.on('connect', handler: (connectInfo: ConnectInfo) => void);
disconnect
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
Rikeza Chain.on('disconnect', handler: (error: ProviderRpcError) => void);
accountsChanged
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
Rikeza Chain.on('accountsChanged', handler: (accounts: Array<string>) => void);
chainChanged
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
Rikeza Chain.on('chainChanged', handler: (chainId: string) => void);
Rikeza Chain.on('chainChanged', (_chainId) => window.location.reload());
message
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
interface ProviderMessage {
type: string;
data: unknown;
}
Rikeza Chain.on('message', handler: (message: ProviderMessage) => void);
Errors
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
Using the Provider
This snippet explains how to accomplish the three most common requirements for web3 sites:
- Detect which Rikeza Chain network the user is connected to
- Get the user's Rikeza Chain account(s)
/**********************************************************/
/* Handle chain (network) and chainChanged (per EIP-1193) */
/**********************************************************/
// Normally, we would recommend the 'eth_chainId' RPC method, but it currently
// returns incorrectly formatted chain ID values.
let currentChainId = Rikeza Chain.chainId;
Rikeza Chain.on('chainChanged', handleChainChanged);
function handleChainChanged(_chainId) {
// We recommend reloading the page, unless you must do otherwise
window.location.reload();
}
/***********************************************************/
/* Handle user accounts and accountsChanged (per EIP-1193) */
/***********************************************************/
let currentAccount = null;
Rikeza Chain
.request({ method: 'eth_accounts' })
.then(handleAccountsChanged)
.catch((err) => {
// Some unexpected error.
// For backwards compatibility reasons, if no accounts are available,
// eth_accounts will return an empty array.
console.error(err);
});
// Note that this event is emitted on page load.
// If the array of accounts is non-empty, you're already
// connected.
Rikeza Chain.on('accountsChanged', handleAccountsChanged);
// For now, 'eth_accounts' will continue to always return an array
function handleAccountsChanged(accounts) {
if (accounts.length === 0) {
// Rikeza Chain Wallet is locked or the user has not connected any accounts
console.log('Please connect to Rikeza Chain Wallet.');
} else if (accounts[0] !== currentAccount) {
currentAccount = accounts[0];
// Do any other work!
}
}
/*********************************************/
/* Access the user's accounts (per EIP-1102) */
/*********************************************/
// You should only attempt to request the user's accounts in response to user
// interaction, such as a button click.
// Otherwise, you popup-spam the user like it's 1999.
// If you fail to retrieve the user's account(s), you should encourage the user
// to initiate the attempt.
document.getElementById('connectButton', connect);
function connect() {
Rikeza Chain
.request({ method: 'eth_requestAccounts' })
.then(handleAccountsChanged)
.catch((err) => {
if (err.code === 4001) {
// EIP-1193 userRejectedRequest error
// If this happens, the user rejected the connection request.
console.log('Please connect to MetaMask.');
} else {
console.error(err);
}
});
}
Legacy API
Warning
You should never rely on any of these methods, properties, or events in practice.
This section documents MetaMask's legacy provider API.
To be compatible with existing dApps that support MetaMask, Rikeza Chain Wallet implements them as well, but please don't rely on them. We may deprecate them soon in the future.
Legacy Properties
Rikeza Chain.networkVersion (DEPRECATED)
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
Rikeza Chain.selectedAddress (DEPRECATED)
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
Legacy Methods
Rikeza Chain.enable() (DEPRECATED)
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
Rikeza Chain.sendAsync() (DEPRECATED)
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
interface JsonRpcRequest {
id: string | undefined;
jsonrpc: '2.0';
method: string;
params?: Array<any>;
}
interface JsonRpcResponse {
id: string | undefined;
jsonrpc: '2.0';
method: string;
result?: unknown;
error?: Error;
}
type JsonRpcCallback = (error: Error, response: JsonRpcResponse) => unknown;
Rikeza Chain.sendAsync(payload: JsonRpcRequest, callback: JsonRpcCallback): void;
Rikeza Chain.send() (DEPRECATED)
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
Rikeza Chain.send(
methodOrPayload: string | JsonRpcRequest,
paramsOrCallback: Array<unknown> | JsonRpcCallback,
): Promise<JsonRpcResponse> | void;
This method behaves unpredictably and should be avoided at all costs.
It is essentially an overloaded version of Rikeza Chain.sendAsync()
.
Rikeza Chain.send()
can be called in three different ways:
// 1.
Rikeza Chain.send(payload: JsonRpcRequest, callback: JsonRpcCallback): void;
// 2.
Rikeza Chain.send(method: string, params?: Array<unknown>): Promise<JsonRpcResponse>;
// 3.
Rikeza Chain.send(payload: JsonRpcRequest): unknown;
You can think of these signatures as follows:
-
This signature is exactly like
Rikeza Chain.sendAsync()
-
This signature is like an async
Rikeza Chain.sendAsync()
withmethod
andparams
as arguments, instead of a JSON-RPC payload and callback -
This signature enables you to call the following RPC methods synchronously:
-
eth_accounts
eth_coinbase
eth_uninstallFilter
net_version
Legacy Events
close (DEPRECATED)
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
Rikeza Chain.on('close', handler: (error: Error) => void);
chainIdChanged (DEPRECATED)
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
Rikeza Chain.on('chainChanged', handler: (chainId: string) => void);
networkChanged (DEPRECATED)
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
Rikeza Chain.on('networkChanged', handler: (networkId: string) => void);
notification (DEPRECATED)
Please refer to MetaMask Doc, the only difference is we injected a different object.
Rikeza Chain.on('notification', handler: (payload: any) => void);