stellar-base
is now maintained in the astroband/ruby-stellar-sdk repository.
The stellar-base library is the lowest-level stellar helper library. It consists of classes to read, write, hash, and sign the xdr structures that are used in stellard.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'stellar-base'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install stellar-base
Also requires libsodium. Installable via brew install libsodium
on OS X.
Please see travis.yml for what versions of ruby are currently tested by our continuous integration system. Any ruby in that list is officially supported.
It seems as though jruby is particularly slow when it comes to BigDecimal math; the source behind this slowness has not been investigated, but it is something to be aware of.
In addition to the code generated from the XDR definition files (see ruby-xdr for example usage), this library also provides some stellar specific features. Let's look at some of them.
We wrap rbnacl with Stellar::KeyPair
, providing some stellar specific functionality as seen below:
# Create a keypair from a stellar secret seed
signer = Stellar::KeyPair.from_seed("SCBASSEX34FJNIPLUYQPSMZHHYXXQNWOOV42XYZFXM6EGYX2DPIZVIA3")
# Create a keypair from a stellar address
verifier = Stellar::KeyPair.from_address("GBQWWBFLRP3BXD2RI2FH7XNNU2MKIYVUI7QXUAIVG34JY6MQGXVUO3RX")
# Produce a stellar compliant "decorated signature" that is compliant with stellar transactions
signer.sign_decorated("Hello world!") # => #<Stellar::DecoratedSignature ...>
This library also provides an impementation of Stellar's "StrKey" encoding (RFC-4648 Base32 + CCITT-XModem CRC16):
Stellar::Util::StrKey.check_encode(:account_id, "\xFF\xFF\xFF\xFF\xFF\xFF\xFF") # => "GD777777777764TU"
Stellar::Util::StrKey.check_encode(:seed, "\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x39") # => "SAAAAAAAAAADST3H"
# To prevent interpretation mistakes, you must pass the expected version byte
# when decoding a check_encoded value
encoded = Stellar::Util::StrCheck.check_encode(:account_id, "\x61\x6b\x04\xab\x8b\xf6\x1b")
Stellar::Util::StrKey.check_decode(:account_id, encoded) # => "\x61\x6b\x04\xab\x8b\xf6\x1b"
Stellar::Util::StrKey.check_decode(:seed, encoded) # => throws ArgumentError: Unexpected version: :account_id
During development of your app, you may include the FactoryBot definitions in your specs:
require "stellar-base/factories"
See the factories file for information on what factories are available.
The generated code of this library must be refreshed each time the Stellar network's protocol is updated. To perform this task, run rake xdr:update
, which will download the latest .x
files into the xdr
folder and will run xdrgen
to regenerate the built ruby code.
The current integration of user-written code with auto-generated classes is to put it nicely, weird. We intend to segregate the auto-generated code into its own namespace and refrain from monkey patching them. This will happen before 1.0, and hopefully will happen soon.
Please see CONTRIBUTING.md for details.