This library provides simple access to data structures (binary packing
and JSON interface) and API calls to an EOS.IO RPC server, running
remotely or locally. It provides wallet functionalities (KeyBag), or
can sign transaction through the keosd
wallet. It also knows about
the P2P protocol on port 9876.
As of before the June launch, this library is pretty much in
flux. Don't expect stability, as we're moving alongside the main
eosio
codebase, which changes very fast.
This library is the basis for the eos-bios
launch orchestrator tool
at https://github.com/eoscanada/eos-bios
api := eos.New("http://testnet1.eos.io")
infoResp, _ := api.GetInfo(ctx)
accountResp, _ := api.GetAccount(ctx, "initn")
fmt.Println("Permission for initn:", accountResp.Permissions[0].RequiredAuth.Keys)
eosio.system
and eosio.token
contract Actions are respectively in:
- https://github.com/eoscanada/eos-go/tree/master/system (godocs)
- https://github.com/eoscanada/eos-go/tree/master/token (godocs)
There is some binaries in main
packages under cmd/
, mainly around P2P communication.
- API
- Decoding/Encoding
The easiest way to see the actual output for a given example is to add a line
// Output: any
at the very end of the test, looks like this for
ExampleAPI_GetInfo
file (examples_api_get_info.go):
if err != nil {
panic(fmt.Errorf("json marshal response: %s", err))
}
fmt.Println(string(bytes))
// Output: any
}
This tells go test
that it can execute this test correctly. Then, simply
run only this example:
go test -run ExampleAPI_GetInfo
Replacing ExampleAPI_GetInfo
with the actual example name you want to try
out where line // Output: any
was added.
This will run the example and compares the standard output with the any
which
will fail. But it's ok an expected, so you can see the actual output
printed to your terminal.
Note Some examples will not succeed out of the box because it requires
some configuration. A good example being the transfer
operation which
requires having the authorizations and balance necessary to perform the
transaction. It's quite possible to run them through a development environment
however.
All examples uses by default the https://mainnet.eos.dfuse.io
API endpoint for all
HTTP communication and peering.mainnet.eoscanada.com
for P2P communication.
They can respectively be overridden by specifying environment variable
EOS_GO_API_URL
and EOS_GO_P2P_ENDPOINT
respectively.
Any contributions are welcome, use your standard GitHub-fu to pitch in and improve.
MIT