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IPFS API wrapper library in JavaScript

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A client library for the IPFS API.

Usage

Installing the module

In Node.js Through npm

$ npm install --save ipfs-api
var ipfsAPI = require('ipfs-api')

// connect to ipfs daemon API server
var ipfs = ipfsAPI('localhost', '5001', {protocol: 'http'}) // leaving out the arguments will default to these values

// or connect with multiaddr
var ipfs = ipfsAPI('/ip4/127.0.0.1/tcp/5001')

// or using options
var ipfs = ipfsAPI({host: 'localhost', port: '5001', procotol: 'http'})

In the Browser through browserify

Same as in Node.js, you just have to browserify the code before serving it. See the browserify repo for how to do that.

In the Browser through <script> tag

Make the ipfsapi.min.js available through your server and load it using a normal <script> tag, this will export the ipfsAPI constructor on the window object, such that:

var ipfs = window.ipfsAPI('localhost', '5001')

If you omit the host and port, the api will parse window.host, and use this information. This also works, and can be useful if you want to write apps that can be run from multiple different gateways:

var ipfs = window.ipfsAPI()

Using Promises

If you do not pass in a callback all api functions will return a Promise, for example

ipfs.id()
  .then(function (id) {
    console.log('my id is: ', id)
  })

This relies on a global Promise object. If you are in an environemnt where that is not yet available you need to bring your own polyfill.

Gotchas

When using the api from script tag for things that require buffers (ipfs.add, for example), you will have to use either the exposed ipfs.Buffer, that works just like a node buffer, or use this browser buffer.

CORS

If are using this module in a browser with something like browserify, then you will get an error saying that the origin is not allowed. This would be a CORS ("Cross Origin Resource Sharing") failure. The ipfs server rejects requests from unknown domains by default. You can whitelist the domain that you are calling from by changing your ipfs config like this:

$ ipfs config --json API.HTTPHeaders.Access-Control-Allow-Origin "[\"http://example.com\"]"

Usage

We classify the API calls by 'core', 'extensions', 'tooling', and 'network', following the same API spec organization available at ipfs/specs

The tests folder also contains great examples that can be used to understand how this client library interacts with the HTTP-API. You can find the tests here: https://github.com/ipfs/js-ipfs-api/tree/master/test/api

Core

version
node

node start and stop are not implemented in the API

block
object

curl

curl 'http://localhost:5001/api/v0/object/get?arg=QmYEqnfCZp7a39Gxrgyv3qRS4MoCTGjegKV6zroU3Rvr52&stream-channels=true' --compressed

response

{
    Links: [{
        Name: string,
        Hash: string,
        Size: number
    }, ...],
    Data: string
}

Data is base64 encoded.

pin

Extensions


Tooling

add

Add a file (where file is any data) to ipfs returning the hash and name. The name value will only be set if you are actually sending a file. A single or array of files can be used.

usage

ipfs.add(files, function(err, res) {
    if(err || !res) return console.error(err)

    res.forEach(function(file) {
        console.log(file.Hash)
        console.log(file.Name)
    })
})

files can be a mixed array of filenames or buffers of data. A single value is also acceptable.

Example

var files = ["../files/hello.txt", new Buffer("ipfs!")]
var files = "../files/hello.txt"

curl

curl 'http://localhost:5001/api/v0/add?stream-channels=true' \
-H 'content-type: multipart/form-data; boundary=a831rwxi1a3gzaorw1w2z49dlsor' \
-H 'Connection: keep-alive' \
--data-binary $'--a831rwxi1a3gzaorw1w2z49dlsor\r\nContent-Type: application/octet-stream\r\nContent-Disposition: file; name="file"; filename="Hello.txt"\r\n\r\nhello--a831rwxi1a3gzaorw1w2z49dlsor--' --compressed

response

[{
    Hash: string,
    Name: string
}, ...]

The name value will only be set for actual files.

cat

Retrieve the contents of a single hash, or array of hashes.

usage

ipfs.cat(hashs, function(err, res) {
    if(err || !res) return console.error(err)

    if(res.readable) {
        // Returned as a stream
        res.pipe(process.stdout)
    } else {
        // Returned as a string
        console.log(res)
    }
})

curl

curl "http://localhost:5001/api/v0/cat?arg=<hash>&stream-channels=true"

response

The response is either a readable stream, or a string.

ls

Get the node structure of a hash. Included in it is a hash and array to links.

Usage

ipfs.ls(hashs, function(err, res) {
    if(err || !res) return console.error(err)

    res.Objects.forEach(function(node) {
        console.log(node.Hash)
        console.log("Links [%d]", node.Links.length)
        node.Links.forEach(function(link, i) {
            console.log("[%d]", i, link)
        })
    })
})

Curl

curl "http://localhost:5001/api/v0/ls?arg=<hash>&stream-channels=true"

Response

{
    Objects: [
        {
            Hash: string,
            Links: [{
                Name: string,
                Hash: string,
                Size: number
            }, ...]
        },
        ....
    ]
}
update

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A client library for the IPFS HTTP API, implemented in JavaScript.

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