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Interactive EIP-6963 Tutorial

Overview

This tutorial will guide you in transforming the Web3 user experience by contributing to the development of EIP-6963: Multi Injected Provider Discovery. This Ethereum Improvement Proposal (EIP) is designed to boost connectivity in the blockchain space by offering an alternative discovery mechanism to window.ethereum.

By enabling the discovery of multiple injected wallet providers, EIP-6963 not only simplifies wallet interactions for developers, but also gives them more control over their decentralized applications (DApps).

For end-users, it enhances the user experience by allowing them to use any installed wallet of their choice, thus facilitating seamless communication between DApps and browser extension wallets.


Objective

The primary goal of this tutorial is to speed up the adoption of EIP-6963 among DApp developers and the broader blockchain community. It aims to make the integration of wallet providers into the decentralized ecosystem not only more intuitive but also more reliable. This guide serves as a comprehensive resource, equipping you with the knowledge and tools to implement EIP-6963 within your DApp in just 15 minutes.

For developers, this means less time spent on understanding the complexities of wallet provider integration and more time dedicated to creating remarkable DApps.

By working together, it's possible to enhance the blockchain space, making it more accessible and efficient for everyone.


Using Existing Libraries

Here is the list of ready-to-use libraries that already support EIP-6963 to push your DApp to the new level.

If you are already using one of them β€” consider updating to the latest version.


Quick Start

Get your hands on a ready-to-use InjectedWalletProvider setup right away. Simply add this file into your project, and you'll be all set to connect your DApp with EIP-6963 in a moment:

InjectedWalletProvider implementation

injected-wallet-provider.ts

types.ts

Later in this tutorial, we'll construct this implementation step by step to give you a comprehensive understanding of its internal mechanics.


The Roadmap

This guide will take you step by step through the exciting journey of implementing * EIP-6963: Multi Injected Provider Discovery* from scratch. It's organized into a series of straightforward sections:

πŸ“– Section 1: Requesting Available Providers

Dive into the mechanics of 'requestProvider' and 'announceProvider' events and understand their roles. This section will clarify how DApps can initiate connections with multiple injected wallet providers and will provide examples of these and related interfaces essential for wallet communication.

Explore the connection flow in step 1 of the interactive tutorial.

πŸ“– Section 2: Connecting to Wallet Accounts

This section will show you how to connect available provider wallets and how wallet extensions keep accounts connected after a page refresh or on next visit.

Discover why EIP-6963 is a game-changer for DApp users, offering them the freedom to connect with their wallet of choice, moving beyond the limitations of window.ethereum.

Experiment with requesting accounts and ensuring they stay connected in step 2 of the interactive tutorial.

πŸ“– Section 3: Message Signing and Sending a Transaction

Learn how your DApp can leverage connected wallet providers to sign transactions with the user's preferred wallet. This section is all about putting theory into practice.

Get hands-on with account connection and transaction signing in steps 3-4 of the interactive tutorial.

πŸ“– Section 4: πŸ—„οΈ Using localStorage for Persistence

Understand the importance of persistence in maintaining a seamless user experience across DApp sessions. This section will guide you through the practical aspects of using localStorage to remember user preferences and wallet connections.

See it in action in the step 5 of the interactive tutorial.


This tutorial will reference three key files from the repository:

// πŸ“ file: injected-wallet-provider.ts β€” where the core logic for the EIP-6963 implementation resides

// πŸ“ file: types.ts β€” additional classes and interfaces that are essential for the InjectedWalletProvider to function

// πŸ“ file: DemoView.vue β€” the demo page of the tutorial, it uses the InjectedWalletProvider to showcase how EIP-6963 operates


Try It Out!

Ready to dive in? The interactive playground is all set up for you to try out everything you've learned in this guide. It's the perfect place to experience how EIP-6963 operates in a real-world setting.

Just pop over to the interactive playground and let the exploration begin. It's a practical way to grasp how today's DApps can connect to a wallet using EIP-6963.

This guide is all about learning by doing. Let's walk through the steps you'll be taking in the interactive tutorial or on your local machine:

Steps 1-2: Connection Flow

In these steps, you'll learn about the 'requestProvider' and 'announceProvider' events and how they work. You'll gain a clear understanding of how DApps can initiate connections with multiple injected wallet providers. You'll also see examples of these and related interfaces that are crucial for communicating with the wallets.

Steps 3-4: Message Signing and Sending a Transaction

In these final steps, you'll see how your DApp can utilize connected wallet providers to sign transactions using their preferred wallet.

Step 5: Wallet Persistence Handling

This step will guide you through saving a preferred wallet provider in localStorage for reuse, whether after refreshing the page or on your next visit. This introduces a fantastic new feature brought to you by EIP-6963, offering your DApp users the freedom to connect with their chosen wallet, moving away from the constraints of only using the wallet provided by window.ethereum.


πŸ“– Section 0: Getting things ready

To get the most out of this tutorial, you'll need at least one EIP-6963 compatible wallet. But hey, remember what this EIP is about? Get two or three!

Here's a list of wallets that have already rolled out support for EIP-6963:

... and so many more are available here.

Clone the repository

git clone git@github.com:nfwsncked/eip-6963-tutorial.git

Navigate into the project directory

cd eip-6963-tutorial

Make sure installing all the deps

npm i

Run the project locally

npm run dev

Open served app in your browser

http://localhost:5173/

πŸ“– Section 1: Requesting Available Providers

Simplicity is the key to adoption.

The EIP-6963 protocol works in a pretty straightforward way:

A DApp can fire the requestProvider event at any moment, and as a reaction, every EIP-6963 compatible wallet extension in your browser instantly fires announceProvider event in response.

To see this interaction in action, let's add an event listener for announceProvider and emit the requestProvider event.

First let's define all the necessary classes and interfaces in one go:

// πŸ“ file: types.ts

// Declare a global interface to extend the WindowEventMap with a custom event "eip6963:announceProvider"
declare global {
    interface WindowEventMap {
        "eip6963:announceProvider": EIP6963AnnounceProviderEvent;
    }
}

// Define a class for the "eip6963:requestProvider" event
export class EIP6963RequestProviderEvent extends Event {
    constructor() {
        super("eip6963:requestProvider");
    }
}

// Define an interface for the "eip6963:announceProvider" event
export interface EIP6963AnnounceProviderEvent extends Event {
    type: "eip6963:announceProvider";
    detail: EIP6963ProviderDetail;
}

// Define an interface for the provider details
export interface EIP6963ProviderDetail {
    info: EIP6963ProviderInfo;
    provider: EIP1193Provider;
}

// Define an interface for the wallet extension metadata
export interface EIP6963ProviderInfo {
    uuid: string; // Unique identifier of the wallet extension announcement, keep in mind it changes on every request-announcement cycle
    name: string; // Name of the wallet extension
    icon: string; // Icon for the wallet extension
    rdns: string; // Reverse DNS name of the wallet extension
}

// Define an interface for the EIP1193 provider.
// It's the same interface we are used to access with 'window.ethereum'
export interface EIP1193Provider {
    request(request: {
        method: string;
        params?: Array<any> | Record<string, any>;
    }): Promise<any>;
}

The global interface WindowEventMap declaration above is used to extend the existing WindowEventMap interface with a new event type, 'eip6963:announceProvider'.

EIP6963RequestProviderEvent β€” an event class that's being fired to request the wallet providers;

EIP6963AnnounceProviderEvent β€” an interface that represents the response from the wallet extension when the ' eip6963:requestProvider' event is fired;

EIP6963ProviderDetail is the main object we're interested in here. It contains two important properties:

EIP6963ProviderInfo which exposes metadata about the wallet extension;

EIP1193Provider which is a provider interface from the EIP-1193 specification. This should be used in the same way as the window.ethereum provider.


Now that we've got all the pieces in place, let's kick off the construction of a simple EIP-6963 communication setup:

// πŸ“ file: injected-wallet-provider.ts

export class InjectedWalletProvider extends EventEmitter {
    // This will hold the details of the providers received
    providerDetails: EIP6963ProviderDetail[];

...

    // This method processes the provider details announced and adds them to the providerDetails array
    private providerReceived(providerDetail: EIP6963ProviderDetail): void {
        this.providerDetails.push(providerDetail);
        this.emit('providerDetailsUpdated')
        this.log(`updated wallet provider details from '${providerDetail.info.name}' extension`);
    }

    // This method listens for the 'announceProvider' event and processes the provider details announced
    subscribe(): void {
        window.addEventListener("eip6963:announceProvider", (event: EIP6963AnnounceProviderEvent) => {
                this.log(`received 'announceProvider' emitted by ${event.detail.info.name} / ${event.detail.info.rdns}`);
                this.providerReceived(event.detail);
            }
        );
    }

    // This method is used to request wallet providers by firing a 'EIP6963RequestProviderEvent'
    requestProviders(): void {
        this.log("emitting 'requestProvider' event");
        this.providerDetails = [];
        window.dispatchEvent(new EIP6963RequestProviderEvent());
    }
}

First we have to call subscribe that will set up an event listener for eip6963:announceProvider event. Next step is calling requestProviders to emit our request event.

Finally, we can see our events in the console:

001-events-in-console.png

Let's dive into the detail parameter of the 'EIP6963ProviderDetail'. It has two parts: info and **provider **.

πŸ“ EIP6963ProviderDetail.info

First up, info. This is where the extension shares all its metadata with the DApp. We've already defined its interface as β€” EIP6963ProviderInfo.

Let's break down the data points we received (find full descriptions here: EIP-6963 specification):

uuid β€” a unique identifier for each wallet provider announcement, allowing different EIP-1193 provider sessions to be distinguished

❗ Keep in mind that uuid changes with each announcement, so it's not a reliable way to consistently identify the wallet extension!

name β€” a user-friendly name of the Wallet Provider that can be displayed to the user on the DApp

icon β€” an encoded image that represents the wallet provider's logo

❗ For security reasons you should always wrap received icon into <img> tag

rdns β€” a unique identifier provided by the wallet in the form of a reversed domain name (like com.example.subdomain). It's expected to stay the same throughout the wallet's lifespan, providing a stable identifier for DApps to rely on across sessions.

❗ rdns is a consistent parameter that helps us identify the wallet across different sessions. We'll use that later for persistency.

Example values:

{
  "uuid": "36072975-ed89-4a55-a0d0-e7523f1413a8",
  "name": "Zerion",
  "icon": "data:image/svg+xml,%3Csvg%20xmlns%3D%22http%3A%2F%2Fwww.w3.org%2F2000%2Fsvg%22%20width%3D%22512%22%20height%3D%22512%22%20viewBox%3D%220%200%20512%20512%22%20fill%3D%22none%22%3E%3Crect%20width%3D%22512%22%20height%3D%22512%22%20rx%3D%22170.667%22%20fill%3D%22url%28%27%23paint0_linear_1098_5380%27%29%22%2F%3E%3Crect%20x%3D%2242.667%22%20y%3D%2242.667%22%20width%3D%22426.667%22%20height%3D%22426.667%22%20rx%3D%22170.667%22%20fill%3D%22%232461ED%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20fill-rule%3D%22evenodd%22%20clip-rule%3D%22evenodd%22%20d%3D%22M286.757%20250.326c-41.73-22.55-92.506-51.794-130.72-75.629-11.276-8.123-5.553-25.364%208.074-25.364h189.086c10.548%200%2017.604%2011.761%2012.318%2020.66-12.706%2021.944-31.256%2049.805-46.75%2071.895-8.317%2011.857-21.872%2013.894-32.008%208.438Zm-60.862%207.323c40.349%2021.508%2096.895%2054.218%20137.074%2078.951%2012.415%207.663%207.468%2026.042-7.032%2026.042-23.728%200-62.285.007-100.641.013-37.961.006-75.725.012-98.726.012-11.59%200-17.531-12.027-12.609-20.417%2016.634-28.346%2035.33-56.959%2050.872-78.321%206.911-9.529%2020.975-11.663%2031.062-6.28Z%22%20fill%3D%22%23fff%22%2F%3E%3Cdefs%3E%3ClinearGradient%20id%3D%22paint0_linear_1098_5380%22%20x1%3D%220%22%20y1%3D%220%22%20x2%3D%22604.983%22%20y2%3D%22352.348%22%20gradientUnits%3D%22userSpaceOnUse%22%3E%3Cstop%20stop-color%3D%22%232962EF%22%2F%3E%3Cstop%20offset%3D%221%22%20stop-color%3D%22%23255CE5%22%2F%3E%3C%2FlinearGradient%3E%3C%2Fdefs%3E%3C%2Fsvg%3E",
  "rdns": "io.zerion.wallet"
}
{
  "uuid": "f13cd14b-e30e-44b1-8ce7-2c4354ce1d9e",
  "name": "MetaMask",
  "icon": "data:image/svg+xml,%3Csvg%20fill%3D%22none%22%20height%3D%2233%22%20viewBox%3D%220%200%2035%2033%22%20width%3D%2235%22%20xmlns%3D%22http%3A%2F%2Fwww.w3.org%2F2000%2Fsvg%22%3E%3Cg%20stroke-linecap%3D%22round%22%20stroke-linejoin%3D%22round%22%20stroke-width%3D%22.25%22%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m32.9582%201-13.1341%209.7183%202.4424-5.72731z%22%20fill%3D%22%23e17726%22%20stroke%3D%22%23e17726%22%2F%3E%3Cg%20fill%3D%22%23e27625%22%20stroke%3D%22%23e27625%22%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m2.66296%201%2013.01714%209.809-2.3254-5.81802z%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m28.2295%2023.5335-3.4947%205.3386%207.4829%202.0603%202.1436-7.2823z%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m1.27281%2023.6501%202.13055%207.2823%207.46994-2.0603-3.48166-5.3386z%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m10.4706%2014.5149-2.0786%203.1358%207.405.3369-.2469-7.969z%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m25.1505%2014.5149-5.1575-4.58704-.1688%208.05974%207.4049-.3369z%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m10.8733%2028.8721%204.4819-2.1639-3.8583-3.0062z%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m20.2659%2026.7082%204.4689%202.1639-.6105-5.1701z%22%2F%3E%3C%2Fg%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m24.7348%2028.8721-4.469-2.1639.3638%202.9025-.039%201.231z%22%20fill%3D%22%23d5bfb2%22%20stroke%3D%22%23d5bfb2%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m10.8732%2028.8721%204.1572%201.9696-.026-1.231.3508-2.9025z%22%20fill%3D%22%23d5bfb2%22%20stroke%3D%22%23d5bfb2%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m15.1084%2021.7842-3.7155-1.0884%202.6243-1.2051z%22%20fill%3D%22%23233447%22%20stroke%3D%22%23233447%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m20.5126%2021.7842%201.0913-2.2935%202.6372%201.2051z%22%20fill%3D%22%23233447%22%20stroke%3D%22%23233447%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m10.8733%2028.8721.6495-5.3386-4.13117.1167z%22%20fill%3D%22%23cc6228%22%20stroke%3D%22%23cc6228%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m24.0982%2023.5335.6366%205.3386%203.4946-5.2219z%22%20fill%3D%22%23cc6228%22%20stroke%3D%22%23cc6228%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m27.2291%2017.6507-7.405.3369.6885%203.7966%201.0913-2.2935%202.6372%201.2051z%22%20fill%3D%22%23cc6228%22%20stroke%3D%22%23cc6228%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m11.3929%2020.6958%202.6242-1.2051%201.0913%202.2935.6885-3.7966-7.40495-.3369z%22%20fill%3D%22%23cc6228%22%20stroke%3D%22%23cc6228%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m8.392%2017.6507%203.1049%206.0513-.1039-3.0062z%22%20fill%3D%22%23e27525%22%20stroke%3D%22%23e27525%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m24.2412%2020.6958-.1169%203.0062%203.1049-6.0513z%22%20fill%3D%22%23e27525%22%20stroke%3D%22%23e27525%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m15.797%2017.9876-.6886%203.7967.8704%204.4833.1949-5.9087z%22%20fill%3D%22%23e27525%22%20stroke%3D%22%23e27525%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m19.8242%2017.9876-.3638%202.3584.1819%205.9216.8704-4.4833z%22%20fill%3D%22%23e27525%22%20stroke%3D%22%23e27525%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m20.5127%2021.7842-.8704%204.4834.6236.4406%203.8584-3.0062.1169-3.0062z%22%20fill%3D%22%23f5841f%22%20stroke%3D%22%23f5841f%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m11.3929%2020.6958.104%203.0062%203.8583%203.0062.6236-.4406-.8704-4.4834z%22%20fill%3D%22%23f5841f%22%20stroke%3D%22%23f5841f%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m20.5906%2030.8417.039-1.231-.3378-.2851h-4.9626l-.3248.2851.026%201.231-4.1572-1.9696%201.4551%201.1921%202.9489%202.0344h5.0536l2.962-2.0344%201.442-1.1921z%22%20fill%3D%22%23c0ac9d%22%20stroke%3D%22%23c0ac9d%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m20.2659%2026.7082-.6236-.4406h-3.6635l-.6236.4406-.3508%202.9025.3248-.2851h4.9626l.3378.2851z%22%20fill%3D%22%23161616%22%20stroke%3D%22%23161616%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m33.5168%2011.3532%201.1043-5.36447-1.6629-4.98873-12.6923%209.3944%204.8846%204.1205%206.8983%202.0085%201.52-1.7752-.6626-.4795%201.0523-.9588-.8054-.622%201.0523-.8034z%22%20fill%3D%22%23763e1a%22%20stroke%3D%22%23763e1a%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m1%205.98873%201.11724%205.36447-.71451.5313%201.06527.8034-.80545.622%201.05228.9588-.66255.4795%201.51997%201.7752%206.89835-2.0085%204.8846-4.1205-12.69233-9.3944z%22%20fill%3D%22%23763e1a%22%20stroke%3D%22%23763e1a%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m32.0489%2016.5234-6.8983-2.0085%202.0786%203.1358-3.1049%206.0513%204.1052-.0519h6.1318z%22%20fill%3D%22%23f5841f%22%20stroke%3D%22%23f5841f%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m10.4705%2014.5149-6.89828%202.0085-2.29944%207.1267h6.11883l4.10519.0519-3.10487-6.0513z%22%20fill%3D%22%23f5841f%22%20stroke%3D%22%23f5841f%22%2F%3E%3Cpath%20d%3D%22m19.8241%2017.9876.4417-7.5932%202.0007-5.4034h-8.9119l2.0006%205.4034.4417%207.5932.1689%202.3842.013%205.8958h3.6635l.013-5.8958z%22%20fill%3D%22%23f5841f%22%20stroke%3D%22%23f5841f%22%2F%3E%3C%2Fg%3E%3C%2Fsvg%3E",
  "rdns": "io.metamask"
}

πŸ“ EIP6963ProviderDetail.provider

The second part of the 'EIP6963ProviderDetail' is the provider. This is an interface, known as **EIP1193Provider **, that acts like a gateway to the user's account. You can use it in the same way you'd use window.ethereum.

The EIP1193Provider interface is a standard way for Ethereum wallets to talk to DApps. It's main usage is the request method, this method takes a request object as a parameter: object should have a method property (a string that names the method to be called) and it can also have a params property (this can be an array or an object, and it holds the parameters for the method call). The request method gives back a Promise that resolves to the result of the method call. This lets DApps interact with the Ethereum blockchain in a way that doesn't block the user interface.

Example calls you usually make:

await provider.request({method: 'eth_accounts'})

await provider.request({
    method: 'personal_sign',
    params: ['some message to sign', '0x0000000000000000000000000000000000000000']
});

πŸ“– Section 2: Connecting to Wallet Accounts

When you want to access Ethereum accounts, you can use either eth_requestAccounts or eth_accounts.

The difference? eth_requestAccounts prompts the user to connect their wallet via the extension interface, while eth_accounts simply returns a list of accounts already connected and available to the DApp.

Once the DApp requests access to the accounts, they stay connected. This means you only need to request access once. The wallet extension takes care of persisting these connections.

πŸ” eth_requestAccounts

To establish a connection with the accounts in the wallet extension, we should simply call 'eth_requestAccounts':

// πŸ“ file: DemoView.vue

async function connectWalletAccount(providerDetail: EIP6963ProviderDetail) {
    try {
        const accounts = await providerDetail.provider.request({method: 'eth_requestAccounts'})
        setCurrentWalletAccount(accounts[0])
    } catch (e) {
        console.error(`error getting account: ${e}`);
    }
}

This action will prompt the selected wallet extension provider to display a dialog box, asking for permission to connect to the available account:

002-request-accounts.png

You will see the following in the console:

current account has been set to: 0x4adad79b327a627395a5ed54f051b64f42249d3d

Which means our DApp successfully got the ethereum account from the extension

πŸ”“ eth_accounts

To get accounts previously connected via eth_requestAccounts, we should use method 'eth_accounts':

// πŸ“ file: DemoView.vue

async function getConnectedWalletAccount(providerDetail: EIP6963ProviderDetail) {
    const accounts = await providerDetail.provider.request({method: 'eth_accounts'})
    if (accounts) {
        setCurrentWalletAccount(accounts[0])
    }
}

πŸ“– Section 3: Message Signing and Sending a Transaction

In this part of the guide, you'll learn how modern DApps can leverage connected wallet providers to sign transactions in a secure manner.

Let's start with an example of signing a string with the selected wallet:

// signs a message by requesting the 'personal_sign' method from the provider
async function signMessage(providerDetail: EIP6963ProviderDetail) {
    try {
        const msg = signatureInputText.value;
        const signature = await providerDetail.provider.request({
            method: 'personal_sign',
            params: [msg, currentAccountAddress.value]
        });
        const signatureLog = `signed '${signatureInputText.value}' with ${providerDetail.info.name}, signature: ${signature}`;
        console.log(signatureLog);
        signatures.value.push(signatureLog);
    } catch (error) {
        console.error(`error signing: ${error}`);
    }
}

Now we can utilize 'eth_sendTransaction' to send a transaction into the network:

// sends a transaction by requesting the 'eth_sendTransaction' method from the provider
async function sendTransaction(providerDetail: EIP6963ProviderDetail) {
    // this is a demo implementation to avoid excesive dependencies
    // for production-ready apps you should use ethers / web3.js or bn.js to properly work with BigNumbers
    const value = `0x${parseInt(txValue.value).toString(16)}`;
    try {
        const transactionParameters = {
            to: txToAddress.value,
            from: currentAccountAddress.value,
            value: value,
        };
        const txHash = await providerDetail.provider.request({
            method: 'eth_sendTransaction',
            params: [transactionParameters],
        });
        console.log(`transaction sent with hash: ${txHash}`);
    } catch (error) {
        console.error(`error sending transaction: ${error}`);
    }
}

πŸ“– Section 4: πŸ—„οΈ Using localStorage for persistence

Thanks to EIP-6963, it's now possible to use multiple wallet extensions at the same time. This opens up a scenario where you might want to stick with the same wallet extension every time you use this DApp. To make this happen, we can save your choice in localStorage using the RDNS value of the chosen extension. Just a quick reminder, the RDNS parameter is a unique identifier that each wallet extension provides.

// πŸ“ file: injected-wallet-provider.ts

  // This function stores the default provider.info.rdns in the local storage
storeDefaultProviderRdns(providerRdns
:
string
)
{
    window.localStorage.setItem(defaultProviderLocalStorageName, providerRdns);
    this.log(`stored default provider rdns '${providerRdns}' in local storage.`);
}

// This function retrieves the default provider.info.rdns from the local storage
readDefaultProviderRdns()
:
string | null
{
    const providerRdns = window.localStorage.getItem(defaultProviderLocalStorageName);
    this.log(`read default provider rdns '${providerRdns}' from local storage.`);
    return providerRdns;
}

// This function removes the default provider.info.rdns from the local storage
removeDefaultProvider()
{
    window.localStorage.removeItem(defaultProviderLocalStorageName);
    this.log("removed default provider rdns from local storage");
}

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A quick onboarding into EIP-6963 implementation with an interactive demo.

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