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A wrapper library around the official Ledger JavaScript library that attempts to simplify usage and handle various failure modes/problems.

Usage

import { LedgerVapory, BrowserLedgerConnectionFactory, Network } from "vaporyjs-ledger";

async function doStuff() {
	const onConnectLedgerRequest = async () => { await promptUserToConnectLedger(); }
	const onOpenVaporyAppRequest = async () => { await promptUserToOpenVaporyAppOnLedger(); }
	const onSwitchLedgerModeRequest = async () => { await promptUserToSwitchVaporyAppToBrowserModeAndRestartVaporyApp(); }
	const onEnableContractSupportRequest = async () => { await promptUserToEnableContractSupportInVaporyAppAndRestartVaporyApp(); }

	const ledgerVapory = new LedgerVapory(Network.Main, BrowserLedgerConnectionFactory, onConnectLedgerRequest, onOpenVaporyAppRequest, onSwitchLedgerModeRequest);
	const address = await ledgerVapory.getAddressByBip44Index(0);
	const firstSignedMessagePromise = ledgerVapory.signTransactionByBip44Index("e8018504e3b292008252089428ee52a8f3d6e5d15f8b131996950d7f296c7952872bd72a2487400080", 7);
	const secondSignedMessagePromise = ledgerVapory.signTransactionByBip32Path("e8018504e3b292008252089428ee52a8f3d6e5d15f8b131996950d7f296c7952872bd72a2487400080", "m/44'/60'/0'/0/7");

	// this will block until both first and second messages are done because the library handles ordering internally
	const secondSignedMessage = await secondSignedMessage;

	// if the ledger isn't connected with the Vapory app open in browser mode, the on*Request callbacks above will be called before the signing promises return
	const firstSignedMessage = await firstSignedMessage;

	// BIP44 index 7 is the same as `m/44'/60'/0'/0/7`; it is strongly recommended to use index 0 if you don't support multi-address wallets
	assert.equal(firstSignedMessage, secondSignedMessage);
}

Development

Note 1

package-lock.json force updates node-hid, a transitive dependency of ledgerco to 0.6.0. This is necessary to get things working on Windows without requiring python as well as get tests working in Docker until ledgerco upgrades its dependency on node-hid to 0.6.0.

Testing with a physical ledger

You can test in node by building the TypeScript files and then running node output/scripts/node.js.

You can test in browser (chrome only, look at developer console) by building the TypeScript files and then running npx budo output/scripts/browser.js --ssl (note: you need openssl binaries on your path or in the root of your project).

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A wrapper library around the official Ledger JavaScript

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