1
0
mirror of https://github.com/oceanprotocol/docs.git synced 2024-11-01 15:55:34 +01:00
docs/developers/ocean.js/configuration.md
2023-08-17 16:16:01 +03:00

5.8 KiB

Configuration

For obtaining the API keys for blockchain access and setting the correct environment variables, please consult this section first and proceed with the next steps.

Create a directory

Let's start with creating a working directory where we store the environment variable file, configuration files, and the scripts.

mkdir my-ocean-project
cd my-ocean-project

Create a .env file

In the working directory create a .env file. The content of this file will store the values for the following variables:

Variable nameDescriptionRequired
OCEAN_NETWORKName of the network where the Ocean Protocol's smart contracts are deployed.Yes
OCEAN_NETWORK_URLThe URL of the Ethereum node (along with API key for non-local networks)**Yes
PRIVATE_KEYThe private key of the account which you want to use. A private key is made up of 64 hex characters. Make sure you have sufficient balance to pay for the transaction fees.Yes
AQUARIUS_URLThe URL of the Aquarius. This value is needed when reading an asset from off-chain store.No
PROVIDER_URLThe URL of the Provider. This value is needed when publishing a new asset or update an existing asset.No

{% hint style="info" %} Treat this file as a secret and do not commit this file to git or share the content publicly. If you are using git, then include this file name in .gitignore file. {% endhint %}

The below tabs show partially filled .env file content for some of the supported networks.

{% tabs %} {% tab title="Mainnet" %} {% code title=".env" %}

# Mandatory environment variables

OCEAN_NETWORK=mainnet
OCEAN_NETWORK_URL=<replace this>
PRIVATE_KEY=<secret>

# Optional environment variables

AQUARIUS_URL=https://v4.aquarius.oceanprotocol.com/
PROVIDER_URL=https://v4.provider.oceanprotocol.com

{% endcode %} {% endtab %}

{% tab title="Polygon" %} {% code title=".env" %}

# Mandatory environment variables

OCEAN_NETWORK=polygon
OCEAN_NETWORK_URL=<replace this>
PRIVATE_KEY=<secret>

# Optional environment variables

AQUARIUS_URL=https://v4.aquarius.oceanprotocol.com/
PROVIDER_URL=https://v4.provider.oceanprotocol.com

{% endcode %} {% endtab %}

{% tab title="Local (using Barge)" %} {% code title=".env" %}

# Mandatory environment variables
OCEAN_NETWORK=development
OCEAN_NETWORK_URL=http://172.15.0.3:8545/
AQUARIUS_URL=http://172.15.0.5:5000
PROVIDER_URL=http://172.15.0.4:8030

# Replace PRIVATE_KEY if needed
PRIVATE_KEY=0xc594c6e5def4bab63ac29eed19a134c130388f74f019bc74b8f4389df2837a58

{% endcode %} {% endtab %} {% endtabs %}

Replace <replace this> with the appropriate values. You can see all the networks configuration on Oceanjs' config helper.

Setup dependencies

In this step, all required dependencies will be installed.

Installation & Usage

Let's install Ocean.js library into your current project by running:

{% tabs %} {% tab title="Terminal" %} {% code overflow="wrap" %}

npm init
npm i @oceanprotocol/lib@latest dotenv crypto-js ethers@5.7.4 @truffle/hdwallet-provider

{% endcode %} {% endtab %} {% endtabs %}

Create a configuration file

A configuration file will read the content of the .env file and initialize the required configuration objects which will be used in the further tutorials. The below scripts creates a Web3 wallet instance and an Ocean's configuration object.

Create the configuration file in the working directory i.e. at the same path where the .env is located.

{% tabs %} {% tab title="config.js" %} {% code title="config.js" %}

require("dotenv").config();
const {
	Aquarius,
	ConfigHelper,
	configHelperNetworks,
} = require("@oceanprotocol/lib");
const ethers = require("ethers");
import fs from "fs";
import { homedir } from "os";

async function oceanConfig() {
	const provider = new ethers.providers.JsonRpcProvider(
		process.env.OCEAN_NETWORK_URL || configHelperNetworks[1].nodeUri
	);
	const publisherAccount = new ethers.Wallet(process.env.PRIVATE_KEY, provider);

	let oceanConfig = new ConfigHelper().getConfig(
		parseInt(String((await publisherAccount.provider.getNetwork()).chainId))
	);
	const aquarius = new Aquarius(oceanConfig?.metadataCacheUri);

	// If using local development environment, read the addresses from local file.
	// The local deployment address file can be generated using barge.
	if (process.env.OCEAN_NETWORK === "development") {
		const addresses = JSON.parse(
			// eslint-disable-next-line security/detect-non-literal-fs-filename
			fs.readFileSync(
				process.env.ADDRESS_FILE ||
					`${homedir}/.ocean/ocean-contracts/artifacts/address.json`,
				"utf8"
			)
		).development;

		oceanConfig = {
			...oceanConfig,
			oceanTokenAddress: addresses.Ocean,
			fixedRateExchangeAddress: addresses.FixedPrice,
			dispenserAddress: addresses.Dispenser,
			nftFactoryAddress: addresses.ERC721Factory,
			opfCommunityFeeCollector: addresses.OPFCommunityFeeCollector,
		};
	}

	oceanConfig = {
		...oceanConfig,
		publisherAccount: publisherAccount,
		consumerAccount: publisherAccount,
		aquarius: aquarius,
	};

	return oceanConfig;
}

module.exports = {
	oceanConfig,
};

{% endcode %} {% endtab %} {% endtabs %}

Now you have set up the necessary files and configurations to interact with Ocean Protocol's smart contracts using ocean.js. You can proceed with further tutorials or development using these configurations.