This repository acts as a monorepo for the various components that make up Pyth Crosschain.
Within this monorepo you will find the following subprojects:
This directory contains on-chain contracts and SDKs for all of the various blockchain runtimes that Pyth supports. Each subdirectory corresponds to a blockchain runtime. Inside each subdirectory, there are subfolders for contracts, SDKs, and examples.
Hermes is an off-chain service which constantly observes Pythnet and the Wormhole network watching for price updates emitted from the Pyth contract. It exposes all observed attestations via a public API over HTTPS/WSS which can be consumed by client-side applications that wish to use Pyth pricing data.
The price_service/client
directory provides an SDK for interacting with Hermes.
However, most users will interact with the price service via a chain-specific SDK
For a guide on utilising this service in your project, see the chain-specific SDK
and examples for your blockchain runtime in the target_chains
directory.
Use the following format for naming the pull requests:
[component] PR description
For example:
[hermes] Add storage tests
The repository has a CI workflow that will release javascript packages whose version number has changed. To perform a release, follow these steps:
- Update the version number in the
package.json
file for the package(s) you wish to release. Please follow Semantic Versioning for package versions. - Submit a PR with the changes and merge them in to main.
- Create a new tag
pyth-js-v<number>
and push to github. You can simply increment the version number each time -- it doesn't affect any of the published information. - Pushing the tag automatically triggers a CI workflow to publish the updated packages to NPM.
If you have a javascript package that shouldn't be published, simply add "private": "true"
to the package.json
file
and it will be excluded from the publishing workflow. If you are creating a new public javascript package, you should add
the following config option to package.json
:
"publishConfig": {
"access": "public"
},
pre-commit is a tool that checks and fixes simple issues (formatting, ...) before each commit. You can install it by following their website. In order to enable checks for this repo run pre-commit install
from command-line in the root of this repo.
The checks are also performed in the CI to ensure the code follows consistent formatting.
Integration tests run in Tilt (via the tilt ci
command). The Tilt CI workflow requires approval from a member of the Pyth team. If you are a member, click on "Details" next to the "Workflow / ci-pyth-crosschain" check in a pull request, and then on the "Resume" button on the workflow page.
All of the typescript / javascript packages in this repository are part of a lerna monorepo.
This setup allows each package to reference the current version of the others.
You can install dependencies using npm ci
from the repository root.
You can build all of the packages using npx lerna run build
and test with npx lerna run test
.
Lerna has some common failure modes that you may encounter:
npm ci
fails with a typescript compilation error about a missing package. This error likely means that the failing package has aprepare
entry compiling the typescript in itspackage.json
. Fix this error by moving that logic to theprepublishOnly
entry.- The software builds locally but fails in CI, or vice-versa.
This error likely means that some local build caches need to be cleaned.
The build error may not indicate that this is a caching issue, e.g., it may appear that the packages are being built in the wrong order.
Delete
node_modules/
,lib/
andtsconfig.tsbuildinfo
from each package's subdirectory. then try again.
⚠ This software is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. Or plainly spoken - this is a very complex piece of software which targets a bleeding-edge, experimental smart contract runtime. Mistakes happen, and no matter how hard you try and whether you pay someone to audit it, it may eat your tokens, set your printer on fire or startle your cat. Cryptocurrencies are a high-risk investment, no matter how fancy.