The Starter Package is an example that you can use as a starting point for developing your SubQuery project. A SubQuery package defines which data The SubQuery will index from the Substrate blockchain, and how it will store it.
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Typescript are required to compile project and define types.
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Both SubQuery CLI and generated Project have dependencies and require Node.
Install SubQuery CLI globally on your terminal by using NPM:
npm install -g @subql/cli
Run help to see available commands and usage provide by CLI
subql help
Inside the directory in which you want to create the SubQuery project, simply replace project-name
with your project name and run the command:
subql init --starter project-name
Then you should see a folder with your project name has been created inside the directory, you can use this as the start point of your project. And the files should be identical as in the Directory Structure.
Last, under the project directory, run following command to install all the dependency.
yarn install
In the starter package, we have provided a simple example of project configuration. You will be mainly working on the following files:
- The Manifest in
project.yaml
- The GraphQL Schema in
schema.graphql
- The Mapping functions in
src/mappings/
directory
For more information on how to write the SubQuery, check out our doc section on Define the SubQuery
In order to index your SubQuery project, it is mandatory to build your project first. Run this command under the project directory.
yarn codegen
In order to deploy your SubQuery project to our hosted service, it is mandatory to pack your configuration before upload.
Run pack command from root directory of your project will automatically generate a your-project-name.tgz
file.
yarn build
Under the project directory run following command:
docker-compose pull && docker-compose up
Open your browser and head to http://localhost:3000
.
Finally, you should see a GraphQL playground is showing in the explorer and the schemas that ready to query.
For the subql-starter
project, you can try to query with the following code to get a taste of how it works.
{
query {
starterEntities(first: 10) {
nodes {
field1
field2
field3
}
}
}
}