Read/write XDR encoded data structures (RFC 4506)
XDR is an open data format, specified in RFC 4506. This library provides a way to read and write XDR data from javascript. It can read/write all of the primitive XDR types and also provides facilities to define readers for the compound XDR types (enums, structs and unions)
via npm:
npm install --save @stellar/js-xdrYou can find some examples here.
First, let's import the library:
var xdr = require('@stellar/js-xdr');
// or
import xdr from '@stellar/js-xdr';Now, let's look at how to decode some primitive types:
// booleans
xdr.Bool.fromXDR([0, 0, 0, 0]); // returns false
xdr.Bool.fromXDR([0, 0, 0, 1]); // returns true
// the inverse of `fromXDR` is `toXDR`, which returns a Buffer
xdr.Bool.toXDR(true); // returns Buffer.from([0,0,0,1])
// XDR ints and unsigned ints can be safely represented as
// a javascript number
xdr.Int.fromXDR([0xff, 0xff, 0xff, 0xff]); // returns -1
xdr.UnsignedInt.fromXDR([0xff, 0xff, 0xff, 0xff]); // returns 4294967295
// XDR Hypers, however, cannot be safely represented in the 53-bits
// of precision we get with a JavaScript `Number`, so we allow creation from big-endian arrays of numbers, strings, or bigints.
var result = xdr.Hyper.fromXDR([0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]); // returns an instance of xdr.Hyper
result = new xdr.Hyper(0); // equivalent
// convert the hyper to a string
result.toString(); // return '0'
// math!
var ten = result.toBigInt() + 10;
var minusone = result.toBigInt() - 1;
// construct a number from a string
var big = xdr.Hyper.fromString('1099511627776');
// encode the hyper back into xdr
big.toXDR(); // <Buffer 00 00 01 00 00 00 00 00>There are a couple of caveats to be aware of with this library:
- We do not support quadruple precision floating point values. Attempting to read or write these values will throw errors.
- NaN is not handled perfectly for floats and doubles. There are several forms of NaN as defined by IEEE754 and the browser polyfill for node's Buffer class seems to handle them poorly.
js-xdr by itself does not have any ability to parse XDR IDL files and produce
a parser for your custom data types. Instead, that is the responsibility of
xdrgen. xdrgen will take your .x files
and produce a javascript file that target this library to allow for your own
custom types.
See stellar-base for an example
(check out the src/generated directory)
Please see CONTRIBUTING.md for details.
Requirements:
- Node.js ≥ 20.0.0
- pnpm ≥ 9.0
- Git
Setup Steps:
-
Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/stellar/js-xdr.git cd js-xdr -
Install pnpm (if not already installed)
npm install -g pnpm
-
Install dependencies
pnpm install
-
Run tests
pnpm test
Development Tips:
- Run
pnpm fmtto format code with Prettier - Pre-commit hooks will automatically format staged files
- Use
nvmto manage Node versions: https://github.com/creationix/nvm
Note: While the built library supports multiple Node versions, development requires Node.js ≥ 20.0.0 and pnpm ≥ 9.0.