Hummingbot Gateway is a REST API that exposes connections to various blockchains (wallet, node & chain interaction) and decentralized exchanges (pricing, trading & liquidity provision). It is written in Typescript and takes advantage of existing blockchain and DEX SDKs. The advantage of using gateway is it provideds a programming language agnostic approach to interacting with blockchains and DEXs.
Gateway may be used alongside the main Hummingbot client to enable trading on DEXs, or as a standalone module by external developers.
If you are installing Gateway alongside Hummingbot, check out the Deploy Examples repository that helps you deploy various types of Hummingbot and Gateway configurations. For most new users, we recommend following the Hummingbot Gateway Compose deployment.
The repo also contains Bash Scripts that help you install the Gateway Docker image on a standalone basis.
Dependencies:
- NodeJS (16.0.0 or higher)
- Yarn: run
npm install -g yarn
after installing NodeJS
# Install dependencies
yarn
# Complile Typescript into JS
$ yarn build
# Run Gateway setup script, which helps you set configs and CERTS_PATH
$ chmod a+x gateway-setup.sh
$ ./gateway-setup.sh
# Start the Gateway server using PASSPHRASE
$ yarn start --passphrase=<PASSPHRASE>
To build the gateway docker image locally execute the below make command:
make docker
Pass the ${TAG}
environmental variable to add a tag to the docker
image. For example, the below command will create the hummingbot/gateway:dev
image.
TAG=dev make docker
See the official Gateway docs.
The API is documented using Swagger. When Gateway is started, it also generates Swagger API docs at: https://localhost:8080
There are a number of ways to contribute to gateway.
-
File an issue at hummingbot issues
-
Make a pull request
-
Edit the docs
-
Vote on a Snapshot proposal
-
If you want to turn off
https
, setunsafeDevModeWithHTTP
totrue
in conf/server.yml. -
If you want Gateway to log to standard out, set
logToStdOut
totrue
in conf/server.yml. -
The format of configuration files are dictated by src/services/config-manager-v2.ts and the corresponding schema files in src/services/schema.
-
For each supported chain, token lists that translate address to symbols for each chain are stored in
/conf/lists
. You can add tokens here to make them available to Gateway.
Here are some files we recommend you look at in order to get familiar with the Gateway codebase:
-
src/services/ethereum-base.ts: base class for EVM chains.
-
src/connectors/uniswap/uniswap.ts: functionality for interacting with Uniswap.
-
src/services/validators.ts: defines functions for validating request payloads.
For a pull request merged into the codebase, it has to pass unit test coverage requirements. Take a look at Workflow for more details.
Read this document for more details about how to write unit test in gateway: How we write unit tests for gateway.
Run all unit tests.
yarn test:unit
Run an individual test folder or file
yarn jest test/<folder>/<file>
We have found it is useful to test individual endpoints with curl
commands. We have a collection of prepared curl calls. POST bodies are stored in JSON files. Take a look at the curl calls for gateway. Note that some environment variables are expected.
This repo uses eslint
and prettier
. When you run git commit
it will trigger the pre-commit
hook. This will run eslint
on the src
and test
directories.
You can lint before committing with:
yarn run lint
You can run the prettifier before committing with:
yarn run prettier