Awesome
BitBoxApp
This repo contains the source code for the BitBoxApp and related tools.
Contributions are very welcome. Please see the contribution guidelines.
Tech stack
The wallet UI is a React single page webapp. It sources its data from the backend written in Go.
The Desktop app is a C++ Qt program containing only a WebEngineView
, displaying the UI.
Static assets are sourced from a Qt rcc file, and the dynamic data is bridged from Go with WebChannels.
The Go library is compiled as a C library which exposes two functions only: one to set up the bridge, and one to invoke calls in the backend.
Similarly to the Desktop variant, the Go library can be compiled and added to an Android Studio / XCode project.
Directories (subject to change)
cmd/
: Go projects which generate binaries are here.cmd/servewallet/
: a development aid which serves the static web ui and the http api it talks to. See below.vendor/
: Go dependencies, created bymake go-vendor
based on Go modules.backend/coins/btc/electrum/
: A json rpc client library, talking to Electrum servers.backend/devices/{bitbox,bitbox02}/
: Library to detect and talk to BitBoxes. High level API access.backend/coins/btc/
: Local HD wallet, sourcing blockchain index from an arbitrary backend. Manages addresses, outputs, tx creation, and everything else that a wallet needs to do.backend/
: The library that ties it all together. Uses the above packages to create a wallet talking Electrum using the BitBox for signing, and serve a high level HTTP API to control it.frontends/qt/
: the C++/Qt app which builds the wallet app for the desktop.frontends/android/
: Android targetfrontends/web/
: home of the React UI.
Set up the development environment
The below instructions assume a unix environment.
Requirements
To build the app or run the development workflow, the following dependencies need to be installed:
- Go version 1.23
- Node.js version 20.x
- NPM version 10.x or newer
- Qt version 6.2.4
- install Qt for your platform, including the WebEngine component
Build the BitBoxApp
Clone this repository using git clone --recursive
.
Please consult docs/BUILD.md for platform specific instructions and further information.
I18N translation workflow
Please consult docs/i18n.md.
Electrum server backend
The servers used are configurable in the app settings. Currently, when running the app in devmode
(make servewallet
), the config is ignored and servers on Shift's devserver are used. The
hosts/ports/certs of those are currently hardcoded.
Currently, Electrs and ElectrumX are the recommended ways to connect your own full node.
Development workflow
Local development
Run make envinit
to fetch golangci-lint and some other devtools.
Run make servewallet
and make webdev
in seperate terminals.
Before the first use of make webdev
, you also need to run make buildweb
, to install the dev
dependencies.
Watch and build the UI
Run make webdev
to develop the UI inside a web browser (for quick development, automatic rebuilds
and devtools). This serves the UI on localhost:8080. Changes to the web
code in frontends/web/src
are automatically detected and rebuilt.
UI testing
The tests are run using jest and ts-jest preprocessor.
Because the app is based on preact, we use preact-render-spy package instead of enzyme to test app components rendering and their state.
To run all test suites, execute make webtest
.
If you plan on spending a lot of time in frontends/web/src
space
or just keen on doing TDD, use jest's tests watcher:
cd frontends/web/
make jstest-watch
To generate coverage report, execute make jstest-cover
from frontends/web
dir
and open coverage/lcov-report/index.html
in a browser.
Run the HTTP API
Run make servewallet
to compile the code and run servewallet
. servewallet
is a devtool which
serves the HTTP API. Changes to the backend code are not automatically detected, so you need to
restart the server after changes.
Go dependencies
Go dependencies are managed by go mod
, and vendored using make go-vendor
. The deps are vendored
so that
- offline builds work
- dependency diffs are easier to inspect
- less reliance on remote systems
- because
gomobile bind
does not support Go modules yet
NPM dependencies
All dependencies are locked in package-lock.json
so that subsequent installs and different installations get the exact same dependency tree. To run any of the following npm commands run cd frontends/web
first.
Note: Some devDependencies in package.json
are specified with a semver range operator i.e. "typescript": "^4.4.2"
. The main reason is that those dependencies can be updated anytime within the range by running npm update
.
Check outdated dependencies: npm outdated
.
Update a specific dependency with a fixed semver npm install modulename@specificversion --save-exact
, and with --save-dev
for devDependencies.
Qt WebEngine Debugging
Set the following environment variable to debug the Qt WebEngine with Chrome developer tools,
use a port_number of your choice, launch the following command and go to http://localhost:<port_number>
.
QTWEBENGINE_REMOTE_DEBUGGING=<port_number> ./frontends/qt/build/osx/BitBox.app/Contents/MacOS/BitBox
see also https://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qtwebengine-debugging.html
CI
Run make ci
to run all static analysis tools and tests.
Build the UI
To statically compile the UI, run make buildweb
again, which compiles the web ui into a compact
bundle.
Develop using Docker
The Dockerfile provides a Ubuntu container with the whole environment preconfigured. To set it up,
run make dockerinit
, which builds the Docker image (this takes a while).
After that, make dockerdev
enters the container (a shell inside an Ubuntu virtual machine), where
you can perform the same steps as in the previous section (make servewallet
and make webdev
).
Before the first use of make webdev
, you also need to run make buildweb
, to install the dev
dependencies.
Running make dockerdev
multiple times shares the same container. You can edit the code
in your usual editor in the host and compile inside the container.
To execute make servewallet
and make webdev
insider the container, but from the host, use this:
$ ./scripts/docker_exec.sh servewallet/webdev
Testnet coins
In development mode, any password entered derives a unique testnet wallet.
Get Bitcoin Testnet coins here: https://coinfaucet.eu/en/btc-testnet/
Get Litecoin Testnet coins here: https://tltc.bitaps.com/
Get Ethereum Sepolia coins here: https://faucet.sepolia.dev/
In case any of the Ethereum faucets are not working, you can try others from here: https://faucetlink.to (some require account creation)