Awesome
<p align="center"> <a href="https://github.com/ipfs/helia" title="Helia"> <img src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ipfs/helia/main/assets/helia.png" alt="Helia logo" width="300" /> </a> </p>Helia is a lean, modular, and modern TypeScript implementation of IPFS for the prolific JS and browser environments.
See the Manifesto, the FAQ, and the State of IPFS in JS blog post from October 2022 for more info.
🌟 Usage
A quick overview of how to get different types of data in and out of your Helia node.
🪢 Strings
You can use the @helia/strings module to easily add and get strings from your Helia node:
import { createHelia } from 'helia'
import { strings } from '@helia/strings'
const helia = await createHelia()
const s = strings(helia)
const myImmutableAddress = await s.add('hello world')
console.log(await s.get(myImmutableAddress))
// hello world
🌃 JSON
The @helia/json module lets you add or get plain JS objects:
import { createHelia } from 'helia'
import { json } from '@helia/json'
const helia = await createHelia()
const j = json(helia)
const myImmutableAddress = await j.add({ hello: 'world' })
console.log(await j.get(myImmutableAddress))
// { hello: 'world' }
🌠 DAG-JSON
The @helia/dag-json allows you to store references to linked objects as CIDs:
import { createHelia } from 'helia'
import { dagJson } from '@helia/dag-json'
const helia = await createHelia()
const d = dagJson(helia)
const object1 = { hello: 'world' }
const myImmutableAddress1 = await d.add(object1)
const object2 = { link: myImmutableAddress1 }
const myImmutableAddress2 = await d.add(object2)
const retrievedObject = await d.get(myImmutableAddress2)
console.log(retrievedObject)
// { link: CID(baguqeerasor...) }
console.log(await d.get(retrievedObject.link))
// { hello: 'world' }
🌌 DAG-CBOR
@helia/dag-cbor works in a
similar way to @helia/dag-json
but stores objects using
Concise Binary Object Representation:
import { createHelia } from 'helia'
import { dagCbor } from '@helia/dag-cbor'
const helia = await createHelia()
const d = dagCbor(helia)
const object1 = { hello: 'world' }
const myImmutableAddress1 = await d.add(object1)
const object2 = { link: myImmutableAddress1 }
const myImmutableAddress2 = await d.add(object2)
const retrievedObject = await d.get(myImmutableAddress2)
console.log(retrievedObject)
// { link: CID(baguqeerasor...) }
console.log(await d.get(retrievedObject.link))
// { hello: 'world' }
🔒 Custom Hasher
A hasher is used to determine the immutable address of the content (aka the CID) being imported into helia. The default hasher used by the methods above is sha2-256 multihash, but others can be provided with AddOptions. This is useful for applications that require hashers with specific properties; so in most cases keeping the default is recommended.
Changing the hasher will cause a different CID to be returned for the same content! In other words: the same content imported with different hashers is treated like unique content with a unique address.
import { createHelia } from 'helia'
import { dagCbor } from '@helia/dag-cbor'
import { sha512 } from 'multiformats/hashes/sha2'
const helia = await createHelia()
const d = dagCbor(helia)
const object1 = { hello: 'world' }
const cidWithSHA256 = await d.add(object1)
const cidWithSHA512 = await d.add(object1, {
hasher: sha512
})
/** The same objects with different CIDs are treated as different objects */
console.log(cidWithSHA256)
// CID(bafyreidykglsfhoixmivffc5uwhcgshx4j465xwqntbmu43nb2dzqwfvae)
console.log(cidWithSHA512)
// CID(bafyrgqhai26anf3i7pips7q22coa4sz2fr4gk4q4sqdtymvvjyginfzaqewveaeqdh524nsktaq43j65v22xxrybrtertmcfxufdam3da3hbk)
const retrievedObject1 = await d.get(cidWithSHA256)
const retrievedObject2 = await d.get(cidWithSHA512)
console.log(retrievedObject1)
// { hello: 'world' }
console.log(retrievedObject2)
// { hello: 'world' }
🐾 Next steps
Check out the helia-examples repo for how to do mostly anything with your Helia node.
🏃♀️ Getting Started
Check out the Helia examples repo, which covers a wide variety of use cases. If you feel something has been missed, follow the contribution guide and create a PR to the examples repo.
📗 Project Docs
- See the project wiki.
📒 API Docs
📐 System diagram
graph TD;
User["User or application"]-->IPNS["@helia/ipns"];
User-->UnixFS["@helia/unixfs"];
User-->Libp2p;
User-->Datastore;
User-->Blockstore;
UnixFS-->Blockstore;
IPNS-->Datastore;
subgraph helia [Helia]
Datastore
Blockstore-->BlockBrokers;
BlockBrokers-->Bitswap;
BlockBrokers-->TrustlessGateways;
Libp2p-->DHT;
Libp2p-->PubSub;
Libp2p-->IPNI;
Libp2p-->Reframe;
end
Blockstore-->BlockStorage["File system/IDB/S3/etc"];
Datastore-->DataStorage["Level/S3/IDB/etc"];
Bitswap-->Network;
TrustlessGateways-->Gateway1;
TrustlessGateways-->GatewayN;
DHT-->Network;
PubSub-->Network;
IPNI-->Network;
Reframe-->Network;
🏭 Code Structure
Helia embraces a modular approach and encourages users to bring their own implementations of various APIs to suit their needs.
The basic Helia API is defined in:
/packages/interface
The Helia API
The API is implemented by:
/packages/helia
An peer to peer implementation that uses bitswap, libp2p and HTTP gateways as fallback/packages/http
A lightweight implementation that uses HTTP gateways exclusively
Helia also ships a number of supplemental libraries and tools that can be combined with Helia API implementations to accomplish tasks in distributed and trustless ways.
These libraries are not intended to be the "one true implementation" of any given API, but are made available for users to include depending on the need of their particular application:
- ./packages/car The
@helia/car
module - ./packages/dag-cbor The
@helia/dag-cbor
module - ./packages/dag-json The
@helia/dag-json
module - ./packages/ipns The
@helia/ipns
module - ./packages/json The
@helia/json
module - ./packages/mfs The
@helia/mfs
module - ./packages/strings The
@helia/strings
module - ./packages/unixfs The
@helia/unixfs
module
An interop suite ensures everything is compatible:
/packages/interop
Interop tests for Helia
Other modules
There are several other modules available outside this repo:
@helia/verified-fetch
A fetch-like API for retrieving trustless, verified content from the distributed web@helia/delegated-routing-v1-http-api
An implementation of the Delegated Routing v1 HTTP API including a server and a client- Helia WNFS a WNFS implementation built on top of Helia
@helia/remote-pinning
A Helia client for communicating with IPFS Pinning Services@helia/http-gateway
An implentation of the IPFS HTTP Gateway API built with Helia
📣 Project status
Helia v1 shipped in 202303 (see releases), and development keeps on trucking as we work on initiatives in the roadmap and make performance improvements and bug fixes along the way.
Release Process
For information about our release process, please see our release process wiki.
🛣️ Roadmap
Please find and comment on the Roadmap here.
👫 Get involved
- Watch our Helia Demo Day presentations here
- We are sharing about the progress at periodic Helia Demos. This is a good place to find out the latest and learn of ways to get involved. We'd love to see you there!
- Pick up one of the issues.
- Come chat in Filecoin Slack #ip-js. (Yes, we should bridge this to other chat environments. Please comment here if you'd like this.)
🤲 Contribute
Contributions welcome! Please check out the issues.
Also see our contributing document for more information on how we work, and about contributing in general.
Please be aware that all interactions related to this repo are subject to the IPFS Code of Conduct.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.
🛍️ Notable Consumers/Users
- See Projects using Helia.
🌞 Branding
- See Branding.
🪪 License
Licensed under either of
- Apache 2.0, (LICENSE-APACHE / http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT (LICENSE-MIT / http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)