* add the rest of the eth methods * added the rest of the namespaces * get rid of extra space * doc bug fixes * remove space Co-authored-by: Federico Kunze <31522760+fedekunze@users.noreply.github.com>
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Clients
Learn how to connect a client to a running node. {synopsis}
Pre-requisite Readings
- Run a Node {prereq}
Client Integrations
Command Line Interface
Ethermint is integrated with a CLI client that can be used to send transactions and query the state from each module.
# available query commands
ethermintcli query -h
# available transaction commands
ethermintcli tx -h
Client Servers
The Ethermint client supports both REST endpoints from the SDK and Ethereum's JSON-RPC.
REST and Tendermint RPC
Ethermint exposes REST endpoints for all the integrated Cosmos-SDK modules. This makes it easier for wallets and block explorers to interact with the proof-of-stake logic.
To run the REST Server, you need to run the Ethermint daemon (ethermintd
) and then execute (in another
process):
ethermintcli rest-server --laddr "tcp://localhost:8545" --unlock-key $KEY --chain-id $CHAINID --trace
You should see the logs from the REST and the RPC server.
I[2020-07-17|16:54:35.037] Starting application REST service (chain-id: "8")... module=rest-server
I[2020-07-17|16:54:35.037] Starting RPC HTTP server on 127.0.0.1:8545 module=rest-server
Ethereum JSON-RPC server
Ethermint also supports most of the standard web3 JSON-RPC APIs to connect with existing web3 tooling.
::: tip Some of the JSON-RPC API namespaces are currently under development. :::
To connect to the JSON-PRC server, use the rest-server
command as shown on the section above. Then, you can point any Ethereum development tooling to http://localhost:8545
or whatever port you choose with the listen address flag (--laddr
).
For further information JSON-RPC calls, please refer to this document.
Next {hide}
Process and subscribe to events via websockets {hide}