1.8 KiB
This package wraps the c-kzg C code in C++ NAPI bindings which allow it to be imported into a NodeJS program.
Spec: https://github.com/ethereum/consensus-specs/blob/dev/specs/eip4844/polynomial-commitments.md
Usage
Install this library with
yarn add c-kzg
Import from it like any other library
import {
KZGCommitment,
blobToKzgCommitment,
verifyAggregateKzgProof,
loadTrustedSetup,
transformTrustedSetupJSON,
} from "c-kzg";
Requirements
- The C and C++ code is compiled by node-gyp on installation, so your environment will need a compiler like GCC or clang
Contributing
This directory contains the code necessary to generate NodeJS bindings for C-KZG.
The bindings file has the following interface:
loadTrustedSetup: (filePath: string) => SetupHandle;
freeTrustedSetup: (setupHandle: SetupHandle) => void;
blobToKzgCommitment: (blob: Blob, setupHandle: SetupHandle) => KZGCommitment;
computeAggregateKzgProof: (
blobs: Blob[],
setupHandle: SetupHandle
) => KZGProof;
verifyAggregateKzgProof: (
blobs: Blob[],
expectedKzgCommitments: KZGCommitment[],
kzgAggregatedProof: KZGProof,
setupHandle: SetupHandle
) => boolean;
But this library wraps it in module with manages the setupHandle internally.
First,
npm install -g yarn
if you don't have it.
Install the blst submodule
git submodule update --init
Build blst and c_kzg_4844.c
cd src && make blst lib
Generate NodeJS bindings and run the TypeScript tests against them
cd ../bindings/node.js && yarn install && make test
After doing this once, you can re-build (if necessary) and re-run the tests with
make build test
After making changes, regenerate the distributable JS and type defs
make bundle