Package Exports
- @mysten/wallet-standard
Readme
@mysten/wallet-standard
A suite of standard utilities for implementing wallets and libraries based on the Wallet Standard.
Implementing the Wallet Standard in an extension wallet
Creating a wallet interface
You need to create a class that represents your wallet. You can use the Wallet
interface from @mysten/wallet-standard
to help ensure your class adheres to the standard.
import { Wallet, SUI_DEVNET_CHAIN } from '@mysten/wallet-standard';
class YourWallet implements Wallet {
get version() {
// Return the version of the Wallet Standard this implements (in this case, 1.0.0).
return '1.0.0';
}
get name() {
return 'Wallet Name';
}
get icon() {
return 'some-icon-data-url';
}
// Return the Sui chains that your wallet supports.
get chains() {
return [SUI_DEVNET_CHAIN];
}
}
Implementing features
Features are standard methods consumers can use to interact with a wallet. To be listed in the Sui wallet adapter, you must implement the following features in your wallet:
standard:connect
- Used to initiate a connection to the wallet.standard:events
- Used to listen for changes that happen within the wallet, such as accounts being added or removed.sui:signTransactionBlock
- Used to prompt the user to sign a transaction block, and return the serializated transaction block and signature back to the user. This method does not submit the transaction block for execution.sui:signAndExecuteTransactionBlock
- Used to prompt the user to sign a transaction block, then submit it for execution to the blockchain.
You can implement these features in your wallet class under the features
property:
import {
StandardConnectFeature,
StandardConnectMethod,
StandardEventsFeature,
StandardEventsOnMethod,
SuiFeatures,
SuiSignTransactionBlockMethod,
SuiSignAndExecuteTransactionBlockMethod
} from "@mysten/wallet-standard";
class YourWallet implements Wallet {
get features(): StandardConnectFeature & StandardEventsFeature & SuiFeatures {
return {
"standard:connect": {
version: "1.0.0",
connect: this.#connect,
},
"standard:events": {
version: "1.0.0",
on: this.#on,
},
"sui:signTransactionBlock": {
version: "1.0.0",
signTransactionBlock: this.#signTransactionBlock,
},
"sui:signAndExecuteTransactionBlock": {
version: "1.1.0",
signAndExecuteTransactionBlock: this.#signAndExecuteTransactionBlock,
},
'sui:signMessage': {
version: '1.0.0',
signMessage: this.#signMessage,
},
};
},
#on: StandardEventsOnMethod = () => {
// Your wallet's on implementation.
};
#connect: StandardConnectMethod = () => {
// Your wallet's implementation
};
#signTransactionBlock: SuiSignTransactionBlockMethod = () => {
// Your wallet's implementation
};
#signAndExecuteTransactionBlock: SuiSignAndExecuteTransactionBlockMethod = () => {
// Your wallet's implementation
};
#signMessage: SuiSignMessageMethod = () => {
// Your wallet's implementation
};
}
Exposing accounts
The last requirement of the wallet interface is to expose an acccounts
interface. This should expose all of the accounts that a connected dapp has access to. It can be empty prior to initiating a connection through the standard:connect
feature.
The accounts can use the ReadonlyWalletAccount
class to easily construct an account matching the required interface.
import { ReadonlyWalletAccount } from '@mysten/wallet-standard';
class YourWallet implements Wallet {
get accounts() {
// Assuming we already have some internal representation of accounts:
return someWalletAccounts.map(
(walletAccount) =>
// Return
new ReadonlyWalletAccount({
address: walletAccount.suiAddress,
publicKey: walletAccount.pubkey,
// The Sui chains that your wallet supports.
chains: [SUI_DEVNET_CHAIN],
// The features that this account supports. This can be a subset of the wallet's supported features.
// These features must exist on the wallet as well.
features: ['sui:signAndExecuteTransactionBlock'],
}),
);
}
}
Registering in the window
Once you have a compatible interface for your wallet, you can register it using the registerWallet
function.
import { registerWallet } from '@mysten/wallet-standard';
registerWallet(new YourWallet());
If you're interested in the internal implementation of the
registerWallet
method, you can see how it works here.