This demo is a user interface written in Javascript (Vue.JS) to illustrate the use of the Hedera Token Service. When first launched, the demo will create three accounts as follows:
- An account for the owner/admin of new tokens
- Two accounts representing users (wallet holders) that will use the token, Alice and Bob
- Another account representing a marketplace (escrow) for the purpose of holding tokens that have been offered for sale
Each account is credited some hBar to fund their activity on Hedera.
The demo enables you to:
- Create tokens
- Mint and Burn
- Associate and Dissociate tokens to/from accounts
- Manage KYC and Freeze for token/account relationships
- Transfer from treasury (owner) to users
- Transfer between users
- Atomically transfer up to two tokens between users, with an optional hBar payment as one atomic transaction
- Transfer tokens to a marketplace escrow account along with an offer price in hBar
For convenience, accounts and tokens created during the demo will be persisted to a cookie and will be available when the demo is restarted.
Note: This is purely for demonstration purposes and should not be used as-is in production
- A testnet or mainnet account (head to https://portal.hedera.com to create an account if you don't have one)
- Node.js v14.9.0
- Yarn 1.22.10
- Docker
- Docker compose (optional)
The project requires an environment file to be setup.
First, copy .env.sample
to .env
Edit .env
and setup the following variables
- VUE_APP_OPERATOR_ID=0.0.xxxx Input your operator id
- VUE_APP_OPERATOR_KEY=302xxx Input your private key
- VUE_APP_INITIAL_BALANCE=100
- VUE_APP_NETWORK=testnet (or mainnet)
optionally you may set
- VUE_APP_MAX_QUERY_PAYMENT=10 max allowed query payment
- VUE_APP_MAX_TX_FEE=10 max allowed transaction fee
You can deploy the UI with docker-compose after you have edited the .env
file above.
Build
docker-compose build --no-cache
Run
docker-compose up
Note: docker-compose
build is only necessary the first time, or if you make changes to the code or .env
to (re)build the images.
yarn install
yarn serve
yarn build
yarn lint
Navigate to the URL output by the serve
command (e.g. http://localhost:8080/) to access the UI.
If you are running docker-compose, the url is http://localhost:8080
.
The Header has links for the following:
- An admin page where you can manage tokens
- Accounts for the users
- A
+
button to add a token - A button to show a list of transactions that were executed while running the demo (newest at the top)
- A button to reset (nuke) the demo. This will remove all traces of the tokens and accounts in your browser and re-create a clean demo environment with three new accounts.
Once a token is created, you can:
- Show accounts associated with the token
- Mint (If a supply key was provided when the token was created)
- Burn (If a supply key was provided when the token was created)
- Transfer from treasury to users Note: Update and Delete are not currently supported
Clicking on the accounts button (left most) will show which accounts are currently associated with the token, from there you can:
- Freeze/UnFreeze an account in relation to the token (if a freeze key was provided when the token was created)
- Grant or Revoke KYC for an account in relation to the token (if a KYC key was provided when the token was created)
- Wipe an amount of tokens from an account (if a wipe key was provided when the token was created)
Choosing one of the user accounts in the header allows you to associate or dissociate the account from a token. Once associated (and subject to the account being KYCd and unfrozen if appropriate for the token), you can transfer to the other user account.
Support for creating NFTs is demonstrated in the composer whereby a set of templates (driven from /public/tokenTemplates.json
) are available within the UI when creating an NFT.
Each template carries a set of properties that are input during the token creation.
These properties (along with an image if necessary) as then stored in an immutable file on Hedera, the resulting FileId is used to define the symbol for the token, e.g. HEDERA://0.0.xxxx.
You may edit or add to the templates by editing the /public/tokenTemplates.json
file, following guidelines from the vjsf component.
Note that if you wish to include a picture in your NFT specification, the property must be called photo
since the UI depends on that field value.
Note: An alternative to using files on Hedera would be to host the file on a shared location and use a hash of the file as the symbol for the token so that the validity of the file can be verified at any time. We demonstrate usage of IPFS storage using nft.storage integration. You can create your API key on https://nft.storage and add it to your .env file to enable IPFS upload.
A pseudo-market place is enabled in the demo, this enables a token to be transferred to a market place (an escrow account of sorts) along with an offer price in hBar.
One a token has been transferred to the market place, Alice or Bob can request transfer of the token from the marketplace to their account in exchange for the offered hBar value whereby they will own the token in exchange for the hBar value which will be transferred to the account that transferred the token to the market place in the first place.
Note: If Alice transferred a token to the market place, she's not able to buy the token, only Bob can. If the issuer (owner) of the token transferred to the marketplace, both Bob and Alice can buy it.
Contributions are welcome. Please see the contributing guide to see how you can get involved.
This project is governed by the Contributor Covenant Code of Conduct. By participating, you are expected to uphold this code of conduct. Please report unacceptable behavior to oss@hedera.com