The IPFS Core API
ipfs-core
is the implementation of the IPFS Core API. It contains all you need to integrate IPFS into your application.
If you want to run IPFS as a standalone daemon process, see the ipfs module.
The ipfs-core
package contains all the features of ipfs
but in a lighter package without the CLI or HTTP servers:
$ npm install ipfs-core
Then start a node in your app:
import * as IPFS from 'ipfs-core'
const ipfs = await IPFS.create()
const { cid } = await ipfs.add('Hello world')
console.info(cid)
// QmXXY5ZxbtuYj6DnfApLiGstzPN7fvSyigrRee3hDWPCaf
- Look into the examples to learn how to spawn an IPFS node in Node.js and in the Browser
- Read the Core API docs to see what you can do with an IPFS node
- Visit https://dweb-primer.ipfs.io to learn about IPFS and the concepts that underpin it
- Head over to https://proto.school to take interactive tutorials that cover core IPFS APIs
- Check out https://docs.ipfs.io for tips, how-tos and more
- See https://blog.ipfs.io for news and more
- Need help? Please ask 'How do I?' questions on https://discuss.ipfs.io
You can load IPFS right in your browser by adding the following to your page using the super fast jsdelivr CDN:
<!-- loading the minified version using jsDelivr -->
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/ipfs-core/dist/index.min.js"></script>
<!-- loading the human-readable (not minified) version jsDelivr -->
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/ipfs-core/dist/index.min.js"></script>
Inserting one of the above lines will make an IpfsCore
object available in the global namespace:
<script>
async function main () {
const node = await window.IpfsCore.create()
// Ready to use!
// See https://github.com/ipfs/js-ipfs#core-api
}
main()
</script>
Learn how to bundle IPFS into your application with webpack, parceljs and browserify in the examples.
The IPFS implementation in JavaScript needs your help! There are a few things you can do right now to help out:
Read the Code of Conduct and JavaScript Contributing Guidelines.
- Check out existing issues The issue list has many that are marked as 'help wanted' or 'difficulty:easy' which make great starting points for development, many of which can be tackled with no prior IPFS knowledge
- Look at the IPFS Roadmap This are the high priority items being worked on right now
- Perform code reviews More eyes will help a. speed the project along b. ensure quality, and c. reduce possible future bugs.
- Add tests. There can never be enough tests.
- Join the Weekly Core Implementations Call it's where everyone discusses what's going on with IPFS and what's next