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Price Service Client

Pyth Network provides real-time pricing data in a variety of asset classes, including cryptocurrency, equities, FX and commodities. These prices are available either via HTTP or WebSocket from Hermes. This library is a client for interacting with Hermes, allowing your application to consume Pyth real-time prices in on- and off-chain Javascript/Typescript applications.

Installation

npm

$ npm install --save @pythnetwork/price-service-client

Yarn

$ yarn add @pythnetwork/price-service-client

Quickstart

Typical usage of the connection is along the following lines:

const connection = new PriceServiceConnection(
  "https://hermes-beta.pyth.network",
  {
    priceFeedRequestConfig: {
      // Provide this option to retrieve signed price updates for on-chain contracts.
      // Ignore this option for off-chain use.
      binary: true,
    },
  }
); // See Hermes endpoints section below for other endpoints

const priceIds = [
  // You can find the ids of prices at https://pyth.network/developers/price-feed-ids#pyth-evm-testnet
  "0xf9c0172ba10dfa4d19088d94f5bf61d3b54d5bd7483a322a982e1373ee8ea31b", // BTC/USD price id in testnet
  "0xca80ba6dc32e08d06f1aa886011eed1d77c77be9eb761cc10d72b7d0a2fd57a6", // ETH/USD price id in testnet
];

// Get the latest values of the price feeds as json objects.
// If you set `binary: true` above, then this method also returns signed price updates for the on-chain Pyth contract.
const currentPrices = await connection.getLatestPriceFeeds(priceIds);

// You can also call this function to get price updates for the on-chain contract directly.
const priceUpdateData = await connection.getPriceFeedsUpdateData(priceIds);

PriceServiceConnection also allows subscribing to real-time price updates over a websocket connection:

connection.subscribePriceFeedUpdates(priceIds, (priceFeed) => {
  // priceFeed here is the same as returned by getLatestPriceFeeds above.
  // It will include signed price updates if the binary option was provided to the connection constructor.
  console.log(
    `Received update for ${priceFeed.id}: ${priceFeed.getPriceNoOlderThan(60)}`
  );
});

// When using the subscription, make sure to close the websocket upon termination to finish the process gracefully.
setTimeout(() => {
  connection.closeWebSocket();
}, 60000);

On-chain Applications

On-chain applications will need to submit the price updates returned by Hermes to the Pyth contract on their blockchain. These applications should pass the binary: true option to the constructor as shown above, to ensure that all methods on PriceServiceConnection return the required information. This option will add a vaa field to PriceFeed that represents a signed price update. The vaa is a binary blob serialized as a base64 string. Depending on the blockchain, you may need to reformat this into hex or another format before submitting it to the Pyth contract.

Examples

The PriceServiceClient example demonstrates both the HTTP and websocket APIs described above. You can run it with npm run example. A full command that prints BTC and ETH price feeds, in the testnet network, looks like so:

npm run example -- --endpoint https://hermes-beta.pyth.network --price-ids 0xf9c0172ba10dfa4d19088d94f5bf61d3b54d5bd7483a322a982e1373ee8ea31b 0xca80ba6dc32e08d06f1aa886011eed1d77c77be9eb761cc10d72b7d0a2fd57a6

Hermes endpoints

You can find the list of Hermes public endpoints here.