|
2 tahun lalu | |
---|---|---|
basics | 2 tahun lalu | |
compression | 2 tahun lalu | |
tokens | 2 tahun lalu | |
.gitignore | 2 tahun lalu | |
README.md | 2 tahun lalu |
Do you ever think to yourself: "OK, but how do I do this on-chain?"
Or maybe you're in a hackathon right now, the clock's ticking, and you need to get a program off the ground fast.
We present to you this list of curated examples for a wide range of use cases implemented using on-chain programs.
Most system-level operations on Solana involve already-existing Solana programs.
For example, to create a system account you use the system program and to create a token mint you use the token program.
So, you'll notice that these operations are in fact conducting what's called a cross-program invocation - which is a fancy way of saying it calls other Solana programs to do business. You can see this in action whenever you see invoke
or invoke_signed
in the native
examples, or CpiContext
in the anchor
examples.
Deciding when to use cross-program invocation instead of invoking the programs directly from the client is completely up to you as the builder. It depends on how your application is designed.
pdas
folder to see why.:file_folder: Each example contains two folders:
native
- Written using Solana's native Rust crates and vanilla Rust.anchor
- Written using Anchor's anchor_lang
Rust crate and the associated Anchor framework to build & deploy.:wrench: How to build & run:
yarn install
.native
- Use cicd.sh
to build & deploy the program. Run yarn run test
to test it.anchor
- Use anchor build && anchor deploy
to build & deploy the program. Run anchor run test
to test it.