Test and develop your application or service without Ledger Live
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The Ledger Wallet Simulator is a comprehensive tool designed to emulate the behavior of a Ledger device simulating responses and interactions with the wallet-API. It aids developers in testing and interacting with Ledger-related applications without requiring a physical Ledger device or necessitating the run of your application inside the WebView of the LedgerLive software. This documentation will guide you through the process of setting up and using the simulator.
By following this documentation, you'll be equipped to install, set up, and make the most out of this simulator. If any issues arise or further customization is needed, consider diving deeper into the source code or consulting the official documentation.
To install the Ledger Wallet Simulator, you'll first need to include the necessary dependencies in your project.
npm install @ledgerhq/wallet-api-client
Then, install the simulator package:
npm install @ledgerHQ/simulator
Begin by setting up the transport using the getSimulatorTransport
function.
import { getSimulatorTransport, profiles } from "@ledgerHQ/simulator";
const transport = getSimulatorTransport(profiles.STANDARD);
transport.onMessage = handleMessageFunction; // Replace with your message handler.
Create a createClient
function that return a new client. The provided simulated transport should be passed to the WalletAPIClient()
as a parameter to effectively interact with the WalletAPIClient
. Normally, WalletAPIClient
only works with real transport, but the simulator provides a simulated transport for this purpose.
Here's a basic form:
function createClient() {
// insert the transport created above
return new WalletAPIClient(transport);
}
The simulator comes with predefined profiles (STANDARD
and DEVICE
), which determine the behavior and data of the simulator. You can easily extend these profiles by spreading inside the profile object:
const extendedProfile = {
...profiles.STANDARD,
yourInfo: "yourValue", // Add any custom information here.
};
The primary use case for the simulator is to emulate a Ledger device's behavior for development and testing purposes. Here's a basic example:
// Create a client
const client = createClient();
// List accounts
const response = await client.transaction.list();
console.log(response);