Node.js connector for the FTX APIs and WebSockets, with TypeScript & browser support.
npm install --save ftx-api
- Issues? Check the issues tab.
- Discuss & collaborate with other node devs? Join our Node.js Algo Traders engineering community on telegram.
Most methods accept JS objects, except for methods with only one parameter. These can be populated using parameters specified by FTX's API documentation.
This project uses typescript. Resources are stored in 3 key structures:
- src - the whole connector written in typescript
- lib - the javascript version of the project (compiled from typescript). This should not be edited directly, as it will be overwritten with each release.
- dist - the packed bundle of the project for use in browser environments.
- examples - demonstrations on various workflows using this library
Create API credentials at FTX
Import and instance the RestClient
to access all REST API methods.
- All methods return promises.
- Supports subaccounts.
To use the REST APIs, import the `RestClient`. Click here to expand and see full sample:
const { RestClient } = require('ftx-api');
const restClientOptions = {
// override the max size of the request window (in ms)
recv_window?: number;
// how often to sync time drift with FTX servers
sync_interval_ms?: number | string;
// Default: false. Disable above sync mechanism if true.
disable_time_sync?: boolean;
// Default: false. If true, we'll throw errors if any params are undefined
strict_param_validation?: boolean;
// Optionally override API protocol + domain
// e.g 'https://ftx.us/api'
baseUrl?: string;
// Default: true. whether to try and post-process request exceptions.
parse_exceptions?: boolean;
// Subaccount nickname URI-encoded
subAccountName?: string;
};
const API_KEY = 'xxx';
const PRIVATE_KEY = 'yyy';
const client = new RestClient(
API_KEY,
PRIVATE_KEY,
// restClientOptions,
// requestLibraryOptions
);
client.getMarkets()
.then(result => {
console.log("getMarkets result: ", result);
})
.catch(err => {
console.error("getMarkets error: ", err);
});
client.setAccountLeverage(5)
.then(result => {
console.log("setAccountLeverage result: ", result);
})
.catch(err => {
console.error("setAccountLeverage error: ", err);
});
See rest-client.ts for further information.
- Automatically connect to FTX websockets
- Automatically authenticate, if key & secret are provided.
- Automatically checks connection integrity. If connection stale (no response to pings), automatically reconnects, re-authenticates and resubscribes to previous topics.
- Supports subaccounts.
WebSocket channels can be subscribed to via the `WebsocketClient`. Click here to expand and see full sample:
const { WebsocketClient } = require('ftx-api');
const API_KEY = 'xxx';
const PRIVATE_KEY = 'yyy';
const wsConfig = {
key: API_KEY,
secret: PRIVATE_KEY,
/*
The following parameters are optional:
*/
// Subaccount nickname
// subAccountName: 'sub1',
// how long to wait (in ms) before deciding the connection should be terminated & reconnected
// pongTimeout: 1000,
// how often to check (in ms) that WS connection is still alive
// pingInterval: 10000,
// how long to wait before attempting to reconnect (in ms) after connection is closed
// reconnectTimeout: 500,
// config options sent to RestClient (used for time sync). See RestClient docs.
// restOptions: { },
// config for axios used for HTTP requests. E.g for proxy support
// requestOptions: { }
// override which URL to use for websocket connections
// wsUrl: 'wss://example.ftx.com/ws'
};
const ws = new WebsocketClient(wsConfig);
// subscribe to multiple topics at once
ws.subscribe(['fills', 'orders']);
// and/or subscribe to individual topics on demand
ws.subscribe('fills');
// and/or subscribe to complex topics on demand, one at a time
ws.subscribe({
channel: 'trades',
market: 'BTC-PERP'
});
// or as a list of complex topics
ws.subscribe([
{
channel: 'trades',
market: 'BTC-PERP'
},
{
channel: 'orderbookGrouped',
market: 'BTC-PERP',
grouping: 500
}
]);
// Listen to events coming from websockets. This is the primary data source
ws.on('update', data => {
console.log('update', data);
});
// Optional: Listen to websocket connection open event (automatic after subscribing to one or more topics)
ws.on('open', ({ event }) => {
console.log('connection opened');
});
// Optional: Listen to responses to websocket queries (e.g. the response after subscribing to a topic)
ws.on('response', response => {
console.log('response', response);
});
// Optional: Listen to connection close event. Unexpected connection closes are automatically reconnected.
ws.on('close', () => {
console.log('connection closed');
});
// Optional: Listen to raw error events.
// Note: responses to invalid topics are currently only sent in the "response" event.
ws.on('error', err => {
console.error('ERR', err);
});
See websocket-client.ts for further information.
More demonstrations can be found in the examples folder.
Pass a custom logger which supports the log methods silly
, debug
, notice
, info
, warning
and error
, or override methods from the default logger as desired.
Click here to expand and see full sample:
const { WebsocketClient, DefaultLogger } = require('ftx-api');
// Disable all logging on the silly level
DefaultLogger.silly = () => {};
const ws = new WebsocketClient(
{ key: 'xxx', secret: 'yyy' },
DefaultLogger
);
Build a bundle using webpack:
npm install
npm build
npm pack
The bundle can be found in dist/
. Altough usage should be largely consistent, smaller differences will exist. Documentation is still TODO.
This client also supports the US FTX exchange. Simply set the "domain" to "ftxus" in both the RestClient and the WebsocketClient. See examples/ftxus.ts for a demonstration.
If you found this project interesting or useful, create accounts with my referral links:
Or buy me a coffee using any of these:
- BTC:
1C6GWZL1XW3jrjpPTS863XtZiXL1aTK7Jk
- ETH (ERC20):
0xd773d8e6a50758e1ada699bb6c4f98bb4abf82da
Contributions are encouraged, I will review any incoming pull requests. See the issues tab for todo items.