Quickstart
Run the create-ponder
CLI tool
pnpm create ponder
You will be asked for a project name, and if you are using a template (recommended). The tool will then create a project directory, install dependencies, and initialize a git repository.
If you're building a Ponder app for a contract that has already been deployed, use the Etherscan contract link template.
Start the development server
Just like Next.js and Vite, Ponder has a development server that automatically reloads when you save changes in any project file. It also prints console.log
statements and errors encountered while running your code.
First, cd
into your project directory, then start the server.
pnpm dev
Add an RPC URL
Ponder fetches data using the standard Ethereum RPC API. To get started, you'll need an RPC URL from a provider like Alchemy or Infura.
Open up .env.local
and paste in RPC URLs for any networks that your project uses:
PONDER_RPC_URL_1 = "https://eth-mainnet.g.alchemy.com/v2/..."
Design your schema
The schema.graphql
file contains a model of your application data. The entity types defined here can be thought of as database tables.
type BlitmapToken @entity {
id: String!
owner: String! # Ethereum address
}
See Design your schema for a detailed guide on schema design.
Write event handlers
Files in the src/
directory contain event handlers. Event handlers are TypeScript functions that process a contract event. The purpose of event handler functions is to insert data into the entity store.
Here's a sample event handler for an ERC721 Transfer
event.
import { ponder } from "@/generated";
ponder.on("Blitmap:Transfer", async ({ event, context }) => {
const { BlitmapToken } = context.entities;
await BlitmapToken.create({
id: event.params.tokenId,
data: {
owner: event.params.to
}
});
});
See Create & update entities for a detailed guide on writing event handlers.
Query the GraphQL API
As you write your event handlers and start inserting entity data, open the GraphiQL interface at http://localhost:42069/graphql
to explore your GraphQL API locally. Any changes you make to your schema.graphql
file will be reflected here.
query {
blitmapTokens {
id
owner
}
}
{
"blitmapTokens": [
{ "id": 1452, "owner": "0xaf3d5..." },
{ "id": 7164, "owner": "0x9cb3b..." },
]
}