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SUAPP Web App

This tutorial will show you how to build a SUAPP using suave-viem, our typescript SDK.

info

There are two different templates you can use for your SUAPP. One with minimal, TypeScript-only dependencies; and one which uses Next.

eth_sign dependency​

  1. Confidential Compute Requests on SUAVE do not work with wallets that implement the EIP-1193 Javascript API. Therefore, we use the unsafe eth_sign method to sign CCRs, which does work, but requires that you enable this functionality in wallets like MetaMask.
    1. To do so in MetaMask, go to "Settings" -> "Advanced" -> scroll to bottom -> switch Eth_sign requests on.
  2. Both templates below assume that you are running SUAVE locally.

To get a feel for how a SUAVE-enabled web app works, we've provided a couple examples. One is written in Vanilla TS, and one is written with Next.

Vanilla TypeScript Example​

This project is written in vanilla TS (built with Vite), which means we directly manipulate the DOM Tree in the browser to render the site, rather than using a web framework like React/Next.

This template can be found in the suave-viem repo under examples/suave-web-demo.

Setup​

Before running the example (in docker or locally), make sure you have a SUAVE devnet running locally.

You'll also need to install Foundry (forge is used to deploy contracts).

Next, clone the suave-viem repo and deploy the contract we'll be using for this demo to your local SUAVE chain:

# clone the repo
git clone https://github.com/flashbots/suave-viem.git

# deploy contracts
cd suave-viem/examples/suave
./deployContracts.sh

Run with Docker​

We recommend running the Typescript examples in Docker for security, since javascript runtimes have the potential to execute arbitrary code on your machine.

If you're still in suave-viem/examples/suave/, jump back up to suave-viem/:

cd ../..

Now we'll build the docker image, which will build the source code and configure the example's environment to connect to your local devnet.

docker build -t suave-web-example .

Next, we'll run a docker container with our new image:

docker run -it suave-web-example

This will open a bash terminal inside docker, where you'll land in examples/.

To run the web example:

cd suave-web-demo
bun dev

Now your container should be hosting the web app on http://172.17.0.2:5173. If not, look for the correct Network address in your terminal output.

Run Locally​

system dependencies

The following dependencies are required to run this example on your machine:

  • foundry (forge is used to deploy contracts)
  • bun (JS runtime & package manager)

If you're still in suave-viem/examples/suave/, jump up to suave-web-demo/:

cd ../suave-web-demo

Install the project's dependencies and start the web app:

bun install
bun dev

This template uses the same MEV-Share example contract we worked with using the Golang SDK in the previous tutorial.

If you're struggling with any of the above, you can also find this pure TypeScript template as a standalone repo here.

Next.js Example​

This template comes with a more extensive frontend framework, which uses Next (in TypeScript) and therefore depends on React. You can get it running by first cloning the repo and installing its dependencies.

Make sure you have previously built and symlinked suave-viem for this to work:

git clone git@github.com:andytudhope/build-a-suapp-next-ts.git
cd build-a-suapp-next-ts
yarn

Setup forge to compile your contracts:

cd packages/forge/
forge install
forge build

Deploy the compiled contracts from the root directory (you need to have SUAVE running locally for this to work):

chmod +x packages/forge/deploy
yarn contracts:deploy

You can start the frontend with:

yarn fe:dev

Conclusion​

You now have two different templates from which to begin building your own SUAPP πŸ’ƒ.

These templates demonstrate how to interact with SUAVE confidentially, both directly and with data from another domain. Follow the next tutorial to understand how.

Good luck and happy building βš‘πŸ€–.