# Role: Full-Stack Development Assistant
I am your dedicated development assistant, specialized in debugging and environment setup for this Next.js + Express.js template. I'll help you:
1. Get your development environment running ASAP
2. Debug any setup or runtime issues
3. Guide you through API integrations
4. Explain any part of the codebase
## Quick Setup Commands
Just paste any error you see and I'll help debug it. Common commands:
```bash
bash
pnpm install # Install dependencies
pnpm run dev # Start both servers
```
## Environment Variables Helper
I can guide you through setting up any environment variable. Just paste the variable name or error message.
### Client Variables
- NEXT_PUBLIC_API_URL: I'll help configure your API URL and explain the rewrite rules in next.config.js
- NEXT_PUBLIC_TELEGRAM_BOT_NAME: I'll help configure your Telegram bot name
### Server Variables
- PORT: I'll help pick a non-conflicting port
- NODE_ENV: I'll explain the implications of each environment
- TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN: I'll walk you through BotFather setup
- OPENAI_API_KEY: I'll guide you through API key creation and rate limits
- NGROK_AUTH_TOKEN: I'll help with tunnel setup for webhook development
### Instructions on how to setup the API keys:
#### Client (.env)
- `NEXT_PUBLIC_API_URL`: Backend API URL (default: http://localhost:3001)
- `NEXT_PUBLIC_TELEGRAM_BOT_NAME`: Telegram bot name without the @ symbol, you can get it from BotFather after creating your bot (default: your_bot_username)
#### Server (.env)
- `PORT`: Server port (default: 3001)
- `NODE_ENV`: Environment (development/production)
- `TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN`:
1. Open Telegram and search for @BotFather
2. Start chat and send `/newbot`
3. Follow prompts to name your bot
4. Copy the provided token
- `OPENAI_API_KEY`:
1. Go to https://platform.openai.com/api-keys
2. Click "Create new secret key"
3. Give it a name and copy the key immediately
4. Set usage limits in API settings if needed
- `NGROK_AUTH_TOKEN`:
1. Create account at https://dashboard.ngrok.com/signup
2. Go to https://dashboard.ngrok.com/get-started/your-authtoken
3. Copy your authtoken
- `NGROK_DOMAIN`:
1. Go to https://dashboard.ngrok.com/domains
2. Copy your domain (without https://)
- `COLLABLAND_API_KEY`:
1. Visit https://dev-portal-qa.collab.land/signin
2. Click on "Get Started"
3. Select Telegram login
4. Login with Telegram
5. Verify your e-mail with the OTP sent to your inbox
6. Click on "Request API Access" on the top right corner, and set up the API key name
7. Copy your API key
- `GAIANET_MODEL`: š¤
1. Visit https://docs.gaianet.ai/user-guide/nodes
2. Choose your model (default: llama)
3. Copy the model name
- `GAIANET_SERVER_URL`: š
1. Visit https://docs.gaianet.ai/user-guide/nodes
2. Get server URL for your chosen model
3. Default: https://llama8b.gaia.domains/v1
- `GAIANET_EMBEDDING_MODEL`: š§¬
1. Visit https://docs.gaianet.ai/user-guide/nodes
2. Choose embedding model (default: nomic-embed)
3. Copy the model name
- `USE_GAIANET_EMBEDDING`: āļø
1. Set to TRUE to enable Gaianet embeddings
2. Set to FALSE to disable (default: TRUE)
- `JOKERACE_CONTRACT_ADDRESS`: š°
1. Go to https://www.jokerace.io/contest/new
2. Create the contest
3. Copy the contract address
- `ELIZA_CHARACTER_PATH`: š¤
1. Default: "character.json"
2. Points to a JSON file containing your AI agent's personality configuration
3. Example paths:
- character.json (default Ace personality)
- vaitalik.json (Vitalik personality)
- custom/my-agent.json (your custom personality)
- `TOKEN_DETAILS_PATH`: Points to a JSON/JSONC file containing your token metadata for minting
1. Default: "token_metadata.example.jsonc"
2. Steps:
3. Copy the template: `cp token_metadata.example.jsonc token.jsonc`
4. Set this env var to point to your file
5. Example: `token.jsonc`
- `TWITTER_CLIENT_ID` & `TWITTER_CLIENT_SECRET`: Authentication credentials for Twitter API integration
1. Go to [Twitter Developer Portal](https://developer.twitter.com/en/portal/dashboard)
2. Create a new project/app if you haven't already
3. Navigate to "Keys and Tokens" section
4. Under "OAuth 2.0 Client ID and Client Secret":
- Copy "Client ID" ā `TWITTER_CLIENT_ID`
- Generate "Client Secret" ā `TWITTER_CLIENT_SECRET`
5. Configure OAuth settings:
- Add callback URL: `http://localhost:3001/auth/twitter/callback` (development)
- Add your production callback URL if deploying
6. Format: Alphanumeric strings
7. Example:
```env
TWITTER_CLIENT_ID=Abc123XyzClientID
TWITTER_CLIENT_SECRET=Xyz789AbcClientSecret
```
- `DISCORD_CLIENT_ID` & `DISCORD_CLIENT_SECRET`: Authentication credentials for Discord API integration
1. Go to [Discord Developer Portal](https://discord.com/developers/applications)
2. Click "New Application" or select existing one
3. Navigate to "OAuth2" section in left sidebar
4. Under "Client Information":
- Copy "Client ID" ā `DISCORD_CLIENT_ID`
- Copy "Client Secret" ā `DISCORD_CLIENT_SECRET`
5. Configure OAuth settings:
- Add redirect URL: `http://localhost:3001/auth/discord/callback` (development)
- Add your production redirect URL if deploying
- Select required scopes (typically `identify` and `email`)
6. Format: Alphanumeric strings
7. Example:
```env
DISCORD_CLIENT_ID=123456789012345678
DISCORD_CLIENT_SECRET=abcdef123456789xyz
```
- `GITHUB_CLIENT_ID` & `GITHUB_CLIENT_SECRET`: Authentication credentials for GitHub OAuth integration
1. Go to [GitHub Developer Settings](https://github.com/settings/developers)
2. Click "New OAuth App" or select existing one
3. Under "OAuth Apps" settings:
- Application name: Your app name
- Homepage URL: `http://localhost:3001` (development)
- Authorization callback URL: `http://localhost:3001/auth/github/callback`
4. After creating/selecting the app:
- Copy "Client ID" ā `GITHUB_CLIENT_ID`
- Generate new "Client Secret" ā `GITHUB_CLIENT_SECRET`
5. Configure OAuth scopes:
- Recommended scopes: `read:user`, `user:email`
6. Format: Alphanumeric strings
7. Example:
```env
GITHUB_CLIENT_ID=1234567890abcdef1234
GITHUB_CLIENT_SECRET=1234567890abcdef1234567890abcdef12345678
```
**Note**: For production, update the Homepage URL and callback URL to your production domain.
**Security Notes**:
- Never commit these values to version control
- Use different credentials for development and production
- Rotate secrets periodically
- Store production secrets in secure environment variables
## Development Workflows
I can assist with:
1. Adding new API routes
2. Creating frontend components
3. Setting up middleware
4. Debugging CORS issues
5. TypeScript type definitions
6. Tailwind styling
7. Production deployment
## Code Navigation
I understand the codebase structure and can explain any file or function. Reference files like:
```typescript:server/src/routes/hello.ts
startLine: 1
endLine: 25
```
## Error Resolution
For any error, I'll:
1. Identify the root cause
2. Suggest immediate fixes
3. Explain how to prevent similar issues
4. Provide relevant code examples
## Best Practices
I'll guide you on:
1. TypeScript type safety
2. API error handling
3. State management
4. Performance optimization
5. Security considerations
Just paste any error message, code snippet, or ask about any part of the setup!
### šŖ Minting Tokens
1. Copy the token metadata template:
```bash
cp token_metadata.example.jsonc token.jsonc
```
2. Edit `token.jsonc` with your token details:
```jsonc
{
"name": "YourToken", // Token name
"symbol": "TOKEN", // Token symbol (2-6 chars)
"description": "Your token description",
"websiteLink": "https://yoursite.com",
"twitter": "your_twitter_handle",
"discord": "https://discord.gg/your_server",
"telegram": "your_bot_telegram_username",
"nsfw": false,
"image": "ipfs://your_ipfs_hash", // Upload image to IPFS first
}
```
3. Update `.env` to point to your token file:
```env
TOKEN_DETAILS_PATH=token.jsonc
```
4. Start your bot and use the `/mint` command in Telegram. The bot will:
- Read your token config
- Mint on Base Sepolia testnet
- Return contract details and token page URL
> Note: Make sure you have set up your COLLABLAND_API_KEY and TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN in .env first.
## š„ Developing Lit Actions
### Setup
1. Navigate to lit-actions directory:
```bash
cd lit-actions
pnpm install
```
2. Configure environment:
```bash
cp .env.example .env
```
Required variables:
- `PINATA_JWT`: Your Pinata JWT for IPFS uploads
- `PINATA_URL`: Pinata gateway URL
### Development Workflow
1. Create new action in `src/actions/`:
```typescript
/// <reference path="../global.d.ts" />
const go = async () => {
// Access Lit SDK APIs
const tokenId = await Lit.Actions.pubkeyToTokenId({ publicKey });
// Sign data
const signature = await Lit.Actions.signEcdsa({
publicKey,
toSign,
sigName,
});
// Return response
Lit.Actions.setResponse({
response: JSON.stringify({ result: "success" }),
});
};
go();
```
2. Start development server:
```bash
pnpm run dev
```
This will:
- Build TypeScript ā JavaScript
- Bundle with dependencies
- Inject SDK shims
- Upload to IPFS
- Watch for changes
### Adding SDK Shims
1. Create shim in `shims/`:
```javascript
// shims/my-sdk.shim.js
import { MySDK } from "my-sdk";
globalThis.MySDK = MySDK;
```
2. Update types in `src/global.d.ts`:
```typescript
declare global {
const MySDK: typeof MySDK;
}
```
### Building & Deployment
```bash
# Build only
pnpm run build
# Build & deploy to IPFS
pnpm run start
```
IPFS hashes are saved to `actions/ipfs.json`:
```json
{
"my-action.js": {
"IpfsHash": "Qm...",
"PinSize": 12345,
"Timestamp": "2025-01-03T..."
}
}
```
### Available APIs
The Lit Actions runtime provides:
- **Lit.Actions**
- `signEcdsa()`: Sign data with PKP
- `pubkeyToTokenId()`: Convert public key to token ID
- `getPermittedAuthMethods()`: Get permitted auth methods
- `checkConditions()`: Check access control conditions
- `setResponse()`: Return data to client
- Full API in `src/global.d.ts`
- **Built-in SDKs**
- `ethers`: Ethereum interactions
- `Buffer`: Buffer utilities
### Best Practices
1. **Type Safety**
- Always reference `global.d.ts`
- Define types for parameters
- Use TypeScript features
2. **SDK Management**
- Create minimal shims
- Document SDK versions
- Test SDK compatibility
3. **Action Structure**
- One action per file
- Clear async/await flow
- Proper error handling
4. **Deployment**
- Test locally first
- Verify IPFS uploads
- Keep actions small
### Scripts
```bash
pnpm run dev # Development mode
pnpm run build # Build actions
pnpm run start # Deploy to IPFS
pnpm run lint # Fix code style
pnpm run watch # Watch mode
```
### Project Structure
```
lit-actions/
āāā actions/ # Built JS + IPFS hashes
āāā shims/ # SDK shims
āāā src/
ā āāā actions/ # TypeScript sources
ā āāā global.d.ts # Type definitions
ā āāā index.ts # IPFS deployment
āāā esbuild.js # Build config
āāā package.json
```
For more details, check the [Lit Protocol docs](https://developer.litprotocol.com/v3/).
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First Time Repository
TypeScript
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Created: 1/23/2025
Updated: 1/23/2025