This project is not actively maintained by Parity Technologies anymore. It is currently only compatible with Parity Ethereum <v2.0. This is a community maintained project. Read about possible alternatives here.
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Be sure to check out our wiki for more information.
Parity UI is a User Interface desktop application for Parity Ethereum Client >=v1.10. It features a Wallet supporting Ether and ERC-20 Tokens, a Contract development environment, and so much more. Parity UI will download and run Parity Ethereum Client in the background if it is not found on the system. By default Parity UI will try connect to a Parity Ethereum node using Websocket port 8546. You can use alternative ports, see CLI Options below.
You can download Parity UI here or follow the instructions below to build from source.
As Parity UI is not working properly with Parity Ethereum >2.0, you can use MyCrypto Desktop app connected to a local full node to interact with your accounts. Follow these steps to connect MyCrypto Desktop to a local Parity Ethereum node. Parity UI accounts' JSON keystore files can be found at the following location:
- Mac OS X:
~/Library/Application\ Support/io.parity.ethereum/keys/ethereum/
- Linux:
$HOME/.local/share/io.parity.ethereum/keys
- Windows 7/10:
%HOMEPATH%/AppData/Roaming/Parity/Ethereum/keys
Import an account to MyCrypto by selecting the corresponding JSON keystore file. You will require your account's password to unlock it (originally setup with Parity UI).
You can use Remix connected to a local Parity Ethereum full node as an alternative to Parity UI for smart contracts development and deployment. Make sure that Remix is allowed to connect to your node by setting up the right JSON-RPC cors policy.
In any of the supported Linux distros:
sudo snap install parity-ui
Or, if you want to contribute testing the upcoming release:
sudo snap install parity-ui --beta
And to test the latest code landed into the master branch:
sudo snap install parity-ui --edge
npm install
npm run electron
You should see the Electron app popping up.
One further, albeit optional step is to create an OS-specific binary. This is done with the following command:
npm run release
This command may take some time. Once finished, you will see binaries for your OS in the dist/
folder.
The best Developer Experience is achieved by running:
parity --ui-no-validation # Warning: INSECURE. Only use it when developing the UI.
npm start
A new browser tab will open on http://localhost:3000
with the UI, and this tab will refresh on any code change. This DX allows fast iterations.
If you want to test the rendering in an Electron window, run the following command in parallel with the previous command:
npm run electron:dev
This will spawn an Electron window serving http://localhost:3000
. Same thing, the Electron window will refresh on any code change.
All other flags passed to Parity UI will be passed down to parity when trying to launch it.
Operating Options:
--no-run-parity
Parity UI will not attempt to run
the locally installed parity.
--ui-dev
Parity UI will load http://localhost:3000.
WARNING: Only use this is you plan on developing on Parity UI.
--ws-interface=[IP]
Specify the hostname portion of the WebSockets server
Parity UI will connect to. IP should be an
interface's IP address. (default: 127.0.0.1)
--ws-port=[PORT]
Specify the port portion of the WebSockets
server Parity UI will connect to. (default: 8546)