Giter Site home page Giter Site logo

fractalawareness / tardis-node Goto Github PK

View Code? Open in Web Editor NEW

This project forked from tardis-dev/tardis-node

0.0 1.0 0.0 9.17 MB

Convenient access to tick-level real-time and historical cryptocurrency market data via Node.js

Home Page: https://docs.tardis.dev/api/node-js

License: Mozilla Public License 2.0

TypeScript 99.68% JavaScript 0.32%

tardis-node's Introduction

tardis-dev

Version Try on RunKit


Node.js tardis-dev library provides convenient access to tick-level real-time and historical cryptocurrency market data both in exchange native and normalized formats. Instead of callbacks it relies on async iteration (for await ...of) enabling composability features like seamless switching between real-time data streaming and historical data replay or computing derived data locally.


const { replayNormalized, normalizeTrades, normalizeBookChanges } = require('tardis-dev')

const messages = replayNormalized(
  {
    exchange: 'bitmex',
    symbols: ['XBTUSD', 'ETHUSD'],
    from: '2019-05-01',
    to: '2019-05-02'
  },
  normalizeTrades,
  normalizeBookChanges
)

for await (const message of messages) {
  console.log(message)
}

Try this code live on RunKit



Features

  • historical tick-level market data replay backed by tardis.dev HTTP API — includes full order book depth snapshots plus incremental updates, tick-by-tick trades, historical open interest, funding, index, mark prices, liquidations and more


  • consolidated real-time data streaming API connecting directly to exchanges' public WebSocket APIs


  • support for both exchange-native and normalized market data formats (unified format for accessing market data across all supported exchanges — normalized trades, order book and ticker data)


  • transparent historical local data caching (cached data is stored on disk in compressed GZIP format and decompressed on demand when reading the data)

  • support for top cryptocurrency exchanges: BitMEX, Deribit, Binance, Binance Futures, FTX, OKEx, Huobi Global, Huobi DM, bitFlyer, Bitstamp, Coinbase Pro, Crypto Facilities, Gemini, Kraken, Bitfinex, Bybit, OKCoin, CoinFLEX and more

  • automatic closed connections and stale connections reconnection logic for real-time streams


  • computing derived data locally like order book imbalance, custom trade bars, book snapshots and more via compute helper function and computables, e.g., volume based bars, top 20 levels order book snapshots taken every 10 ms etc.


  • fast and lightweight architecture — low memory footprint and no heavy in-memory buffering





Installation

Requires Node.js v12+ installed.

npm install tardis-dev --save


Documentation



Examples

Real-time spread across multiple exchanges

Example showing how to quickly display real-time spread and best bid/ask info across multiple exchanges at once. It can be easily adapted to do the same for historical data (replayNormalized instead of streamNormalized).

const tardis = require('tardis-dev')
const { streamNormalized, normalizeBookChanges, combine, compute, computeBookSnapshots } = tardis

const exchangesToStream = [
  { exchange: 'bitmex', symbols: ['XBTUSD'] },
  { exchange: 'deribit', symbols: ['BTC-PERPETUAL'] },
  { exchange: 'cryptofacilities', symbols: ['PI_XBTUSD'] }
]
// for each specified exchange call streamNormalized for it
// so we have multiple real-time streams for all specified exchanges
const realTimeStreams = exchangesToStream.map(e => {
  return streamNormalized(e, normalizeBookChanges)
})

// combine all real-time message streams into one
const messages = combine(...realTimeStreams)

// create book snapshots with depth1 that are produced
// every time best bid/ask info is changed
// effectively computing real-time quotes
const realTimeQuoteComputable = computeBookSnapshots({
  depth: 1,
  interval: 0,
  name: 'realtime_quote'
})

// compute real-time quotes for combines real-time messages
const messagesWithQuotes = compute(messages, realTimeQuoteComputable)

const spreads = {}

// print spreads info every 100ms
setInterval(() => {
  console.clear()
  console.log(spreads)
}, 100)

// update spreads info real-time
for await (const message of messagesWithQuotes) {
  if (message.type === 'book_snapshot') {
    spreads[message.exchange] = {
      spread: message.asks[0].price - message.bids[0].price,
      bestBid: message.bids[0],
      bestAsk: message.asks[0]
    }
  }
}

Try this code live on RunKit


Seamless switching between real-time streaming and historical market data replay

Example showing simple pattern of providing async iterable of market data messages to the function that can process them no matter if it's is real-time or historical market data. That effectively enables having the same 'data pipeline' for backtesting and live trading.

const tardis = require('tardis-dev')
const { replayNormalized, streamNormalized, normalizeTrades, compute, computeTradeBars } = tardis

const historicalMessages = replayNormalized(
  {
    exchange: 'bitmex',
    symbols: ['XBTUSD'],
    from: '2019-08-01',
    to: '2019-08-02'
  },
  normalizeTrades
)

const realTimeMessages = streamNormalized(
  {
    exchange: 'bitmex',
    symbols: ['XBTUSD']
  },
  normalizeTrades
)

async function produceVolumeBasedTradeBars(messages) {
  const withVolumeTradeBars = compute(
    messages,
    computeTradeBars({
      kind: 'volume',
      interval: 100 * 1000 // aggregate by 100k contracts volume
    })
  )

  for await (const message of withVolumeTradeBars) {
    if (message.type === 'trade_bar') {
      console.log(message.name, message)
    }
  }
}

await produceVolumeBasedTradeBars(historicalMessages)

// or for real time data
//  await produceVolumeBasedTradeBars(realTimeMessages)

Try this code live on RunKit


Stream real-time market data in exchange native data format

const { stream } = require('tardis-dev')

const messages = stream({
  exchange: 'bitmex',
  filters: [
    { channel: 'trade', symbols: ['XBTUSD'] },
    { channel: 'orderBookL2', symbols: ['XBTUSD'] }
  ]
})

for await (const message of messages) {
  console.log(message)
}

Try this code live on RunKit


Replay historical market data in exchange native data format

const { replay } = require('tardis-dev')

const messages = replay({
  exchange: 'bitmex',
  filters: [
    { channel: 'trade', symbols: ['XBTUSD'] },
    { channel: 'orderBookL2', symbols: ['XBTUSD'] }
  ],
  from: '2019-05-01',
  to: '2019-05-02'
})

for await (const message of messages) {
  console.log(message)
}

Try this code live on RunKit



See the tardis-dev docs for more examples.

tardis-node's People

Contributors

thaaddeus avatar

Watchers

 avatar

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    🖖 Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. 📊📈🎉

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google ❤️ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.