Deploying to Internet Computer
This Quick Start scenario assumes that you are installing the SDK for the first time and deploying the default project on the Internet Computer blockchain mainnet.
If you are only deploying projects in a local development environment, see the local development scenario.
To get started, let’s build and deploy a simple Hello dapp that has just one function—called greet
. The greet
function accepts one text argument and returns the result with a greeting similar to Hello, everyone! in a terminal if you run the dapp using the command-line or in an HTML page if you access the dapp in a browser.
Before you begin
Before you download and install this release of the SDK, verify the following:
You have an internet connection and access to a shell terminal on your local macOS or Linux computer.
Currently, the SDK only runs on computers with a macOS or Linux operating system.
You have
node.js
installed if you want to access the default frontend for the default project.You have ICP tokens or cycles available for you to use.
You must have cycles available to complete this tutorial. To get cycles, you must either convert ICP tokens to cycles or be provided cycles from another source, for example, from a canister controlled by another developer or from a third-party cycles provider. This tutorial assumes that you have an account with ICP tokens available and illustrates how to convert ICP tokens into cycles and transfer those cycles to a cycles wallet that you control.
For information about how to get ICP tokens, see How you can get ICP tokens.
For information about using your default cycles wallet after you have created it, see Use the default cycles wallet.
Download and install
You can download the latest version of the SDK directly from within a terminal shell on your local computer. If you have previously installed the SDK, you can skip this section and start with Create a new project.
To download and install:
Open a terminal shell on your local computer.
For example, open Applications, Utilities, then double-click Terminal or press ⌘+spacebar to open Search, then type
terminal
.Download and install the SDK package by running the following command:
sh -ci "$(curl -fsSL https://internetcomputer.org/install.sh)"
This command prompts you to read and accept the license agreement before installing the DFINITY execution command-line interface (CLI) and its dependencies on your local computer.
Type
y
and press Return to continue with the installation.The command displays information about the components being installed on the local computer.
Verify the SDK is ready to use
If the installation script runs without any errors, everything you need to start developing programs that run on the IC will be available on your local computer.
To verify the SDK is ready to use:
Open a terminal shell on your local computer, if you don’t already have one open.
Check that you have the DFINITY execution command-line interface (CLI) installed and the
dfx
executable is available in your PATH by running the following command:dfx --version
The command displays version information for the
dfx
command-line executable. You can see the latest version in the release notes.Preview usage information for the other
dfx
command-line sub-commands by running the following command:dfx --help
The command displays usage information for the
dfx
parent command and its subcommands.
Create a new project
Dapps for the Internet Computer start as projects. You create projects using the dfx
parent command and its subcommands.
For this tutorial, we’ll start with the default sample dapp to illustrate creating a dapp using the starter files in a project. When you create a new project, the dfx
command-line interface adds a default project directory structure to your workspace. We cover the template files that make up a project directory in the Explore the default project tutorial.
To create a new project for your first dapp:
Open a terminal shell on your local computer, if you don’t already have one open.
Create a new project named
hello
by running the following command:dfx new hello
The
dfx new hello
command creates a newhello
project directory, template files, and a newhello
Git repository for your project.If you use a different project name instead of
hello
, make note of the name you used. You’ll need to use that project name in place of thehello
project name throughout these instructions.Change to your project directory by running the following command:
cd hello
Check the connection to the IC mainnet
There is a reserved network alias that you can use to access the Internet Computer blockchain mainnet. The network alias is a system setting that’s defined internally, so there’s nothing you need to configure in your projects by default.
To check your connection to the IC:
Check that you are in the root directory for your project, if needed.
Check the current status of the IC and your ability to connect to it by running the following command for the network alias
ic
:dfx ping ic
Verify that the
dfx ping ic
command returns information about the IC.For example, you should see output similar to the following:
{
"ic_api_version": "0.18.0" "impl_hash": "d639545e0f38e075ad240fd4ec45d4eeeb11e1f67a52cdd449cd664d825e7fec" "impl_version": "8dc1a28b4fb9605558c03121811c9af9701a6142" "replica_health_status": "healthy" "root_key": [48, 129, 130, 48, 29, 6, 13, 43, 6, 1, 4, 1, 130, 220, 124, 5, 3, 1, 2, 1, 6, 12, 43, 6, 1, 4, 1, 130, 220, 124, 5, 3, 2, 1, 3, 97, 0, 129, 76, 14, 110, 199, 31, 171, 88, 59, 8, 189, 129, 55, 60, 37, 92, 60, 55, 27, 46, 132, 134, 60, 152, 164, 241, 224, 139, 116, 35, 93, 20, 251, 93, 156, 12, 213, 70, 217, 104, 95, 145, 58, 12, 11, 44, 197, 52, 21, 131, 191, 75, 67, 146, 228, 103, 219, 150, 214, 91, 155, 180, 203, 113, 113, 18, 248, 71, 46, 13, 90, 77, 20, 80, 95, 253, 116, 132, 176, 18, 145, 9, 28, 95, 135, 185, 136, 131, 70, 63, 152, 9, 26, 11, 170, 174]
}
Confirm your developer identity and ledger account
All ICP token transactions are recorded in a ledger canister running on the Internet Computer blockchain. The ledger canister consists of account identifiers and balances for all ICP token holders.
Before you can transfer any ICP tokens you hold in your ledger account, you need to send a secure and properly-signed message that verifies your identity to the ledger and authorizes your developer identity to complete the transaction.
Depending on how you have set up custody for holding your ICP tokens, the hardware, software, and steps required to connect to the ledger and complete a transaction can vary. For example, you might connect to the ledger and start a transaction from a hardware wallet, using a hardware security module (HSM) appliance, through the Network Nervous System (NNS) frontend application, or using the SDK dfx
command-line interface. Each approach presents a different interface for signing and sending messages to the ledger and representing your identity as an account holder.
About your developer identity
The first time you use the SDK, the dfx
command-line tool creates a default
developer identity for you. This identity is represented by a principal data type and a textual representation of the principal often referred to as your principal identifier. This representation of your identity is similar to a Bitcoin or Ethereum address.
However, the principal associated with your developer identity is typically not the same as your account identifier in the ledger. The principal identifier and the account identifier are related—both provide a textual representation of your identity—but they use different formats.
Connect to the ledger to get account information
For the purposes of this tutorial—where there’s no hardware wallet or external application to connect to the ledger—we’ll use your developer identity to retrieve your ledger account identifier, then transfer ICP tokens from the ledger account identifier to a cycles wallet canister controlled by your developer identity.
To look up your account in the ledger:
Confirm the developer identity you are currently using by running the following command:
dfx identity whoami
In most cases, you should see that you are currently using default` developer identity. For example:
default
View the textual representation of the principal for your current identity by running the following command:
dfx identity get-principal
This command displays output similar to the following:
tsqwz-udeik-5migd-ehrev-pvoqv-szx2g-akh5s-fkyqc-zy6q7-snav6-uqe
Get the account identifier for your developer identity by running the following command:
dfx ledger account-id
This command displays the ledger account identifier associated with your developer identity. For example, you should see output similar to the following:
03e3d86f29a069c6f2c5c48e01bc084e4ea18ad02b0eec8fccadf4487183c223
Check your account balance by running the following command:
dfx ledger --network ic balance
This command displays the ICP token balance from the ledger account. For example, you should see output similar to the following:
10.00000000 ICP
Creating a Cycles Wallet
Now that you have confirmed your account information and current ICP token balance, you can convert some of those ICP tokens to cycles and move them into a cycles wallet.
To transfer ICP tokens to create a cycles wallet:
Create a new canister with cycles by transferring ICP tokens from your ledger account by running a command similar to the following:
dfx ledger --network ic create-canister <principal-identifier> --amount <icp-tokens>
This command converts the number of ICP tokens you specify for the
--amount
argument into cycles, and associates the cycles with a new canister identifier controlled by the principal you specify.For example, the following command converts .25 ICP tokens into cycles and specifies the principal identifier for the default identity as the controller of the new canister:
dfx ledger --network ic create-canister tsqwz-udeik-5migd-ehrev-pvoqv-szx2g-akh5s-fkyqc-zy6q7-snav6-uqe --amount .25
If the transaction is successful, the ledger records the event and you should see output similar to the following:
Transfer sent at BlockHeight: 20
Canister created with id: "gastn-uqaaa-aaaae-aaafq-cai"Install the cycles wallet code in the newly-created canister placeholder by running a command similar to the following:
dfx identity --network ic deploy-wallet <canister-identifer>
For example:
dfx identity --network ic deploy-wallet gastn-uqaaa-aaaae-aaafq-cai
This command displays output similar to the following:
Creating a wallet canister on the IC network.
The wallet canister on the "ic" network for user "default" is "gastn-uqaaa-aaaae-aaafq-cai"
Validate your cycles wallet
After you convert ICP tokens to cycles, you can validate the cycles wallet canister and check your current cycles balance.
To validate your cycles wallet:
Verify the canister identifier for the cycles wallet you deployed by running the following command:
dfx identity --network ic get-wallet
The command displays the canister identifier for your cycles wallet with output similar to the following:
gastn-uqaaa-aaaae-aaafq-cai
Check that your cycles wallet canister is properly configured and holds a balance of cycles by running a command similar to the following:
dfx wallet --network ic balance
The command returns the balance for the your cycles wallet. For example:
15430.122 TC (trillion cycles).
You can also access your default cycles wallet in a web browser by using a URL similar to the following:
https://<WALLET-CANISTER-ID>.icp0.io
The first time you access the application, you see a notice that you are using an Anonymous Device and are prompted to authenticate your identity, authorize access to the wallet, and register your device.
Click Authenticate to continue to the Internet Identity service.
Enter your User Number if you have previously registered an identity or register with the service as a new user.
Authenticate using your user number and the authentication method—for example, a security key or fingerprint—you have registered.
Click Proceed to access to the default cycles wallet application.
Register the device you are using for this session by copying the command displayed in the Register Device page and running it in a terminal.
For example, call the
authorize
method for the cycles wallet canister with a command similar to the following:dfx canister --network ic call "gastn-uqaaa-aaaae-aaafq-cai" authorize '(principal "ejta3-neil3-qek6c-i7rdw-sxreh-lypfe-v6hjg-6so7x-5ugze-3iohr-2qe")'
Be sure that the command you copy has the correct network (
ic
) alias. You should recognize the canister identifier—in this example,gastn-uqaaa-aaaae-aaafq-cai
—as the cycles wallet associated with your identity. If this is your first wallet on the IC, however, you might not recognize the principal being authorized. The use of a different principal is the expected behavior in this case.When the browser refreshes after running the
authorize
command, the cycles wallet for your principal account is displayed.View your cycles balance and activity in the browser.
For example:
For more information about the commands and methods available for working with the default cycles wallet, see Use the default cycles wallet.
Register, build, and deploy the application
After you have validated your cycles wallet balance, you can register, build, and deploy your sample application.
To deploy your first application on the Internet Computer blockchain mainnet:
In your terminal shell, check that you are still in the root directory for your project.
Ensure that
node
modules are available in your project directory, if needed, by running the following command:npm install
For more information about this step, see Ensuring node is available in a project.
Register, build, and deploy your first application by running the following command:
dfx deploy --network ic
The
--network
option specifies the network alias or URL for deploying the dapp. This option is required to install on the Internet Computer blockchain mainnet.The
dfx deploy
command output displays information about the operations it performs.For example, this step registers two identifiers—one for the
hello_backend
main program and one for thehello_frontend
frontend user interface—and installation information similar to the following:Deploying all canisters.
Creating canisters...
Creating canister "hello_backend"...
"hello" canister created on network "ic" with canister id: "5o6tz-saaaa-aaaaa-qaacq-cai"
Creating canister "hello_frontend"...
"hello_assets" canister created on network "ic" with canister id: "5h5yf-eiaaa-aaaaa-qaada-cai"
Building canisters...
Building frontend...
Installing canisters...
Installing code for canister hello_backend, with canister_id 5o6tz-saaaa-aaaaa-qaacq-cai
Installing code for canister hello_frontend, with canister_id 5h5yf-eiaaa-aaaaa-qaada-cai
Authorizing our identity (default) to the asset canister...
Uploading assets to asset canister...
/index.html 1/1 (472 bytes)
/index.html (gzip) 1/1 (314 bytes)
/index.js 1/1 (260215 bytes)
/index.js (gzip) 1/1 (87776 bytes)
/main.css 1/1 (484 bytes)
/main.css (gzip) 1/1 (263 bytes)
/sample-asset.txt 1/1 (24 bytes)
/logo.png 1/1 (25397 bytes)
/index.js.map 1/1 (842511 bytes)
/index.js.map (gzip) 1/1 (228404 bytes)
/index.js.LICENSE.txt 1/1 (499 bytes)
/index.js.LICENSE.txt (gzip) 1/1 (285 bytes)
Deployed canisters.If you didn’t convert enough ICP tokens to cycles to complete the operation, you can add cycles to your cycles wallet by running a command similar to the following:
dfx ledger --network ic top-up gastn-uqaaa-aaaae-aaafq-cai --amount 1.005
This command converts an additional
1.005
ICP tokens to cycles for thegastn-uqaaa-aaaae-aaafq-cai
cycles wallet identifier. The command returns output similar to the following:Transfer sent at BlockHeight: 81520
Canister was topped up!Call the
hello_backend
canister and the predefinedgreet
function by running the following command:dfx canister --network ic call hello_backend greet '("everyone": text)'
Let’s take a closer look at this example:
Using the
--network ic
option indicates that the canister you want to call is deployed on theic
. Theic
network alias is an internally-reserved alias for accessing the Internet Computer blockchain mainnet.Note that the
--network ic
option must precede the operation subcommand, which, in this case, is thedfx canister call
command.The
hello_backend
argument specifies the name of the canister you want to call.The
greet
argument specifies the name of the function you want to call in thehello
canister.The text string
everyone
is the argument that you want to pass to thegreet
function.
Verify the command displays the return value of the
greet
function.For example:
("Hello, everyone!")
Rerun the
dfx wallet balance
command or refresh the browser to see your new cycle balance and recent activity.
Test the dapp frontend
Now that you have verified that your dapp has been deployed and tested its operation using the command line, let’s verify that you can access the frontend using your web browser.
To access the dapp frontend:
Open a browser.
Navigate to the frontend for the dapp using a URL that consists of the
hello_frontend
identifier and theboundary.icp0.io
suffix.If you didn’t make a note of the canister identifier, you can look it up by running the following command:
dfx canister --network ic id hello_assets
For example, the full URL should look similar to the following:
https://gsueu-yaaaa-aaaae-aaagq-cai.icp0.io
Navigating to this URL displays the HTML entry page for the template application. For example:
Type a greeting, then click Click Me to return the greeting.
Next steps
Now that you have seen how to deploy a dapp on the Internet Computer blockchain, you are ready to develop and deploy programs of your own.
You can find more detailed examples and tutorials to help you learn about how to use Motoko and how to develop dapps for the Internet Computer blockchain throughout the documentation.
Here are some suggestions for where to go next:
[Build on the IC]/developer-docs/build/index.md) to explore building frontend and backend dapps in a local development environment.
What is Candid? to learn how the Candid interface description language enables service interoperability and composability.
Motoko overview to learn about the features and syntax for using Motoko.