This guide will help you to install the Fuel toolchain binaries and prerequisites.
This guide covers the following topics:
The Fuel toolchain is built on top of the Rust programming language. To install Rust, you can use the rustup
tool.
Run the following command in your shell; this downloads and runs rustup-init.sh
, which in turn downloads and runs the correct version of the rustup-init
executable for your platform.
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh
Check the official Rust documentation to get more information on installing the Rust toolchain .
fuelup
is the official package manager for Fuel that installs the Fuel toolchain
from the official release channels, enabling you to easily switch between different
toolchains and keep them updated. It makes building and maintaining Sway applications simpler with forc
and fuel-core
for common platforms.
💡 Check out the fuelup docs for more information.
fuelup-init
To install the Fuel toolchain, you'll use the fuelup-init
script.
This will install forc
, forc-client
, forc-fmt
, forc-lsp
, forc-wallet
as well as fuel-core
in ~/.fuelup/bin
.
👉 Just paste the following line in your terminal and press Enter.
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://install.fuel.network/fuelup-init.sh | sh
🚧 Be aware that currently we do not natively support Windows. If you wish to use
fuelup
on Windows, please use Windows Subsystem for Linux.
Once the script is downloaded, it will be executed automatically.
The fuelup-init
script will prompt you with the question below:
fuelup uses "/home/username/.fuelup" as its home directory to manage the Fuel toolchain, and will install binaries there.
To use the toolchain, you will have to configure your PATH, which tells your machine where to locate `fuelup` and the Fuel toolchain.
If permitted, fuelup-init will configure your PATH for you by running the following:
echo "export PATH="$HOME/.fuelup/bin:$PATH"" >> /home/username/.bashrc
Would you like fuelup-init to modify your PATH variable for you? (N/y)
👉 Press the Y
key in your terminal and press Enter to modify your PATH.
After allowing the fuelup-init
script to modify your PATH
variable, you will see a lot of information about packages being downloaded and installed. If everything goes as expected you will see the following message:
The Fuel toolchain is installed and up to date
fuelup 0.19.5 has been installed in /home/username/.fuelup/bin.
To fetch the latest toolchain containing the forc and fuel-core binaries, run 'fuelup toolchain install latest'.
To generate completions for your shell, run 'fuelup completions --shell=SHELL'.
👉 Use fuelup --version
any time to check which version of the package you are using.
fuelup --version
That will output your current fuelup
version:
fuelup 0.19.5
Just as in Rust , Fuel supports multiple toolchains. A toolchain is a collection of tools (such as the compiler, LSP, etc).
By default, fuelup
includes a series of packages tested to work with each other, providing a reliable set of tools.
In this case, we will install the beta-4
toolchain, which is the stable toolchain compatible with the beta-4
network.
For more information on beta-4
check the Fuel blog page.
Make sure you have the latest version of fuelup
so you can access the latest features and have the best performance.
👉 Update fuelup
by running the following command:
fuelup self update
Then you will get an output like this:
Fetching binary from https://github.com/FuelLabs/fuelup/releases/download/v0.19.5/fuelup-0.19.5-aarch64-apple-darwin.tar.gz
Downloading component fuelup without verifying checksum
Unpacking and moving fuelup to /var/folders/tp/0l8zdx9j4s9_n609ykwxl0qw0000gn/T/.tmpiNJQHt
Moving /var/folders/tp/0l8zdx9j4s9_n609ykwxl0qw0000gn/T/.tmpiNJQHt/fuelup to /Users/.fuelup/bin/fuelup
The beta-4
network is the latest Fuel testnet.
This includes public infrastructure such as the beta-4
faucet and the beta-4
graphQL playground .
To properly interact with the beta-4
network it is necessary to use its corresponding toolchain.
👉 Run the following command to install the beta-4
toolchain:
fuelup toolchain install beta-4
If the toolchain was successfully installed, you will see this output:
The Fuel toolchain is installed and up to date
The toolchain was installed correctly, however is not in use yet. Next, you need to configure fuelup
to use the beta-4
toolchain as the default.
👉 Set beta-4
as your default toolchain with the following command:
fuelup default beta-4
You will get the following output indicating that you have successfully set beta-4
as your default toolchain.
default toolchain set to 'beta-4'
Sometimes you might end up using multiple toolchains at once. Don't worry if you get confused about which toolchain you are using, since you can check your current toolchain anytime.
👉 Run the fuelup show
command to see the toolchain and the versions of each tool you are using.
fuelup show
This command will give you the following output
active toolchain
-----------------
beta-4-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu (default)
forc : 0.45.0
- forc-client
- forc-deploy : 0.45.0
- forc-run : 0.45.0
- forc-doc : 0.45.0
- forc-explore : 0.28.1
- forc-fmt : 0.45.0
- forc-index : 0.20.7
- forc-lsp : 0.45.0
- forc-tx : 0.45.0
- forc-wallet : 0.3.0
fuel-core : 0.20.4
fuel-core-keygen : Error getting version string
fuel-indexer : 0.20.7
fuels versions
---------------
forc : 0.45
forc-wallet : 0.45
As you can see, the beta-4
toolchain is active 🚀
Now you are ready to start building with Fuel.
👉 Check out the quickstart guide to deploy your first smart contract.
You can create your own set of specific versions, this is known as 'custom toolchains'.
👉 Visit the Fuelup docs to learn how to set up your own custom toolchains.
You can always build the Fuel packages from source.
👉 Visit the Fuelup docs to get more details about other types of installation.
It's always possible to run a development environment in the browser.
👉 Please visit our guide on Github Codespaces to use the Fuel toolchain in the browser.