description: How to use Pantheon JSON-RPC API # Using the JSON-RPC API ## Postman Use the button to import our collection of examples to [Postman](https://www.getpostman.com/). [![Run in Postman](https://run.pstmn.io/button.svg)](https://app.getpostman.com/run-collection/c765d7d22b055c42a510) ## Endpoint Host and Port The placeholder `` and `` represents an endpoint (IP address and port) of the JSON-RPC service of a Pantheon node for HTTP and WebSocket requests. To enable JSON-RPC over HTTP or WebSockets, use the [`--rpc-http-enabled`](../Reference/Pantheon-CLI-Syntax.md#rpc-http-enabled) and [`--rpc-ws-enabled`](../Reference/Pantheon-CLI-Syntax.md#rpc-ws-enabled) options. Use the [--rpc-http-host](../Reference/Pantheon-CLI-Syntax.md#rpc-http-host) and [--rpc-ws-host](../Reference/Pantheon-CLI-Syntax.md#rpc-ws-host) options to specify the host on which the JSON-RPC listens. The default host is 127.0.0.1 for HTTP and WebSockets. Set the host to `0.0.0.0` to allow remote connections. !!! caution Setting the host to 0.0.0.0 exposes the RPC connection on your node to any remote connection. In a production environment, ensure you use a firewall to avoid exposing your node to the internet. Use the [--rpc-http-port](../Reference/Pantheon-CLI-Syntax.md#rpc-http-port) and [--rpc-ws-port](../Reference/Pantheon-CLI-Syntax.md#rpc-ws-port) options to specify the port on which the JSON-RPC listens. The default ports are: * 8545 for HTTP * 8546 for WebSockets Ports must be [exposed appropriately](../Configuring-Pantheon/Networking.md#port-configuration). ## Geth Console The geth console is a REPL (Read, Evaluate, & Print Loop) Javascript console. Use JSON-RPC APIs supported by geth and Pantheon directly in the console. To use the geth console with Pantheon: 1. Start Pantheon with the [`--rpc-http-enabled`](../Reference/Pantheon-CLI-Syntax.md#rpc-http-enabled) option. 1. Specify which APIs to enable using the [`--rpc-http-api`](../Reference/Pantheon-CLI-Syntax.md#rpc-http-api) option. 1. Start the geth console: ```bash geth attach http://localhost:8545 ``` Use the geth console to call [JSON-RPC API methods](../Reference/JSON-RPC-API-Methods.md) that geth and Pantheon share. !!! example ```bash eth.syncing ``` ## Host Whitelist To prevent DNS rebinding, incoming HTTP requests and WebSockets connections are only accepted from hostnames specified using the [`--host-whitelist`](../Reference/Pantheon-CLI-Syntax.md#host-whitelist) option. By default, `localhost` and `127.0.0.1` are accepted. If your application publishes RPC ports, specify the hostnames when starting Pantheon. !!! example ```bash pantheon --host-whitelist=example.com ``` Specify * or all for `--host-whitelist` to effectively disable host protection. !!! caution Specifying * or all for `--host-whitelist` is not recommended for production code. ## JSON-RPC Authentication [Authentication](Authentication.md) is disabled by default. ## HTTP and WebSocket Requests ### HTTP To make RPC requests over HTTP, you can use [`curl`](https://curl.haxx.se/download.html). ```bash $ curl -X POST --data '{"jsonrpc":"2.0","method":"web3_clientVersion","params":[],"id":53}' ``` ### WebSockets To make RPC requests over WebSockets, you can use [wscat](https://github.com/websockets/wscat), a Node.js based command-line tool. First connect to the WebSockets server using `wscat` (you only need to connect once per session): ```bash $ wscat -c ws:// ``` After the connection is established, the terminal displays a '>' prompt. Send individual requests as a JSON data package at each prompt: ```bash > {"jsonrpc":"2.0","method":"web3_clientVersion","params":[],"id":53} ``` !!! note `wscat` does not support headers. [Authentication](Authentication.md) requires an authentication token to be passed in the request header. To use authentication with WebSockets, an app that supports headers is required. ### API Methods Enabled by Default The `ETH`, `NET`, and `WEB3` API methods are enabled by default. Use the [`--rpc-http-api`](../Reference/Pantheon-CLI-Syntax.md#rpc-http-api) or [`--rpc-ws-api`](../Reference/Pantheon-CLI-Syntax.md#rpc-ws-api) options to enable the `ADMIN` ,`CLIQUE`,`DEBUG`, `EEA`, `IBFT`, `MINER`, and `PERM` API methods. !!!note EEA methods are for privacy features. Privacy features are under development and will be available in v1.1. ## Block Parameter When you make requests that might have different results depending on the block accessed, the block parameter specifies the block. Several methods, such as [eth_getTransactionByBlockNumberAndIndex](../Reference/JSON-RPC-API-Methods.md#eth_gettransactionbyblocknumberandindex), have a block parameter. The block parameter can have the following values: * `blockNumber` : `quantity` - Block number. Can be specified in hexadecimal or decimal. 0 represents the genesis block. * `earliest` : `tag` - Earliest (genesis) block. * `latest` : `tag` - Last block mined. * `pending` : `tag` - Last block mined plus pending transactions. Use only with [eth_getTransactionCount](../Reference/JSON-RPC-API-Methods.md#eth_gettransactioncount). ## Not Supported by Pantheon ### Account Management Account management relies on private key management in the client which is not implemented by Pantheon. Use [`eth_sendRawTransaction`](../Reference/JSON-RPC-API-Methods.md#eth_sendrawtransaction) to send signed transactions; `eth_sendTransaction` is not implemented. Use third-party wallets for [account management](../Using-Pantheon/Account-Management.md). ### Protocols Pantheon does not implement the Whisper and Swarm protocols.