# Quick Start Guide There is a simple react/typescript demo app in `./demo/react-ts-webpack`. The directory contains a webpack configuration file that allows you to quickly bootstrap a webpack app using tlsn-js. ## Run a local notary server and websocket proxy ### Websocket Proxy Since a web browser doesn't have the ability to make TCP connection, we need to use a websocket proxy server. To run your own websockify proxy **locally**, run: ```sh git clone https://github.com/novnc/websockify && cd websockify ./docker/build.sh docker run -it --rm -p 55688:80 novnc/websockify 80 swapi.dev:443 ``` Note the `swapi.dev:443` argument on the last line, this is the server we will use in this quick start. ### Run a Local Notary Server For this demo, we also need to run a local notary server. 1. Clone the TLSNotary repository: ```shell git clone https://github.com/tlsnotary/tlsn.git --branch "v0.1.0-alpha.5" ``` 2. Edit the notary server config file (`notary-server/config/config.yaml`) to turn off TLS so that the browser extension can connect to the local notary server without requiring extra steps to accept self-signed certificates in the browser. ```yaml tls: enabled: false ``` 3. Run the notary server: ```shell cd notary-server cargo run --release ``` The notary server will now be running in the background waiting for connections. ## `tlsn-js` in a React/Typescript app ### Run the 1. Clone the repository ```sh git clone https://github.com/tlsnotary/tlsn-js ``` 2. Go to the demo folder ```sh cd ./tlsn-js/demo/react-ts-webpack ``` 3. Install dependencies ```sh npm i ``` 4. Start Webpack Dev Server: ``` npm run dev ``` 5. Open `http://localhost:8080` in your browser 6. Click the **start demo** button 7. Open developer tools and monitor the console logs