You can use the token creator application to create a token and sent it to your wallet. This application is purely for demonstration purposes.
Creating a Solana token requires the following steps:
- Creating a new Mint account
- Creating an associated token account
- Minting an amount of the token to the associated token account
- Adding the token metadata to the mint account
Mint accounts hold information about the token such as how many decimals the token has and who can mint new tokens.
You can create a custom keypair for the mint account
This keypair's public key will be used to have a vanity address
for the token. Create a new mint account with that key
by first initializing the account and space for the mint
account, then calling createInitializeMintInstruction
.
These instructions can be added and executed in the same
transaction.
const Transaction = new Transaction().add(
SystemProgram.createAccount({
fromPubkey: publicKey,
newAccountPubkey: mintKeypair.publicKey,
space: MINT_SIZE,
lamports: lamports,
programId: TOKEN_PROGRAM_ID,
}),
createInitializeMintInstruction(
mintKeypair.publicKey,
form.decimals,
publicKey,
publicKey,
TOKEN_PROGRAM_ID)
);
Associated Token Accounts are derived from the mint account's address. They hold the token's balance and can be used to transfer tokens from one wallet to another.
Normally when getting ATA's for a user, you would use
getOrCreateAssociatedTokenAccount
. This function will create the
ATA if it doesn't exist.
In our case, we created a brand new mint account and know the ATA will
not exist. So we can make a transaction with the
createAssociatedTokenAccountInstruction
, getting the derived address
with getAssociatedTokenAddress
.
const Transaction = new Transaction().add(
createAssociatedTokenAccountInstruction(
publicKey,
tokenATA,
publicKey,
mintKeypair.publicKey,
)
);
When you mint tokens, you increase the overall supply of the token.
You can mint tokens by using createMintToInstruction
in a transaction.
const Transaction = new Transaction().add(
createMintToInstruction(
mintKeypair.publicKey,
tokenATA,
publicKey,
form.amount
)
);
When you create a token, you want to make sure that the token shows up in user's wallets with a name, ticker, and image. The metadata account address is derived from the mint account. The metadata field requires a JSON file to be populated with at least the following:
{
"name": "Coin name",
"symbol": "Symbol",
"image": "Image link"
}
tokenMetadata
is the JSON file you want to attach to the mint account.
Some people use Arweave to host their metadata. You can also use any other
online storage solution.
Following all of the steps above, you should now have a token minted.
The best part is that you can actually add all of these instructions to a single transaction:
Enjoy your new token!