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mfahampshire a0057eb223 add notice re sdks (#5792)
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# Simple Send
import { Callout } from 'nextra/components'
<Callout type="warning">
There will be a breaking SDK upgrade in the coming months. This upgrade will make the SDK a lot easier to build with.
This upgrade will affect the interface of the SDK dramatically, and will be coupled with a protocol change - stay tuned for information on early access to the new protocol testnet.
It will also be coupled with the documentation of the SDK on [crates.io](https://crates.io/).
</Callout>
Lets look at a very simple example of how you can import and use the websocket client in a piece of Rust code.
Simply importing the `nym_sdk` crate into your project allows you to create a client and send traffic through the mixnet.
> You can find this code [here](https://github.com/nymtech/nym/blob/master/sdk/rust/nym-sdk/examples/simple.rs)
```rust
use nym_sdk::mixnet;
use nym_sdk::mixnet::MixnetMessageSender;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
nym_bin_common::logging::setup_logging();
// Passing no config makes the client fire up an ephemeral session and figure shit out on its own
let mut client = mixnet::MixnetClient::connect_new().await.unwrap();
// Be able to get our client address
let our_address = client.nym_address();
println!("Our client nym address is: {our_address}");
// Send a message through the mixnet to ourselves
client
.send_plain_message(*our_address, "hello there")
.await
.unwrap();
println!("Waiting for message (ctrl-c to exit)");
client
.on_messages(|msg| println!("Received: {}", String::from_utf8_lossy(&msg.message)))
.await;
}
```