1 unstable release

0.1.0 Jun 1, 2024

#11 in #sol

Download history 109/week @ 2024-07-23 82/week @ 2024-07-30 100/week @ 2024-08-06 110/week @ 2024-08-13 60/week @ 2024-08-20 105/week @ 2024-08-27 153/week @ 2024-09-03 249/week @ 2024-09-10 325/week @ 2024-09-17 200/week @ 2024-09-24 121/week @ 2024-10-01 140/week @ 2024-10-08 138/week @ 2024-10-15 286/week @ 2024-10-22 455/week @ 2024-10-29 530/week @ 2024-11-05

1,431 downloads per month
Used in 5 crates (via linera-alloy)

MIT/Apache

695KB
13K SLoC

linera-alloy-contract

Interact with on-chain contracts.

The main type is CallBuilder, which is a builder for constructing calls to on-chain contracts. It provides a way to encode and decode data for on-chain calls, and to send those calls to the chain. See its documentation for more details.

Usage

Combined with the sol! macro's #[sol(rpc)] attribute, CallBuilder can be used to interact with on-chain contracts. The #[sol(rpc)] attribute generates a method for each function in a contract that returns a CallBuilder for that function. See its documentation for more details.

# async fn test() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
use linera_alloy_contract::SolCallBuilder;
use linera_alloy_network::Ethereum;
use linera_alloy_primitives::{Address, U256};
use linera_alloy_provider::ProviderBuilder;
use linera_alloy_sol_types::sol;

sol! {
    #[sol(rpc)] // <-- Important! Generates the necessary `MyContract` struct and function methods.
    #[sol(bytecode = "0x1234")] // <-- Generates the `BYTECODE` static and the `deploy` method.
    contract MyContract {
        constructor(address) {} // The `deploy` method will also include any constructor arguments.

        #[derive(Debug)]
        function doStuff(uint a, bool b) public payable returns(address c, bytes32 d);
    }
}

// Build a provider.
let provider = ProviderBuilder::new().with_recommended_fillers().on_builtin("http://localhost:8545").await?;

// If `#[sol(bytecode = "0x...")]` is provided, the contract can be deployed with `MyContract::deploy`,
// and a new instance will be created.
let constructor_arg = Address::ZERO;
let contract = MyContract::deploy(&provider, constructor_arg).await?;

// Otherwise, or if already deployed, a new contract instance can be created with `MyContract::new`.
let address = Address::ZERO;
let contract = MyContract::new(address, &provider);

// Build a call to the `doStuff` function and configure it.
let a = U256::from(123);
let b = true;
let call_builder = contract.doStuff(a, b).value(U256::from(50e18 as u64));

// Send the call. Note that this is not broadcasted as a transaction.
let call_return = call_builder.call().await?;
println!("{call_return:?}"); // doStuffReturn { c: 0x..., d: 0x... }

// Use `send` to broadcast the call as a transaction.
let _pending_tx = call_builder.send().await?;
# Ok(())
# }

Dependencies

~28–39MB
~725K SLoC