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#38 in #wasm-engine

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ParallelChain Mainnet Contract SDK

The ParallelChain Mainnet Contract SDK (pchain-sdk) provides Rust structs, functions, types, and macros that aid with the development of smart contracts executable in WebAssembly (WASM) engines implementing the ParallelChain Mainnet Contract Binary Interface (CBI) Subprotocol.

Contracts are the run-time programmability mechanism of ParallelChain Mainnet networks. They allow users (Account owners) to implement arbitrary logic in a global, decentralized, and Byzantine Fault Tolerant replicated state machine to support their most business-critical applications.

Theoretically, any WebAssembly (WASM) module that implements the CBI Subprotocol can be deployed onto a ParallelChain Mainnet blockchain. Practically, however, all developers (except perhaps those who like to experiment, or that would like to stretch the limits of the system) will want to use the types and macros in this pchain-sdk to write a Contract in Rust, and the commands in pchain-compile to compile the Rust source code into WASM bytecode that can be included in a Deploy Transaction.

The Contract Programming Model

pchain-sdk enables developers to write Smart Contracts in an intuitive and readable style we call "The Contract Programming Model". The SDK's macros transparently generate lower-level 'boilerplate' code for you, so that you can focus on writing the business logic of your application.

The Contract Programming Model is inspired by Object-Oriented Programming (OOP). In the Model, a Contract can be thought of as a Rust struct that controls access to persistent Storage. Accounts interact with Contracts by submitting Transaction with Call Command to invoke methods of a contract, or just Methods for short. The following two sections elaborate on the two essential concepts of programming with the Contract Programming Model: Contract Methods, and Contract Storage.

Contract Methods

The Model defines methods with macro #[call] as Contract Methods, each corresponding to a method that is callable to a Call Command in the CBI Subprotocol.

In order to produce to appropriate CBI Exports Set bindings that ultimately allow Methods to be called from the outside world, you must write Method definitions inside an impl Contract statement marked with the #[contract_methods] macro, as illustrated in the following examples.

#[contract_methods]
impl PrinceTheDog {
    #[call]
    fn eat_food(&mut self, food: DogFood) {
        ...
    }
}

Methods may mutate Contract Storage. Note however, that (as specified in the Transaction Subprotocol) mutations to Contract Storage made in a Call Transaction only get applied if the Transaction is Successful (e.g., the Transaction must exit with sufficient gas, must have not panicked during execution, etc.).

A function can be called if and only if:

  1. The macro #[call] is added above the function declaration.
  2. Its (zero or more) other arguments implement BorshDeserialize.
  3. Its return value implements BorshSerialize, or it does not have a return value.

Accepting parameters and returning values

Some of the code snippets provided as examples in this document depict Contract Methods that take in function arguments (besides a borrow of the Contract struct) and/or return a value. In order for a Contract to receive arguments from and return values to the 'outside world' (callers), both Contract and caller need to agree on a serialization format.

pchain-sdk expects callers to serialize Method arguments using the borsh serialization standard, and generates code to serialize values into borsh for inclusion in a Transaction's Receipt. To be precise, Transaction Command Call specify the Contract Method to call and provide the arguments for the call by including a borsh-serialized data structure Option<Vec<Vec<u8>>> in its arguments field, and contracts include a borsh-serialized ContractMethodOutput struct. The former type is defined in pchain-types, while the latter is defined in pchain-sdk. In the future, we plan to move both into the SDK.

Contract Storage

Contracts can use Storage to persist data between calls. The simplest way to read and write data into Storage is to add fields to the Contract struct:

#[contract]
struct PrinceTheDog {
    age: u8, 
    breed: String,
    hungry: bool,
    toy: DogToy,
}

The #[contract] macro transparently generates code that loads all Contract struct's fields from Storage before the execution of contract methods. All types that implement the Storage trait can be used as a Contract field. Out of the box, this includes all Rust primitive types, as well as other commonly used types like Option<T>, Result<T>, Vec<T>, etc. In addition, structs defined by the developer can be made to implement Storage by applying the #[contract_field] macro on their definitions, if all their fields implement Storage:

#[contract_field]
struct DogToy {
    ...
}

Storage and Collections

Because Storage is so gas-expensive, loading all Contract's fields before Method execution and writing them all into Storage after execution typically results in Contracts that are not very economical. For Contracts that do not keep much in Storage, or whose Methods always read and write into most fields, this may be okay, or even ideal, however, some applications cannot avoid keeping a lot of on-chain state, and for these applications eagerly loading and saving fields in every call may be unacceptably expensive.

To solve this, the SDK includes a pchain_sdk::collections module. All of the types defined in this module 'lazily' load Storage: they only incur a read or write gas cost when the exact item in the collection is read from or written to. They also offer an API that can make working with large collections of data more convenient.

#[contract]
struct PrinceTheDog {
    nicknames: Vector<String>
}

Cacher (Cacher<T>)

Wraps over any non-collections type that implements Storage and makes them lazy (all collections types are already lazy without Cacher). Cacher implements Deref, so Cacher<T> can be used almost everywhere T can be used without any special syntax.

Vector (Vector<T>)

Lazily stores a list of items in Storage. Vector implements Index, IndexMut, and has an iter method, so most of the things you can do with std::vec::Vec, you can probably do with Vector too.

Maps (FastMap<K, V> and IterableMap<K, V>)

Collections include two types that store statically typed mapping between keys and values. The difference between these two types is that IterableMap is, as its name suggests, iterable. i.e., it has the standard library's HashMap's keys, iter, and values sets of methods. This functionality comes at the cost of storing slightly more data in Storage than FastMap. Both types function identically otherwise, down to being able to nest like-Maps together (e.g., FastMap<T, FastMap<K, V>>, but not FastMap<T, IterableMap<K, V>>).

You should use IterableMap if your application absolutely needs to iterate through stored items, otherwise, use FastMap.

Accessing information about the Blockchain

Contract Methods can be written to not only depend on call arguments and the contract's storage, but also on information about the Blockchain, e.g., the previous block hash, or the identity of the External Account that originated the Transaction with Call Command.

Functions for getting information about the Transaction that triggered a Contract call and information about the larger Blockchain in general are defined in pchain_sdk::transaction and pchain_sdk::blockchain respectively. Internally, these functions are thin wrappers around functions defined in the Imports Set of the CBI.

Calling other Contracts

The SDK includes a pair of functions to make Contract-To-Contract internal calls:

  • call and call_untyped

It does the obvious: to call a method in a specified Contract with the given arguments.

Transferring balance

pchain_sdk::transfer transfers balance from the Contract Account to another Account and returns the balance of the recipient after the transfer.

Dependencies

~8.5MB
~114K SLoC