Casper
The Casper backend allows you to compile your contracts into WASM files which can be deployed onto Casper Blockchain and lets you to easily run them against Casper's Execution Engine locally.
Contract Env
As with any other backend, Casper Backend must implement the same features, but some do not have native support. Let's take a closer look at how Odra overcomes these hindrances.
Events
An event is not a first-class citizen in Casper like in Ethereum, so Odra mimics it. As you've already learned from the events article, in Odra you emit an event, similarly, you would do it in Solidity.
Under the hood, Odra integrates with Casper Event Standard and creates a few URef
s in the global state when a contract is being installed:
__events
- a dictionary that stores events' data.__events_length
- the evens count.__events_ces_version
- the version ofCasper Event Standard
.__events_schema
- a dictionary that stores event schemas.
Besides that, all the events the contract emits are registered - events schemas are written to the storage under the __events_schema
key.
So, Events
are nothing different from any other data stored by a contract.
A struct to be an event must implement traits defined by Casper Event Standard, thankfully you can derive them using #[odra::event]
.
Don't forget to expose events in the module using #[odra::module(events = [...])]
.
Payable
The first Odra idiom is a Contract Main Purse
. It is a purse associated with a contract. The purse is created lazily - when the first transfer to the contract occurs, a proper URef
and a purse are created and stored under the __contract_main_purse
key.
Casper does not allow direct transfers from an account to a contract, so Odra comes up with the second idiom - a Cargo Purse
. It is a one-time-use purse proxy between an account and a contract. First, motes go from the account to the cargo purse and then to the contract's main purse.
Behind the scenes, Odra handles an account-contract transfer via a cargo purse when a function is marked as payable. If under the way something goes wrong with the transfer, the contract reverts.
The transferred amount can be read inside the contract by calling self.env().attached_value()
.
Odra expects the cargo_purse
runtime argument to be attached to a contract call.
In case of its absence, the contract_env::attached_value()
returns zero.
Revert
In Casper, we can stop the execution pretty straightforwardly - call the runtime::revert()
.
Odra adds an extra abstraction layer - in a contract ExecutionError
s are defined, which ultimately are transformed into Casper's ApiError::User
.
Context
Casper equips developers with very low-level tooling, which can be cumbersome for newcomers. If you want to check who called the contract or its address, you can not do it off-hand - you must analyze the call stack.
The self.env().self_address()
function takes the first element of the callstack (runtime::get_call_stack()
) and casts it to Address
.
The self.env().caller()
function takes the second element of the call stack (runtime::get_call_stack()
) and casts it to Address
.
As mentioned in the [Payable] section, to store CSPR, each contract creates its purse. To read the contract balance,
you call self.env().self_balance()
, which checks the balance of the purse stored under __contract_main_purse
.
Test Env
Test environment allows you to test wasm contracts before you deploy them onto the testnet or livenet. It is built on top of the Casper Execution Engine
.
In your test, you can freely switch execution context by setting as a caller (test_env::set_caller()
) one of the 20 predefined accounts. Each account possesses the default amount of Motes
(100_000_000_000_000_000).
The Test Env internally keeps track of the current block time
, error
and attached value
.
Each test is executed on a fresh instance of the Test Env.
Usage
Name of the Casper backend in Odra is casper
, so to run the tests against it, simply pass it as a -b
parameter:
cargo odra test -b casper
If you want to just generate a wasm file, simply run:
cargo odra build -b casper
Deploying a contract to Casper network
There would be no point in writing a contract if you couldn't deploy it to the blockchain.
You can do it in two ways: provided by the Casper itself: using the casper-client
tool
or using the Odra's Livenet integration.
Let's explore the first option to better understand the process.
If you wish, you can skip the following section and jump to the Livenet integration.
WASM arguments
When deploying a new contract you can pass some arguments to it. Every contract written in Odra expects those arguments to be set:
odra_cfg_package_hash_key_name
-String
type. The key under which the package hash of the contract will be stored.odra_cfg_allow_key_override
-Bool
type. Iftrue
and the key specified inodra_cfg_package_hash_key_name
already exists, it will be overwritten.odra_cfg_is_upgradable
-Bool
type. Iftrue
, the contract will be deployed as upgradable.
Additionally, if required by the contract, you can pass constructor arguments.
When working with the test env via cargo odra
or when using
Livenet integration this is handled automatically. However, if you rather use
casper-client
directly, you have to pass them manually:
Example: Deploy Counter
To deploy your contract with a constructor using casper-client
, you need to pass the above arguments.
Additionally, you need to pass the value
argument, which sets the arbitrary initial value for the counter.
casper-client put-deploy \
--node-address [NODE_ADDRESS] \
--chain-name casper-test \
--secret-key [PATH_TO_YOUR_KEY]/secret_key.pem \
--payment-amount 5000000000000 \
--session-path ./wasm/counter.wasm \
--session-arg "odra_cfg_package_hash_key_name:string:'counter_package_hash'" \
--session-arg "odra_cfg_allow_key_override:bool:'true'" \
--session-arg "odra_cfg_is_upgradable:bool:'true'" \
--session-arg "value:u32:42"
For a more in-depth tutorial, please refer to the Casper's 'Writing On-Chain Code'.
Example: Deploy ERC721
Odra comes with a standard ERC721 token implementation.
Clone the main Odra repo and navigate to the modules
directory.
Firstly contract needs to be compiled.
cargo odra build -b casper -c erc721_token
It produces the erc721_token.wasm
file in the wasm
directory.
Now it's time to deploy the contract.
casper-client put-deploy \
--node-address [NODE_ADDRESS] \
--chain-name casper-test \
--secret-key [PATH_TO_YOUR_KEY]/secret_key.pem \
--payment-amount 300000000000 \
--session-path ./wasm/erc721_token.wasm \
--session-arg "odra_cfg_package_hash_key_name:string:'my_nft'" \
--session-arg "odra_cfg_allow_key_override:bool:'false'" \
--session-arg "odra_cfg_is_upgradable:bool:'true'" \
--session-arg "name:string:'MyNFT'" \
--session-arg "symbol:string:'NFT'" \
--session-arg "base_uri:string:'https://example.com/'"
It's done. The contract is deployed and ready to use. Your account is the owner of the contract and you can mint and burn tokens. For more details see the code of the ERC721 module.
To obtain the package hash of the contract search for my_nft
key
in your account's named keys.
Example: Deploy ERC1155
The process is similar to the one described in the previous section.
Contract compilation:
cargo odra build -b casper -c erc1155_token
Contract deployment:
casper-client put-deploy \
--node-address [NODE_ADDRESS] \
--chain-name casper-test \
--secret-key [PATH_TO_YOUR_KEY]/secret_key.pem \
--payment-amount 300000000000 \
--session-path ./wasm/erc1155_token.wasm \
--session-arg "odra_cfg_package_hash_key_name:string:'my_tokens'" \
--session-arg "odra_cfg_allow_key_override:bool:'false'" \
--session-arg "odra_cfg_is_upgradable:bool:'true'" \
--session-arg "odra_cfg_constructor:string:'init'" \
As previously, your account is the owner and can mint and burn tokens. For more details see the code of the ERC1155 module.
Sending CSPR to a contract
Defining payable entry points is described in Native Token section.
What is happening under the hood is that Odra creates a new cargo_purse
argument for each payable
entry point. The cargo_purse
needs to be top-upped with CSPR before calling the contract.
When a contract adds CSPR to another contract call, Odra handles it for you.
The problem arises when you want to call an entry point and attach CSPR as an account.
The only way of doing that is by executing code in the sessions context, that
top-ups the cargo_purse
and then calls the contract.
Odra provides a generic proxy_caller.wasm
that does exactly that.
You can build it by yourself from the main Odra repository, or use the proxy_caller.wasm
we maintain.
Using proxy_caller.wasm
To use the proxy_caller.wasm
you need to attach the following arguments:
contract_package_hash
-BytesArray(32)
type. The package hash of the contract you want to call. Result ofto_bytes
on CasperPackageHash.entry_point
-String
type. The name of the entry point you want to call.args
-Bytes
type. It is a serialized RuntimeArgs with the arguments you want to pass to the entry point. To be specific it is the result ofto_bytes
method wrapped with Bytes type.attached_value
.U512
type. The amount of CSPR you want to attach to the call.amount
.U512
type. Should be the same value asattached_value
if notNone
. It is a special Casper argument that enables the access to account's main purse.
Currently casper-client
doesn't allow building such arguments.
You have to build it using your SDK. See an example in the Tutorial section.
Execution
First thing Odra does with your code, is similar to the one used in OdraVM -
a list of entrypoints is generated, thanks to the #[odra::module]
attribute.