Elixir JSON-RPC client for the Ethereum blockchain.
Check out the documentation here.
Add :ethereumex
to your list of dependencies in mix.exs
:
def deps do
[
{:ethereumex, "~> 0.10"}
]
end
Ensure :ethereumex
is started before your application:
def application do
[
applications: [:ethereumex]
]
end
In config/config.exs
, add Ethereum protocol host params to your config file
config :ethereumex,
url: "http://localhost:8545"
You can also configure the HTTP
request timeout for requests sent to the Ethereum JSON-RPC
(you can also overwrite this configuration in opts
used when calling the client).
config :ethereumex,
http_options: [pool_timeout: 5000, receive_timeout: 15_000],
http_headers: [{"Content-Type", "application/json"}]
:pool_timeout
- This timeout is applied when we check out a connection from the pool. Default value is 5_000
.
:receive_timeout
- The maximum time to wait for a response before returning an error. Default value is 15_000
If you want to use IPC you will need to set a few things in your config.
First, specify the :client_type
:
config :ethereumex,
client_type: :ipc
This will resolve to :http
by default.
Second, specify the :ipc_path
:
config :ethereumex,
ipc_path: "/path/to/ipc"
If you want to count the number of RPC calls per RPC method or overall,
you can attach yourself to executed telemetry events.
There are two events you can attach yourself to:
[:ethereumex]
# has RPC method name in metadata
Emitted event: {:event, [:ethereumex], %{counter: 1}, %{method_name: "method_name"}}
or more granular
[:ethereumex, <rpc_method>]
# %{} metadata
Emitted event: {:event, [:ethereumex, :method_name_as_atom], %{counter: 1}, %{}}
Each event caries a single ticker that you can pass into your counters (like Statix.increment/2
).
Be sure to add :telemetry as project dependency.
The IPC client type mode opens a pool of connection workers (default is 5 and 2, respectively). You can configure the pool size.
config :ethereumex,
ipc_worker_size: 5,
ipc_max_worker_overflow: 2,
ipc_request_timeout: 60_000
Download parity
and initialize the password file
$ make setup
Run parity
$ make run
Run tests
$ make test
web3_clientVersion
web3_sha3
net_version
net_peerCount
net_listening
eth_protocolVersion
eth_syncing
eth_coinbase
eth_chainId
eth_mining
eth_hashrate
eth_gasPrice
eth_accounts
eth_blockNumber
eth_getBalance
eth_getStorageAt
eth_getTransactionCount
eth_getBlockTransactionCountByHash
eth_getBlockTransactionCountByNumber
eth_getUncleCountByBlockHash
eth_getUncleCountByBlockNumber
eth_getCode
eth_sign
eth_sendTransaction
eth_sendRawTransaction
eth_call
eth_estimateGas
eth_getBlockByHash
eth_getBlockByNumber
eth_getTransactionByHash
eth_getTransactionByBlockHashAndIndex
eth_getTransactionByBlockNumberAndIndex
eth_getTransactionReceipt
eth_getUncleByBlockHashAndIndex
eth_getUncleByBlockNumberAndIndex
eth_getCompilers
eth_compileLLL
eth_compileSolidity
eth_compileSerpent
eth_newFilter
eth_newBlockFilter
eth_newPendingTransactionFilter
eth_uninstallFilter
eth_getFilterChanges
eth_getFilterLogs
eth_getLogs
- eth_getProof
eth_getWork
eth_submitWork
eth_submitHashrate
db_putString
db_getString
db_putHex
db_getHex
shh_post
shh_version
shh_newIdentity
shh_hasIdentity
shh_newGroup
shh_addToGroup
shh_newFilter
shh_uninstallFilter
shh_getFilterChanges
shh_getMessages
You can follow along with any of these examples using IPC by replacing HttpClient
with IpcClient
.
iex> Ethereumex.HttpClient.web3_client_version
{:ok, "Parity//v1.7.2-beta-9f47909-20170918/x86_64-macos/rustc1.19.0"}
# Using the url option will overwrite the configuration
iex> Ethereumex.HttpClient.web3_client_version(url: "http://localhost:8545")
{:ok, "Parity//v1.7.2-beta-9f47909-20170918/x86_64-macos/rustc1.19.0"}
iex> Ethereumex.HttpClient.web3_sha3("wrong_param")
{:error, %{"code" => -32602, "message" => "Invalid params: invalid format."}}
iex> Ethereumex.HttpClient.eth_get_balance("0x407d73d8a49eeb85d32cf465507dd71d507100c1")
{:ok, "0x0"}
Note that all method names are snakecases, so, for example, shh_getMessages method has corresponding Ethereumex.HttpClient.shh_get_messages/1 method. Signatures can be found in Ethereumex.Client.Behaviour. There are more examples in tests.
In order to call a smart contract using the JSON-RPC interface you need to properly hash the data attribute (this will need to include the contract method signature along with arguments if any). You can do this manually or use a hex package like ABI to parse your smart contract interface or encode individual calls.
defp deps do
[
...
{:ethereumex, "~> 0.9"},
{:ex_abi, "~> 0.5"}
...
]
end
Now load the ABI and pass the method signature. Note that the address needs to be converted to bytes:
address = "0xF742d4cE7713c54dD701AA9e92101aC42D63F895" |> String.slice(2..-1) |> Base.decode16!(case: :mixed)
contract_address = "0xC28980830dD8b9c68a45384f5489ccdAF19D53cC"
abi_encoded_data = ABI.encode("balanceOf(address)", [address]) |> Base.encode16(case: :lower)
Now you can use eth_call to execute this smart contract command:
balance_bytes = Ethereumex.HttpClient.eth_call(%{
data: "0x" <> abi_encoded_data,
to: contract_address
})
To convert the balance into an integer:
balance_bytes
|> String.slice(2..-1)
|> Base.decode16!(case: :lower)
|> TypeDecoder.decode_raw([{:uint, 256}])
|> List.first
Many Ethereum protocol implementations support additional JSON-RPC API methods. To use them, you should call Ethereumex.HttpClient.request/3 method.
For example, let's call parity's personal_listAccounts method.
iex> Ethereumex.HttpClient.request("personal_listAccounts", [], [])
{:ok,
["0x71cf0b576a95c347078ec2339303d13024a26910",
"0x7c12323a4fff6df1a25d38319d5692982f48ec2e"]}
To send batch requests use Ethereumex.HttpClient.batch_request/1 or Ethereumex.HttpClient.batch_request/2 method.
requests = [
{:web3_client_version, []},
{:net_version, []},
{:web3_sha3, ["0x68656c6c6f20776f726c64"]}
]
Ethereumex.HttpClient.batch_request(requests)
{
:ok,
[
{:ok, "Parity//v1.7.2-beta-9f47909-20170918/x86_64-macos/rustc1.19.0"},
{:ok, "42"},
{:ok, "0x47173285a8d7341e5e972fc677286384f802f8ef42a5ec5f03bbfa254cb01fad"}
]
}
If you are curious what others are building with ethereumex, you might want to take a look at these projects:
-
exw3 - A high-level contract abstraction and other goodies similar to web3.js
-
eth - Ethereum utilities for Elixir.
-
eth_contract - A set of helper methods for calling ETH Smart Contracts via JSON RPC.
-
ethers - Interacting with EVM contracts like first-class Elixir functions similar to Ethers.js
- Fork it!
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
Copyright (c) 2018 Ayrat Badykov
Released under the MIT License, which can be found in the repository in LICENSE.md.