Add support for *connecting to* Quorum blockchains. This plugin will not start a Quorum node or nodes automatically as Embark does with other chains.
This plugins supports deploying contracts publically and privately using the Tessera private transaction manager.
This plugin supports sending of public and private transactions using the Tessera private transaction manager.
Add ability to skip bytecode checking as part of the contract deployment process. Instruct the deployer to skip checking if the contract bytecode exists on-chain before deploying the contract. This is important in the case of having many private nodes in a network because if a contract is deployed privately to node 1 and 7, running Embark on node 2 should skip the bytecode check as the contract *is not* deployed on node 2, nor do we want it deployed on node 2. If the bytecode check was in place, Embark would have deployed it to node 2 and therefore not adhered to the privacy needs.
Add Ethereum contract deployer for Quorum, allowing for deploying of public and private contracts using `privateFor` and `privateFrom` (see Contract config updates below).
Add web3 extensions enabling specific functionality for Quorum. Extensions includes those provided by [`quorum-js`](https://github.com/jpmorganchase/quorum.js), as well as some custom monkeypatches that override web3 method output formatting, including:
- web3.eth.getBlock
- web3.eth.getTransaction
- web3.eth.getTransactionReceipt
- web3.eth.decodeParameters
DApps wishing to take advantage of these overrides will need to patch web3 as follows:
```
import {patchWeb3} from "embark-quorum";
import Web3 from "web3";
let web3 = new Web3(...);
web3 = patchWeb3(web3);
```
Add support for sending a raw private transaction in the Quorum network. This includes running actions from the proxy after an `eth_sendTransaction` RPC request has been transformed in to `eth_sendRawTransaction` after being signed.
fix(@embark/transaction-logger): Fix bug when sending a 0-value transaction.
Add `originalRequest` to the proxy when modifying `eth_sendTransaction` to `eth_sendRawTransaction`, so that the original transaction parameters (including `privateFor` and `privateFrom`) can be used to sign a raw private transaction in the `eth_sendRawTransaction` action.
Added the following properties on to blockchain config:
- *`client`* `{boolean}` - Allows `quorum` to be specified as the blockchain client
- *`clientConfig/tesseraPrivateUrl`* `{string}` - URL of the Tessera private transaction manager
```
client: "quorum",
clientConfig: {
tesseraPrivateUrl: "http://localhost:9081" // URL of the Tessera private transaction manager
}
```
Added the following properties to the contracts config:
- *`skipBytecodeCheck`* `{boolean}` - Instructs the deployer to skip checking if the bytecode of the contract exists on the chain before deploying the contract. This is important in the case of having many private nodes in a network because if a contract is deployed privately to node 1 and 7, running Embark on node 2 should skip the bytecode check as the contract *is not* deployed on node 2, nor do we want it deployed on node 2. If the bytecode check was in place, Embark would have deployed it to node 2 and therefore not adhered to the privacy needs.
- *`privateFor`* `{string[]}` - When sending a private transaction, an array of the recipient nodes' base64-encoded public keys.
- *`privateFrom`* `{string}` - When sending a private transaction, the sending party's base64-encoded public key to use
```
environment: {
deploy: {
SimpleStorage: {
skipBytecodeCheck: true,
privateFor: ["ROAZBWtSacxXQrOe3FGAqJDyJjFePR5ce4TSIzmJ0Bc"],
privateFrom: "BULeR8JyUWhiuuCMU/HLA0Q5pzkYT+cHII3ZKBey3Bo="
}
}
},
```
- *`proxy:endpoint:http:get`* - get the HTTP endpoint of the proxy regardless of blockchain settings
- *`proxy:endpoint:ws:get`* - get the WS endpoint of the proxy regardless of blockchain settings
- *`runcode:register:<variable>`* - when variables are registered in the console using `runcode:register`, actions with the name of the variable (ie `runcode:register:web3`) will be run *before* the variable is actually registered in the console. This allows a variable to be modified by plugins before being registered in the console.
This commit introduces a new feature that enables users to calculate Smart Contract
constructor arguments lazily using an (async) function. Similar to normal Smart Contract
configurations, the return or resolved value from that function has to be either a list
of arguments in the order as they are needed for the constructor, or as an object with
named members that match the arguments individually.
```
...
development: {
deploy: {
SimpleStorage: {
args: async ({ contracts, web3, logger}) => {
// do something with `contracts` and `web3` to determine
// arguments
let someValue = await ...;
return [someValue];
// or
return {
initialValue: someValue
};
}
}
}
}
...
```
Closes#2270
feat(@embark/utils): add method to verify if a plugin is installed & configured
feature(@embark/utils): add method to verify if a plugin is installed & configured
feature: warn about packages that will be independent plugins and are not configured
chore: update templates to specify plugins
refactor: add to plugin api params so that blockchain plugins no longer need to be passed options
address changes in code review
remove unneded space
Update packages/core/utils/src/index.ts
Co-Authored-By: Jonathan Rainville <rainville.jonathan@gmail.com>
Update packages/core/utils/src/index.ts
Co-Authored-By: Michael Bradley <michaelsbradleyjr@gmail.com>
fix linting issue
add missing import
remove optional plugins from coming as default
Revert "chore: update hooks examples to destructure dependencies object"
This reverts commit 448eab724b.
remove trailing comma
fix linting issue
include tsconfig
This commit adds two new configuration settings for Smart Contract configuration:
- `interfaces` - Any Smart Contract that represent an interface or is used for inheritance
- `libraries` - Any Smart Contract that is used as a library
This makes the configuration less redundant in cases where otherwise the `deploy`
property has been set to `false`, such as:
```
deploy: {
Ownable: {
deploy: false
},
...
}
```
The above can now be done via:
```
interfaces: ['Ownable'],
deploy: {
...
}
```
* fix embarkjs generation
fix ens setProvider
fix embarkjs objects
fix generated embarkjs provider
generate contracts
fix embarkjs-ens
* address some of the issues in the code review
* feat(@embark/specialconfigs): introduce dynamic addresses
This commit introduces a new Smart Contract configuration addressHandler
that lets users define a function to "lazily" compute the address of the
Smart Contract in question.
This is useful when a third-party takes care of deploying a dependency
Smart Contract, but the address of that Smart Contract only being available
at run-time.
Example:
```
deploy: {
SimpleStorage: {
fromIndex: 0,
args: [100],
},
OtherContract: {
deps: ['SimpleStorage'],
address: async (deps) => {
// use `deps.contracts.SimpleStorage` to determine address
},
abiDefinition: ABI
},
}
```
In the example above, OtherContract will be deployed after SimpleStorage
because it uses the deps property to define Smart Contracts that it depends
on. All dependencies are exposed on the addressHandler function parameter
similar to deployment hooks.
Closes#1690