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bin | ||
boilerplate | ||
demo | ||
demo_meteor | ||
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LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
package.json |
README.md
What is embark
Embark is a framework that allows you to easily develop and deploy DApps.
With Embark you can:
- Automatically deploy contracts and make them available in your JS code. Embark watches for changes, and if you update a contract, Embark will automatically redeploy the contracts (if needed) and the dapp.
- Use any build pipeline or tool you wish, including grunt and meteor.
- Do Test Driven Development with Contracts using Javascript.
- Easily deploy to & use decentralized systems such as IPFS.
- Keep track of deployed contracts, deploy only when truly needed.
- Quickly create advanced DApps using multiple contracts.
See the Wiki for more details.
Installation
Requirements: geth (1.0.0), solc (0.1.0) or serpent (develop), node (0.12.2) and npm
For specs: pyethereum, ethertdd.py
$ npm install -g embark-framework grunt-cli
See Complete Installation Instructions.
Usage - Demo
You can easily create a sample working DApp with the following:
$ embark demo
$ cd embark_demo
To run the ethereum node for development purposes simply run:
$ embark blockchain
By default embark blockchain will mine a minimum amount of ether and will only mine when new transactions come in. This is quite usefull to keep a low CPU. The option can be configured at config/blockchain.yml
Then, in another command line:
$ embark run
This will automatically deploy the contracts, update their JS bindings and deploy your DApp to a local server at http://localhost:8000
Note that if you update your code it will automatically be re-deployed, contracts included. There is no need to restart embark, refreshing the page on the browser will do.
note: for a demo using meteor do embark meteor_demo
followed by embark deploy
then meteor
Creating a new DApp
$ embark new AppName
$ cd AppName
DApp Structure
app/
|___ contracts/ #solidity or serpent contracts
|___ html/
|___ css/
|___ js/
config/
|___ blockchain.yml #environments configuration
|___ contracts.yml #contracts configuration
|___ server.yml #server configuration
spec/
|___ contracts/ #contracts tests
Solidity/Serpent files in the contracts directory will automatically be deployed with embark run. Changes in any files will automatically be reflected in app, changes to contracts will result in a redeployment and update of their JS Bindings
Using Contracts
Embark will automatically take care of deployment for you and set all needed JS bindings. For example, the contract below:
# app/contracts/simple_storage.sol
contract SimpleStorage {
uint public storedData;
function SimpleStorage(uint initialValue) {
storedData = initialValue;
}
function set(uint x) {
storedData = x;
}
function get() constant returns (uint retVal) {
return storedData;
}
}
Will automatically be available in Javascript as:
# app/js/index.js
SimpleStorage.set(100);
SimpleStorage.get();
SimpleStorage.storedData();
You can specify for each contract and environment its gas costs and arguments:
# config/contracts.yml
development:
SimpleStorage:
gas_limit: 500000
gas_price: 10000000000000
args:
- 100
...
If you are using multiple contracts, you can pass a reference to another contract as $ContractName
, Embark will automatically replace this with the correct address for the contract.
# config/contracts.yml
development:
SimpleStorage:
args:
- 100
- $MyStorage
MyStorage:
args:
- "initial string"
MyMainContract:
args:
- $SimpleStorage
...
You can now deploy many instances of the same contract. e.g
# config/contracts.yml
development:
Currency:
deploy: false
args:
- 100
Usd:
instanceOf: Currency
args:
- "initial string"
MyCoin:
instanceOf: Currency
args:
- $SimpleStorage
...
Contracts addresses can be defined, If an address is defined the contract wouldn't be deployed but its defined address will be used instead.
development:
UserStorage:
address: 0x123456
UserManagement:
args:
- $UserStorage
...
You can also define contract interfaces (Stubs) and actions to do on deployment
development:
DataSource:
args:
MyDataSource:
args:
instanceOf: DataSource
Manager:
stubs:
- DataSource
args:
- $MyDataSource
onDeploy:
- Manager.updateStorage($MyDataSource)
- MyDataSource.set(5)
...
Tests
You can run specs with embark spec
, it will run any files ending *_spec.js under spec/
.
Embark includes a testing lib to fastly run & test your contracts in a EVM.
# spec/contracts/simple_storage_spec.js
Embark = require('embark-framework');
Embark.init();
Embark.blockchainConfig.loadConfigFile('config/blockchain.yml');
Embark.contractsConfig.loadConfigFile('config/contracts.yml');
var files = ['app/contracts/simpleStorage.sol'];
Embark.contractsConfig.init(files, 'development');
var EmbarkSpec = Embark.tests(files);
describe("SimpleStorage", function() {
beforeAll(function() {
// equivalent to initializing SimpleStorage with param 150
SimpleStorage = EmbarkSpec.request("SimpleStorage", [150]);
});
it("should set constructor value", function() {
expect(SimpleStorage.storedData()).toEqual('150');
});
it("set storage value", function() {
SimpleStorage.set(100);
expect(SimpleStorage.get()).toEqual('100');
});
})
Embark uses Jasmine by default, but you can use any testing framework you want.
Working with different chains
You can specify which environment to deploy to:
$ embark blockchain staging
$ embark run staging
The environment is a specific blockchain configuration that can be managed at config/blockchain.yml
# config/blockchain.yml
...
staging:
rpc_host: localhost
rpc_port: 8101
rpc_whitelist: "*"
datadir: default
chains: chains_staging.json
network_id: 0
console: true
geth_extra_opts: --vmdebug
account:
init: false
address: 0x123
See Configuration.
Deploying only contracts
Although embark run will automatically deploy contracts, you can choose to only deploy the contracts to a specific environment
$ embark deploy privatenet
embark deploy will deploy all contracts at app/contracts and return the resulting addresses
Structuring Application
Embark is quite flexible and you can configure you're own directory structure using embark.yml
# embark.yml
type: "manual" #other options: meteor, grunt
contracts: ["app/contracts/**/*.sol", "app/contracts/**/*.se"] # contracts files
output: "src/embark.js" # resulting javascript interface
blockchainConfig: "config/blockchain.yml" # blockchain config
contractsConfig: "config/contracts.yml" # contracts config
Deploying to IPFS
To deploy a dapp to IPFS, all you need to do is run a local IPFS node and then run embark ipfs
.
If you want to deploy to the live net then after configuring you account on config/blockchain.yml
on the production
environment then you can deploy to that chain by specifying the environment embark ipfs production
.
LiveReload Plugin
Embark works quite well with the LiveReload Plugin
Debugging embark
Because embark is internally using grunt tasks, debugging is not straightforward. Example
- you want to debug
embark deploy
- normally you would write something like
node-debug -p 7000 embark -- deploy
- This gives you nothing with embark. If you look at
deploy
command in./bin/embark
you will notice that it internally runs grunt taskgrunt deploy_contracts:[env]
- with this knowledge we can prepare proper command to start debugging
node-debug -p 7000 grunt -- deploy_contracts:development
here is list of all debuggable grunt tasks
EACCESS Error
If you get EACCES (access denied) errors, don't use sudo, try this:
$ mkdir ~/npm-global
$ npm config set prefix ~/npm-global
$ echo 'export PATH="$PATH:$HOME/npm-global/bin"' >>~/.bashrc
$ source ~/.bashrc
$ npm install -g embark-framework grunt-cli