Eric 6fff02fd91
Workaround for Hardhat timestamp bug
Likely due to a Hardhat bug in which the callbacks for subscription events are called and awaited before updating its local understanding of the last block time, Hardhat will report a block time in the `newHeads` event that is generally 1 second before the time reported from `getLatestBlock.timestamp`. This was causing issues with the OnChainClock's offset and therefore the `now()` used by the `OnChainClock` would sometimes be off by a second (or more), causing tests to fail.

This commit introduce a `codex_use_hardhat` compilation flag, that when set, will always get the latest block timestamp from Hardhat via the `getLatestBlock.timestamp` RPC call for `OnChainClock.now` calls. Otherwise, the last block timestamp reported in the `newHeads` event will be used.

Update the docker dist tests compilation flag for simulated proof failures (it was not correct), and explicitly add the `codex_use_hardhat=false` for clarity.
2023-12-14 17:09:18 +11:00

42 lines
1.2 KiB
Nim

import std/times
import pkg/chronos
import codex/contracts/clock
import codex/utils/json
import ../ethertest
ethersuite "On-Chain Clock":
var clock: OnChainClock
setup:
clock = OnChainClock.new(provider)
await clock.start()
teardown:
await clock.stop()
test "returns the current time of the EVM":
let latestBlock = (!await provider.getBlock(BlockTag.latest))
let timestamp = latestBlock.timestamp.truncate(int64)
check clock.now() == timestamp
test "updates time with timestamp of new blocks":
let future = (getTime() + 42.years).toUnix
discard await provider.send("evm_setNextBlockTimestamp", @[%future])
discard await provider.send("evm_mine")
check clock.now() == future
test "can wait until a certain time is reached by the chain":
let future = clock.now() + 42 # seconds
let waiting = clock.waitUntil(future)
discard await provider.send("evm_setNextBlockTimestamp", @[%future])
discard await provider.send("evm_mine")
check await waiting.withTimeout(chronos.milliseconds(100))
test "handles starting multiple times":
await clock.start()
await clock.start()
test "handles stopping multiple times":
await clock.stop()
await clock.stop()