Nim Ethers ========== A port of the [ethers.js][0] library to Nim. Allows you to connect to an Ethereum node. This is very much a work in progress; expect to see many things that are incomplete or wrong. Use at your own risk. Installation ------------ Use the [Nimble][2] package manager to add `ethers` to an existing project. Add the following to its .nimble file: ```nim requires "ethers >= 0.8.0 & < 0.9.0" ``` Usage ----- To connect to an Ethereum node, you require a `Provider`. Currently, only a JSON-RPC provider is supported: ```nim import ethers import chronos let provider = JsonRpcProvider.new("ws://localhost:8545") let accounts = await provider.listAccounts() ``` To interact with a smart contract, you need to define the contract functions in Nim. For example, to interact with an ERC20 token, you could define the following: ```nim type Erc20 = ref object of Contract proc totalSupply(token: Erc20): UInt256 {.contract, view.} proc balanceOf(token: Erc20, account: Address): UInt256 {.contract, view.} proc transfer(token: Erc20, recipient: Address, amount: UInt256) {.contract.} proc allowance(token: Erc20, owner, spender: Address): UInt256 {.contract, view.} proc approve(token: Erc20, spender: Address, amount: UInt256) {.contract.} proc transferFrom(token: Erc20, sender, recipient: Address, amount: UInt256) {.contract.} ``` Notice how some functions are annotated with a `{.view.}` pragma. This indicates that the function does not modify the blockchain. See also the Solidity documentation on [state mutability][3] Now that you've defined the contract interface, you can create an instance of it using its deployed address: ```nim let address = Address.init("0x.....") let token = Erc20.new(address, provider) ``` The functions that you defined earlier can now be called asynchronously: ```nim let supply = await token.totalSupply() let balance = await token.balanceOf(accounts[0]) ``` These invocations do not yet change the state of the blockchain, even when we invoke those functions that lack a `{.view.}` pragma. To allow these changes to happen, we require an instance of a `Signer` first. For example, to use the 4th account on the Ethereum node to sign transactions, you'd instantiate the signer as follows: ```nim let signer = provider.getSigner(accounts[3]) ``` And then connect the contract and signer: ```nim let writableToken = token.connect(signer) ``` This allows you to make changes to the state of the blockchain: ```nim await writableToken.transfer(accounts[7], 42.u256) ``` Which transfers 42 tokens from account 3 to account 7 And lastly, don't forget to close the provider when you're done: ```nim await provider.close() ``` Events ------ You can subscribe to events that are emitted by a smart contract. For instance, to get notified about token transfers you define the `Transfer` event: ```nim type Transfer = object of Event sender {.indexed.}: Address receiver {.indexed.}: Address value: UInt256 ``` Notice that `Transfer` inherits from `Event`, and that some event parameters are marked with `{.indexed.}` to match the definition in Solidity. Note that valid types of indexed parameters are: ```nim uint8 | uint16 | uint32 | uint64 | UInt256 | UInt128 | int8 | int16 | int32 | int64 | Int256 | Int128 | bool | Address | array[ 1..32, byte] ``` Distinct types of valid types are also supported for indexed fields, eg: ```nim type DistinctAlias = distinct array[32, byte] MyEvent = object of Event a {.indexed.}: DistinctAlias b: DistinctAlias # also allowed for non-indexed fields ``` You can now subscribe to Transfer events by calling `subscribe` on the contract instance. ```nim proc handleTransfer(transfer: Transfer) = echo "received transfer: ", transfer let subscription = await token.subscribe(Transfer, handleTransfer) ``` When a Transfer event is emitted, the `handleTransfer` proc that you just defined will be called. When you're no longer interested in these events, you can unsubscribe: ```nim await subscription.unsubscribe() ``` Custom errors ------------- Solidity's [custom errors][4] are supported. To use them, you declare their type and indicate in which contract functions they can occur. For instance, this is how you would define the "InsufficientBalance" error to match the definition in [this Solidity example][5]: ```nim type InsufficientBalance = object of SolidityError arguments: tuple[available: UInt256, required: UInt256] ``` Notice that `InsufficientBalance` inherits from `SoldityError`, and that it has an `arguments` tuple whose fields match the definition in Solidity. You can use the `{.errors.}` pragma to declare that this error may occur in a contract function: ```nim proc transfer*(token: Erc20Token, recipient: Address, amount: UInt256) {.contract, errors:[InsufficientBalance].} ``` This allows you to write error handling code for the `transfer` function like this: ```nim try: await token.transfer(recipient, 100.u256) except InsufficientBalance as error: echo "insufficient balance" echo "available balance: ", error.arguments.available echo "required balance: ", error.arguments.required ``` Utilities --------- This library ships with some optional modules that provides convenience utilities for you such as: - `ethers/erc20` module provides you with ERC20 token implementation and its events Contribution ------------ If you want to run the tests, then before running `nimble test`, you have to have installed NodeJS and started a testing node: ```shell $ cd testnode $ npm ci $ npm start ``` Thanks ------ This library is inspired by the great work done by the [ethers.js][0] (no affiliation) and [nim-web3][1] developers. [0]: https://docs.ethers.io/ [1]: https://github.com/status-im/nim-web3 [2]: https://github.com/nim-lang/nimble [3]: https://docs.soliditylang.org/en/v0.8.11/contracts.html#state-mutability [4]: https://docs.soliditylang.org/en/v0.8.25/contracts.html#errors-and-the-revert-statement [5]: https://soliditylang.org/blog/2021/04/21/custom-errors/