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 >= 0.2.5 & < 0.3.0" ``` 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: ``` 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() ``` 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