StarkNet/Cairo development toolbelt
Project description
OpenZeppelin Nile ⛵
Navigate your StarkNet projects written in Cairo.
Getting started
Create a folder for your project and cd
into it:
mkdir myproject
cd myproject
Create a virtualenv and activate it:
python3 -m venv env
source env/bin/activate
Install nile
:
pip install cairo-nile
Use nile
to quickly set up your development environment:
nile init
...
✨ Cairo successfully installed!
...
✅ Dependencies successfully installed
🗄 Creating project directory tree
⛵️ Nile project ready! Try running:
This command creates the project directory structure and installs cairo-lang
, starknet-devnet
, pytest
, and pytest-asyncio
for you. The template includes a makefile to build the project (make build
) and run tests (make test
).
Usage
node
Run a local starknet-devnet
node:
nile node
* Serving Flask app 'starknet_devnet.server' (lazy loading)
* Environment: production
WARNING: This is a development server. Do not use it in a production deployment.
Use a production WSGI server instead.
* Debug mode: off
* Running on http://127.0.0.1:5050/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
compile
Compile Cairo contracts. Compilation artifacts are written into the artifacts/
directory.
nile compile # compiles all contracts under contracts/
nile compile --directory my_contracts # compiles all contracts under my_contracts/
nile compile contracts/MyContract.cairo # compiles single contract
nile compile contracts/MyContract.cairo --disable-hint-validation # compiles single contract with unwhitelisted hints
As of cairo-lang v0.8.0, account contracts (contracts with the __execute__
method) must be compiled with the --account_contract
flag. Nile automatically inserts the flag if the contract's name ends with Account
i.e. Account.cairo, EthAccount.cairo. Otherwise, the flag must be included by the user.
nile compile contracts/NewAccountType.cairo --account_contract # compiles account contract
Example output:
$ nile compile
Creating artifacts/abis/ to store compilation artifacts
🤖 Compiling all Cairo contracts in the contracts/ directory
🔨 Compiling contracts/Account.cairo
🔨 Compiling contracts/Initializable.cairo
🔨 Compiling contracts/Ownable.cairo
✅ Done
deploy
nile deploy contract --alias my_contract
🚀 Deploying contract
🌕 artifacts/contract.json successfully deployed to 0x07ec10eb0758f7b1bc5aed0d5b4d30db0ab3c087eba85d60858be46c1a5e4680
📦 Registering deployment as my_contract in localhost.deployments.txt
A few things to notice here:
nile deploy <contract_name>
looks for an artifact with the same name- This created a
localhost.deployments.txt
file storing all data related to my deployment - The
--alias
parameter lets me create an unique identifier for future interactions, if no alias is set then the contract's address can be used as identifier - By default Nile works on local, but you can use the
--network
parameter to interact withmainnet
,goerli
, and the defaultlocalhost
.
declare
nile declare contract --alias my_contract
🚀 Declaring contract
⏳ Declaration of contract successfully sent at 0x07ec10eb0758f7b1bc5aed0d5b4d30db0ab3c087eba85d60858be46c1a5e4680
📦 Registering declaration as my_contract in localhost.declarations.txt
A few things to notice here:
nile declare <contract_name>
looks for an artifact with the same name- This created a
localhost.declarations.txt
file storing all data related to my declarations - The
--alias
parameter lets me create an unique identifier for future interactions, if no alias is set then the contract's address can be used as identifier - By default Nile works on local, but you can use the
--network
parameter to interact withmainnet
,goerli
, and the defaultlocalhost
.
setup
Deploy an Account associated with a given private key.
To avoid accidentally leaking private keys, this command takes an alias instead of the actual private key. This alias is associated with an environmental variable of the same name, whose value is the actual private key.
You can find an example .env
file in example.env
. These are private keys only to be used for testing and never in production.
nile setup <private_key_alias>
🚀 Deploying Account
🌕 artifacts/Account.json successfully deployed to 0x07db6b52c8ab888183277bc6411c400136fe566c0eebfb96fffa559b2e60e794
📦 Registering deployment as account-0 in localhost.deployments.txt
Invoke transaction was sent.
Contract address: 0x07db6b52c8ab888183277bc6411c400136fe566c0eebfb96fffa559b2e60e794
Transaction hash: 0x17
A few things to notice here:
nile setup <private_key_alias>
looks for an environment variable with the name of the private key alias- This creates a
localhost.accounts.json
file storing all data related to accounts management
send
Execute a transaction through the Account
associated with the private key provided. The syntax is:
nile send <private_key_alias> <contract_identifier> <method> [PARAM_1, PARAM2...]
For example:
nile send <private_key_alias> ownable0 transfer_ownership 0x07db6...60e794
Invoke transaction was sent.
Contract address: 0x07db6b52c8ab888183277bc6411c400136fe566c0eebfb96fffa559b2e60e794
Transaction hash: 0x1c
Some things to note:
max_fee
defaults to0
. Add--max_fee <max_fee>
to set the maximum fee for the transactionnetwork
defaults to thelocalhost
. Add--network <network>
to change the network for the transaction
call
and invoke
Using call
and invoke
, we can perform read and write operations against our local node (or public one using the --network mainnet
parameter). The syntax is:
nile <command> <contract_identifier> <method> [PARAM_1, PARAM2...]
Where <command>
is either call
or invoke
and <contract_identifier>
is either our contract address or alias, as defined on deploy
.
nile invoke my_contract increase_balance 1
Invoke transaction was sent.
Contract address: 0x07ec10eb0758f7b1bc5aed0d5b4d30db0ab3c087eba85d60858be46c1a5e4680
Transaction hash: 0x1
nile call my_contract get_balance
1
Please note:
network
defaults to thelocalhost
. Add--network <network>
to change the network for the transaction
run
Execute a script in the context of Nile. The script must implement a run(nre)
function to receive a NileRuntimeEnvironment
object exposing Nile's scripting API.
# path/to/script.py
def run(nre):
address, abi = nre.deploy("contract", alias="my_contract")
print(abi, address)
Then run the script:
nile run path/to/script.py
Please note:
localhost
is the default network. Add--network <network>
to change the network for the script
get_declaration
(NRE only)
Return the hash of a declared class. This can be useful in scenarios where a contract class is already declared with an alias prior to running a script.
def run(nre):
predeclared_class = nre.get_declaration("alias")
Note that this command is only available in the context of scripting in the Nile Runtime Environment.
clean
Deletes the artifacts/
directory for a fresh start ❄️
nile clean
🚮 Deleting localhost.deployments.txt
🚮 Deleting artifacts directory
✨ Workspace clean, keep going!
install
Install the latest version of the Cairo language and the starknet-devnet local node.
nile install
version
Print out the Nile version
nile version
debug
Use locally available contracts to make error messages from rejected transactions more explicit.
nile debug <transaction_hash> [CONTRACTS_FILE, NETWORK]
For example, this transaction returns the very cryptic error message:
An ASSERT_EQ instruction failed: 0 != 1.
starknet tx_status \
--hash 0x57d2d844923f9fe5ef54ed7084df61f926b9a2a24eb5d7e46c8f6dbcd4baafe \
--error_message
[...]
Error in the called contract (0x5bf05eece944b360ff0098eb9288e49bd0007e5a9ed80aefcb740e680e67ea4):
Error at pc=0:1360:
An ASSERT_EQ instruction failed: 0 != 1.
Cairo traceback (most recent call last):
Unknown location (pc=0:1384)
Unknown location (pc=0:1369)
This can be made more explicit with:
nile debug 0x57d2d844923f9fe5ef54ed7084df61f926b9a2a24eb5d7e46c8f6dbcd4baafe
⏳ Querying the network to check transaction status and identify contracts...
🧾 Found contracts: ['0x05bf05eece944b360ff0098eb9288e49bd0007e5a9ed80aefcb740e680e67ea4:artifacts/Evaluator.json']
⏳ Querying the network with contracts...
🧾 Error message:
[...]
Error in the called contract (0x5bf05eece944b360ff0098eb9288e49bd0007e5a9ed80aefcb740e680e67ea4):
[path_to_file]:179:5: Error at pc=0:1360:
assert permission = 1
^*******************^
An ASSERT_EQ instruction failed: 0 != 1.
Cairo traceback (most recent call last):
[path_to_file]:184:6
func set_teacher{
^*********^
[path_to_file]:189:5
only_teacher()
^************^
In case of pending transaction states, the command will offer to continue probing the network unless it is terminated prematurely. This example also shows how accepted transactions are handled.
⏳ Querying the network to check transaction status and identify contracts...
🕒 Transaction status: NOT_RECEIVED. Trying again in a moment...
🕒 Transaction status: RECEIVED. Trying again in a moment...
🕒 Transaction status: PENDING. Trying again in a moment...
✅ Transaction status: ACCEPTED_ON_L2. No error in transaction.
Finally, the command will use the local network.deployments.txt
files to fetch the available contracts.
However, it is also possible to override this by passing a CONTRACTS_FILE
argument, formatted as:
CONTRACT_ADDRESS1:PATH_TO_COMPILED_CONTRACT1.json
CONTRACT_ADDRESS2:PATH_TO_COMPILED_CONTRACT2.json
...
Extending Nile with plugins
Nile has the possibility of extending its CLI and NileRuntimeEnvironment
functionalities through plugins. For developing plugins for Nile fork this plugin example boilerplate and implement your desired functionality with the provided instructions.
How it works
This implementation takes advantage of the native extensibility features of click. Using click and leveraging the Python entrypoints we have a simple manner of handling extension natively on Python environments through dependencies. The plugin implementation on Nile looks for specific Python entrypoints constraints for adding commands.
In order for this implementation to be functional, it is needed by the plugin developer to follow some development guidelines defined in this simple plugin example extending Nile for a dummy greet extension. In a brief explanation the guidelines are as follows:
-
Define a Python module that implement a click command or group:
# First, import click dependency import click # Decorate the method that will be the command name with `click.command` @click.command() # You can define custom parameters as defined in `click`: https://click.palletsprojects.com/en/7.x/options/ def my_command(): # Help message to show with the command """ Subcommand plugin that does something. """ # Done! Now implement your custom functionality in the command click.echo("I'm a plugin overiding a command!")
-
Define the plugin entrypoint. In this case using Poetry features in the pyproject.toml file:
# We need to specify that click commands are Poetry entrypoints of type `nile_plugins`. Do not modify this [tool.poetry.plugins."nile_plugins"] # Here you specify you command name and location <command_name> = <package_method_location> "greet" = "nile_greet.main.greet"
-
Done!
How to decide if I want to use a plugin or not? Just install / uninstall the plugin dependency from your project :smile:
Finally, after the desired plugin is installed, it will also be automatically available through the nre
. The plugin developer should be aware of this and design the interface accordingly.
Hacking on Nile
Nile uses tox to manage development tasks, you can get a list of
available task with tox -av
.
- Install a development version of the package with
python -m pip install .
- Build the package with
tox -e build
- Format all files with
tox -e format
- Check files formatting with
tox -e lint
Testing
To run tests:
- Install testing dependencies with
python -m pip install .[testing]
- Run all tests with
tox
- Run unit tests only with
tox -e unit
- To run a specific set of tests, point to a module and/or function, e.g.
tox tests/test_module.py::test_function
- Other
pytest
flags must be preceded by--
, e.g.tox -- --pdb
to runtests in debug mode
License
Nile is released under the MIT License.
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