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Ape SDK for the Silverback platform

Project description

Quick Start

Silverback lets you create and deploy your own Python bots that respond to on-chain events. The Silverback library leverages the Ape development framework as well as it's ecosystem of plugins and packages to enable you to develop simple-yet-sophisticated automated applications that can listen and respond to live chain data.

Silverback applications are excellent for use cases that involve continuously monitoring and responding to on-chain events, such as newly confirmed blocks or contract event logs.

Some examples of these types of applications:

  • Monitoring new pool creations, and depositing liquidity
  • Measuring trading activity of popular pools
  • Listening for large swaps to update a telegram group

Documentation

Please read the development userguide for more information on how to develop an application.

Dependencies

  • python3 version 3.10 or greater, python3-dev

Installation

Silverback relies heavily on the Ape development framework, so it's worth it to familarize yourself with how to install Ape and it's plugins using the Ape installation userguide.

It is suggested that you use a virtual environment of your choosing, and then install the Silverback package via one of the following options.

via pip

You can install the latest release via pip:

pip install silverback

via setuptools

You can clone the repository and use setuptools for the most up-to-date version:

git clone https://github.com/ApeWorX/silverback.git silverback
cd silverback
python3 setup.py install

Quick Usage

Checkout the example to see how to use the library.

The example makes use of the [Ape Tokens](https://github.com/ApeWorX/ape-tokens) plugin.
Be sure to properly configure your environment for the USDC and YFI tokens on Ethereum mainnet.

To run your bot against a live network, this SDK includes a simple runner command you can use via:

$ silverback run "example:app" --network :mainnet:alchemy
This runner uses an in-memory task broker by default.
If you want to learn more about what that means, please visit the [development userguide](https://docs.apeworx.io/silverback/stable/userguides/development.html).

Docker Usage

$ docker run --volume $PWD:/home/harambe/project --volume ~/.tokenlists:/home/harambe/.tokenlists apeworx/silverback:latest run "example:app" --network :mainnet
The Docker image we publish uses Python 3.11.

Setting Up Your Environment

Running the Quick Usage and Docker Usage with the provided example will fail if you do not have a fully-configured environment. Most common issues when using the SDK stem from the proper configuration of Ape plugins to unlock the behavior you desire.

You should use a provider that supports websockets to run silverback. If you want to use a hosted provider with websocket support like Alchemy to run this example, you will need a Alchemy API key for Ethereum mainnet. If you attempt to run the Docker Usage command without supplying this key, you will get the following error:

$ docker run --volume $PWD:/home/harambe/project --volume ~/.tokenlists:/home/harambe/.tokenlists apeworx/silverback:latest run "example:app" --network :mainnet:alchemy
Traceback (most recent call last):
  ...
ape_alchemy.exceptions.MissingProjectKeyError: Must set one of $WEB3_ALCHEMY_PROJECT_ID, $WEB3_ALCHEMY_API_KEY, $WEB3_ETHEREUM_MAINNET_ALCHEMY_PROJECT_ID, $WEB3_ETHEREUM_MAINNET_ALCHEMY_API_KEY.

Go to Alchemy, create an account, then create an application in their dashboard, and copy the API Key.

Another requirement for the command from Docker Usage to run the given example is that it uses ape-tokens plugin to look up token interfaces by symbol. In order for this to work, you should have installed and configured that plugin using a token list that includes both YFI and USDC on Ethereum mainnet. Doing this will give you a ~/.tokenlists hidden folder in your home folder that you must mount into the docker container with the following flag:

... --volume ~/.tokenlists:/home/harambe/.tokenlists ...
It is suggested to install the 1inch tokenlist via `ape tokens install tokens.1inch.eth`.
See the [ape-tokens](https://github.com/ApeWorX/ape-tokens?tab=readme-ov-file#quick-usage) README for more information.

To check that both of the tokens exist in your configured tokenlist, you can execute this command:

$ ape tokens token-info YFI
      Symbol: YFI
        Name: yearn.finance
    Chain ID: 1
     Address: 0x0bc529c00C6401aEF6D220BE8C6Ea1667F6Ad93e
    Decimals: 18

$ ape tokens token-info USDC
      Symbol: USDC
        Name: Circle USD
    Chain ID: 1
     Address: 0xA0b86991c6218b36c1d19D4a2e9Eb0cE3606eB48
    Decimals: 6
If you want, you can comment out the two functions `exec_event1` and `exec_event2` that handle the contract log events from these contracts if you do not have the configured tokenlist, then your command should work.

Development

This project is under active development in preparation of the release of the Silverback Platform. Things might not be in their final state and breaking changes may occur. Comments, questions, criticisms and pull requests are welcomed.

See Contributing for more information.

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