Contract-cli is your configurable build tool for smart contracts. It makes management of your smart contracts, including compiling and testing easier and more consistent. With the contract-cli, you can:
- configure a series of steps to execute against your smart contracts
- create your own steps, or use provided defaults for common operations
- execute your steps serially in a docker container and have the outputs available locally
Before installing the contract-cli, the following requirements should be installed:
- Docker Engine > version 20.10.8
- NodeJS > version 16.16.0
Earlier versions may work but have not been tested and are not considered officially supported.
$ npm i -g @circle-fin/contract-cli
Note: We use the -g
flag for global installation here to enable operation from the command line.
In the root directory of your contracts and/or contract tests, run:
$ contract-cli init
If there are specific build steps you would like to include, you can specify those with the --steps
flag. For example:
$ contract-cli init –steps ganache –steps truffle
This will create your config file, and directories for each step you’ve created.
Your directory may now look something like the following:
$ root_directory
├── contracts
├── tests
├── ganache
│ ├── package.json
│ ├── install.sh
│ └── execute.sh
├── truffle
│ ├── package.json
│ ├── yarn.lock
│ ├── truffle-config.js
│ ├── install.sh
│ └── execute.sh
└── config.json
At this time, you should read through and edit where necessary the config.json
file. In particular, you may want to update the contractsRoot
and testsRoot
to locate your contracts and tests.
You may also want to look at the install.sh
and execute.sh
files in each step directory. Those specify how the step will be installed and/or executed.
If the step is known to the contract-cli, it will come with some defaults that you can review. If the step is unknown, you must provide custom installation and execution scripts.
Once you’ve reviewed the configuration, you can execute the cli which will run your build steps inside a container.
$ contract-cli execute
We welcome pull requests adding new functionality to the CLI, or adding additional modules as steps. To get started, fork the repo, clone it locally and follow the directions below.
If you are interested in adding a new module as a known step for the contract-cli, additional information is available in ADD_STEP_README
- Make sure nvm is installed:
nvm ls
and you are using the correct version:nvm use
.- Please see here for installation instructions.
- Install dependencies
yarn install
- Build the project
yarn build
- Rebuild the project to pick up any changes with
yarn build
- Run the CLI using
./bin/run <cmd_name>
e.g../bin/run help
- If the cmd_name is omitted, information will be displayed about commands the CLI understands
- To run tests:
yarn test
- With coverage output:
yarn test:cov
- Run a specific test:
yarn test {testFileName}
The project uses eslint for code linting and prettier for formatting. To easily work with these tools in VSCode, please install the recommended extensions for the project.
- To view/install these extensions, press
CMD+SHIFT+P
and type:Extensions: Show Recommended Extensions
. - This will enable code error/warning highlighting and format on saves.
- The linter can be run manually with
yarn lint
and can auto-fix problems withyarn lint:fix
. - The linter will be automatically run on
git push
commands. This can be bypassed with theno-verify
flag.
If you’re energized by what we’re building at Circle, please consider joining our team by exploring Careers @ Circle.