Web3 Solidity Connector

Overview

Web3 Solidity Connector

With this project, you can compile your sol files and create new transactions including creating contract and calling the state changer functions. You can integrate integrate your sol files with Python and you can call functions with using Python.

Program Life Cycle

  1. Compile the Solidity(.sol) file
  2. Deploy the contract which is in Solidity file
  3. Manipulate the main.py file for calling and executing relevant functions in contract even with parameters via the help of Web3

Folder Structure

To assure the program is working, there are folder structure rules to follow.

  1. This projects points to sol_files folder for your Solidity files. This means sol_files folder must contain your .sol extensioned files. You should select one of the sol file in this directory to be compiled.

  2. After you execute compile.py, "compilation_files_out" folder will be created which contains your output files. "compiled_abi.json" and "compiled_bytecode.txt" files should not be deleted or overwritten! You can examine your compiled code in "compiled_code.json" file.

  3. global_variables.py file contains your default paths for compilation files and the sol files that will be compiled. You can change this structure any way you want.

GLOBAL_COMPILATION_PATH = "./compilation_files_out"  # folder that contains output files
GLOBAL_SOL_PATH = "./sol_files"  # folder that contains sol file

Running the Program

  1. Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/TekyaygilFethi/ContractDeploment.git
  1. Create an .env file on current folder that contains your address(with MY_ADDRESS key), private key(with PRIVATE_KEY key), rinkeby rpc url(with RINKEBY_RPC_URL key) and chain id(with CHAIN_ID key) values. Your .env file should look like this:
PRIVATE_KEY ="0x{YOUR PRIVATE KEY}"
RINKEBY_RPC_URL = "{YOUR RINKEBY RPC URL}"
MY_ADDRESS = "{YOUR ADDRESS}"
CHAIN_ID = "{YOUR CHAIN ID}"
  1. Install the dependencies from requirements.txt file.
pip install -r requirements.txt
  1. After setting the .env file, to run the program, you first need to go to the project directory and run:
python compile.py {YOUR_SOL_FILE} // python compile.py SimpleContract.sol

! Please note that your sol files must be in the folder sol_files folder by default or in the folder you specified custom in global_variables.py file by assigning to GLOBAL_SOL_PATH.

  1. After compilation you should see screen like this:
Compilation folder created!
Compiled successfully!
  1. When you check your folders, you can see compilation_files_out folder is created. If you changed the folder path and name from global_variables you may see different folder. This folder be based on when deploying your contracts and running your Solidity functions!

  2. For next step, you must deploy your compiled contract. To do this, you must run:

python deploy.py

This command will creates a transaction for contract creation based on your compiled Solidity file. This command will output the success message, transaction receipt and contract address. To use this deployed contract and it's functions, you must copy the address of this deployed contract. You should see response like this (Please note that receipt and address may differ)

New Contract Transaction has been created!

AttributeDict({'transactionHash': HexBytes('0x19f1237cd0bf13bf1112f7e60b9dd7570dcca38c18718368e09c462e01482272'), 'transactionIndex': 0, 'blockHash': HexBytes('0xa47912b38dec2fdecfed283da5fd6a7d778def3f62bc2c629373903cbd5f59bc'), 'blockNumber': 34, 'from': '0x2DAc2487DD401D9E5C757eb03B8928b70FFaFe6e', 'to': None, 'gasUsed': 640222, 'cumulativeGasUsed': 640222, 'contractAddress': '0x874E06Aff5a1031Bd5AE07100A7A518D0C72b8E2', 'logs': [], 'status': 1, 'logsBloom': HexBytes('0x00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000')})

Contract Address: 0x874E06Aff5a1031Bd5AE07100A7A518D0C72b8E2 //This address you should copy.
  1. Edit your main.py content according to your functions. For example, I have addHero function in my compiled Solidity:
struct Hero {
    string name;
    string lightsaberColor;
    uint256 age;
}

Hero[] heroes;

function addHero(
        string memory _name,
        string memory _lightsaberColor,
        uint256 _age
    ) public {
        heroes.push(Hero(_name, _lightsaberColor, _age));
        uint256 idx = heroes.length - 1;
        nameToIndex[_name] = idx;
    }

You can call this function from my main.py file with parameters like this:

# write functions with their parameters if any after this line inside of executeContractFunction method.
contractOps.executeContractFunction(
    # write your contract functions as contract.functions.{your function}, your private key
    contract.functions.addHero("Obi-Wan Kenobi", "Blue", 29),
    private_key,
)

Here, contractOps is an object that allows you to perform contract operations such as creating, deploying, gathering contracts or executing a function inside a contract. And executeContractFunction is a special function that allow you to execute a functions. It creates, signs, sends and gets the receipt for transaction automatically.

  • If you have a function that is not changing a state in Solidity file you also can call it. For example here's the function that is not changing state in my Solidity file:
function getInfoByName(string memory name)
        public
        view
        returns (Hero memory)
    {
        uint256 idx = nameToIndex[name];
        return heroes[idx];
    }

function getAllHeroes() public view returns (Hero[] memory) {
        return heroes;
    }

You can call the getAllHeroes function like this:

print(contract.functions.getAllHeroes().call())

You can call the getInfoByName function which takes parameter like this:

print(contract.functions.getInfoByName("Obi-Wan Kenobi").call())

Please note that we had to use .call() at the end of the function call to gather response and make the function call.

  1. To run main.py file, you need to supply contract address. You should use the contracty address you copied at Step 6.
python main.py {ContractAddress}

Here is an example:

python main.py 0x874E06Aff5a1031Bd5AE07100A7A518D0C72b8E2

And you can see the results when you execute this command: Result

And you're done! Congratulations!

Owner
Fethi Tekyaygil
.NET Core Backend & @google Certified #tensorflow Developer - Flutter & Solidity #padawan - Animal Person
Fethi Tekyaygil
An OBS script to fuze files together

OBS TEXT FUZE Fuze text files and inject the output into a text source. The Index file directory should be a list of file directorys for the text file

SuperZooper3 1 Dec 27, 2021
Registro Online (100% Python-Mysql)

Registro elettronico scritto in python, utilizzando database Mysql e Collegando Registro elettronico scritto in PHP

Sergiy Grimoldi 1 Dec 20, 2021
The only purpose of a byte-sized application is to help you create .desktop entry files for downloaded applications.

Turtle 🐢 The only purpose of a byte-sized application is to help you create .desktop entry files for downloaded applications. As of usual with elemen

TenderOwl 14 Dec 29, 2022
Mixtaper - Web app to make mixtapes

Mixtaper A web app which allows you to input songs in the form of youtube links

suryansh 1 Feb 14, 2022
Tools to convert SQLAlchemy models to Pydantic models

Pydantic-SQLAlchemy Tools to generate Pydantic models from SQLAlchemy models. Still experimental. How to use Quick example: from typing import List f

Sebastián Ramírez 893 Dec 29, 2022
CPython extension implementing Shared Transactional Memory with native-looking interface

CPython extension implementing Shared Transactional Memory with native-looking interface

21 Jul 22, 2022
Curses frontend for Canto daemon

Canto Curses The curses (text) client for canto-daemon. Canto-daemon is required to work and is found at: http://github.com/themoken/canto-next Requir

Jack Miller 86 Dec 28, 2022
A tool for checking if the external data used in Flatpak manifests is still up to date

Flatpak External Data Checker This is a tool for checking for outdated or broken links of external data in Flatpak manifests. Motivation Flatpak apps

Flathub 76 Dec 24, 2022
Runs macOS on linux with qemu.

mac-on-linux-with-qemu Runs macOS on linux with qemu. Pre-requisites qemu-system-x86_64 dmg2img pulseaudio python[click] Usage After cloning the repos

Arindam Das 177 Dec 26, 2022
Prints values and types during compilation!

Compile-Time Printer Compile-Time Printer prints values and types at compile-time in C++. Teaser test.cpp compile-time-printer

43 Dec 26, 2022
Tracking stock volatility.

SP500-highlow-tracking Track stock volatility. Being a useful indicator of the stock price volatility, High-Low gap represents the price range of the

Thong Huynh 13 Sep 07, 2022
A python script providing an idea of how a MindSphere application, e.g., a dashboard, can be displayed around the clock without the need of manual re-authentication on enforced session expiration

A python script providing an idea of how a MindSphere application, e.g., a dashboard, can be displayed around the clock without the need of manual re-authentication on enforced session expiration

MindSphere 3 Jun 03, 2022
Qt-creator-boost-debugging-helper - Qt Creator Debugging Helper for Boost Library

Go to Tools Options Debugger Locals & Expressions. Paste the script path t

Dmitry Bravikov 2 Apr 22, 2022
Writeup of NilbinSec's participation in the Winja CTF for c0c0n 2021

Winja-CTF-c0c0n-2021-Writeup NilbinSec's participation in the Winja CTF for c0c0n 2021 This repo covers NilbinSec's participation in the Winja CTF dur

1 Nov 15, 2021
SuperMario - Python programming class ending assignment SuperMario, using pygame

SuperMario - Python programming class ending assignment SuperMario, using pygame

mars 2 Jan 04, 2022
A Python application that simulates the rolling of a dice, randomly picking one of the 6 faces and then displaying it.

dice-roller-app This is an application developed in Python that shuffles between the 6 faces of a dice, using buttons to shuffle and close the applica

Paddy Costelloe 0 Jul 20, 2021
A free micro-blog written in Python and powered by Heroku. *Merge requests are appreciated!*

Background Hobo is an ultra-lightweight blog engine written in Python. It has two dependencies, fully integrated into the codebase with no additional

Andrew Nelder 48 Jan 28, 2021
A type based dependency injection framework for Python 3.9+

Alluka A type based dependency injection framework for Python 3.9+. Installation You can install Alluka from PyPI using the following command in any P

Lucina 16 Dec 15, 2022
Zotero references script (and app)

A little script (and PyInstaller build) for a very specific, somewhat hack-ish purpose: managing and exporting project references with Zotero and its API.

Marius Rödder 0 Dec 05, 2021
Import modules and files straight from URLs.

Import Python code from modules straight from the internet.

Nate 2 Jan 15, 2022