Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
168 lines (121 loc) · 3.81 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

168 lines (121 loc) · 3.81 KB

Chainsauce 💃

General-purpose Ethereum blockchain indexing library.


main check

Chainsauce is a general-purpose Ethereum indexer that sources contract events from a JSON-RPC endpoint.

Installation

$ npm install boudra/chainsauce#main

Basic usage

import { createIndexer, createHttpRpcClient } from "chainsauce";
import { erc20ABI } from "./erc20ABI.ts";

// -- Define contracts
const MyContracts = {
  ERC20: erc20ABI,
};

// -- Create an indexer:

const indexer = createIndexer({
  chain: {
    id: 1,
    rpcClient: createHttpRpcClient({
      url: "https://mainnet.infura.io/v3/...",
    }),
  },
  contracts: MyContracts,
});

// -- Attach event listeners:

// subscribe to a specific event
indexer.on("ERC20:Approval", async ({ event }) => {
  console.log("Approval event:", event.params);
});

// subscribe to all events
indexer.on("event", async ({ event }) => {
  console.log("Event:", event.params);
});

// -- Subscribe to deployed contracts:

indexer.subscribeToContract({
  contract: "ERC20",
  address: "0xa0b86991c6218b36c1d19d4a2e9eb0ce3606eb48",

  // optional
  fromBlock: 18363594n,
  toBlock: "latest"
});

// -- One off indexing:

// one off indexing, this will resolve when finished or reject if any error happens
await indexer.indexToBlock("latest");

// -- Continous indexing:

// indexes to the latest block and watches the chain for new events
// until stopped with `indexer.stop()`
// errors will be emitted and will not stop indexing
indexer.on("error", (error) => {
   console.error("whoops", error);
});
indexer.watch();

Event handler types

Event handlers should be automatically inferred when used like this:

indexer.on("ERC20:Approval", async ({ event, context }) => {
  // event is inferred to be an Approval event
  // context is inferred to be the context passed into `createIndexer`
});

But if you need to split out event handler function to other files, you can type them like this;

import { Indexer as ChainsauceIndexer } from "chainsauce";

type MyContext = {
  db: DatabaseConnection
};

const MyContracts = {
  ERC20: erc20ABI,
};

type Indexer = ChainsauceIndexer<typeof MyContracts, MyContext>;

const indexer: Indexer = createIndexer({
   ...
   context: { db: new DatabaseConnection() }
});

async function handleTransfer({
  event, context: { db }
}: EventHandlerArgs<Indexer, "ERC20", "Transfer">) {
  // event is a Transfer event
  // context is a MyContext type
}

indexer.on("ERC20:Transfer", handleTransfer);

How to define ABIs

ABIs in Chainsauce are of type type Abi in abitype.

ABIs must be defined in Typescript if you want automatic typing of events and contract reads, make sure you cast ABIs as const:

const myAbi = [
  ...
] as const;

Factory Contracts

You can subscribe to new deployed contracts in your event handlers by using the function subscribeToContract:

indexer.on("FactoryContract:ContractCreated", async ({ event, context, subscribeToContract }) => {
  subscribeToContract({
    contract: "MyContract",
    address: event.params.contractAddress,

    // optional
    toBlock: "latest"
  });
});

Caching events and contract reads

Chainsauce comes with a cache to speed up reindexing, all you have to do is pass a cache when creating the indexer.

Currently only a SQLite version is available, but other options are planned.

import { createIndexer, createSqliteCache } from "chainsauce";

const indexer = createIndexer({
  cache: createSqliteCache("./chainsauce.db"),
});

Complete examples