Learning from Cyfrin Solidity Course. If you also want to learn, got to:
- Foundry Fund Me
- Getting Started
- Usage
- Deployment to a testnet or mainnet
- Formatting
- Additional Info:
- Thank you!
- git
- You'll know you did it right if you can run
git --version
and you see a response likegit version x.x.x
- You'll know you did it right if you can run
- foundry
- You'll know you did it right if you can run
forge --version
and you see a response likeforge 0.2.0 (816e00b 2023-03-16T00:05:26.396218Z)
- You'll know you did it right if you can run
git clone https://github.com/Cyfrin/foundry-fund-me-cu
cd foundry-fund-me-cu
make
If you can't or don't want to run and install locally, you can work with this repo in Gitpod. If you do this, you can skip the clone this repo
part.
forge script script/DeployFundMe.s.sol
We talk about 4 test tiers in the video.
- Unit
- Integration
- Forked
- Staging
This repo we cover #1 and #3.
forge test
or
// Only run test functions matching the specified regex pattern.
"forge test -m testFunctionName" is deprecated. Please use
forge test --match-test testFunctionName
or
forge test --fork-url $SEPOLIA_RPC_URL
forge coverage
The instructions here will allow you to work with this repo on zkSync.
In addition to the requirements above, you'll need:
- foundry-zksync
- You'll know you did it right if you can run
forge --version
and you see a response likeforge 0.0.2 (816e00b 2023-03-16T00:05:26.396218Z)
.
- You'll know you did it right if you can run
- npx & npm
- You'll know you did it right if you can run
npm --version
and you see a response like7.24.0
andnpx --version
and you see a response like8.1.0
.
- You'll know you did it right if you can run
- docker
- You'll know you did it right if you can run
docker --version
and you see a response likeDocker version 20.10.7, build f0df350
. - Then, you'll want the daemon running, you'll know it's running if you can run
docker --info
and in the output you'll see something like the following to know it's running:
- You'll know you did it right if you can run
Client:
Context: default
Debug Mode: false
Run the following:
npx zksync-cli dev config
And select: In memory node
and do not select any additional modules.
Then run:
npx zksync-cli dev start
And you'll get an output like:
In memory node started v0.1.0-alpha.22:
- zkSync Node (L2):
- Chain ID: 260
- RPC URL: http://127.0.0.1:8011
- Rich accounts: https://era.zksync.io/docs/tools/testing/era-test-node.html#use-pre-configured-rich-wallets
make deploy-zk
This will deploy a mock price feed and a fund me contract to the zkSync node.
- Setup environment variables
You'll want to set your SEPOLIA_RPC_URL
and PRIVATE_KEY
as environment variables. You can add them to a .env
file, similar to what you see in .env.example
.
PRIVATE_KEY
: The private key of your account (like from metamask). NOTE: FOR DEVELOPMENT, PLEASE USE A KEY THAT DOESN'T HAVE ANY REAL FUNDS ASSOCIATED WITH IT.- You can learn how to export it here.
SEPOLIA_RPC_URL
: This is url of the sepolia testnet node you're working with. You can get setup with one for free from Alchemy
Optionally, add your ETHERSCAN_API_KEY
if you want to verify your contract on Etherscan.
- Get testnet ETH
Head over to faucets.chain.link and get some testnet ETH. You should see the ETH show up in your metamask.
- Deploy
forge script script/DeployFundMe.s.sol --rpc-url $SEPOLIA_RPC_URL --private-key $PRIVATE_KEY --broadcast --verify --etherscan-api-key $ETHERSCAN_API_KEY
After deploying to a testnet or local net, you can run the scripts.
Using cast deployed locally example:
cast send <FUNDME_CONTRACT_ADDRESS> "fund()" --value 0.1ether --private-key <PRIVATE_KEY>
or
forge script script/Interactions.s.sol:FundFundMe --rpc-url sepolia --private-key $PRIVATE_KEY --broadcast
forge script script/Interactions.s.sol:WithdrawFundMe --rpc-url sepolia --private-key $PRIVATE_KEY --broadcast
cast send <FUNDME_CONTRACT_ADDRESS> "withdraw()" --private-key <PRIVATE_KEY>
You can estimate how much gas things cost by running:
forge snapshot
And you'll see an output file called .gas-snapshot
To run code formatting:
forge fmt
Some users were having a confusion that whether Chainlink-brownie-contracts is an official Chainlink repository or not. Here is the info.
Chainlink-brownie-contracts is an official repo. The repository is owned and maintained by the chainlink team for this very purpose, and gets releases from the proper chainlink release process. You can see it's still the smartcontractkit
org as well.
https://github.com/smartcontractkit/chainlink-brownie-contracts
The "official" release process is that chainlink deploys it's packages to npm. So technically, even downloading directly from smartcontractkit/chainlink
is wrong, because it could be using unreleased code.
So, then you have two options:
- Download from NPM and have your codebase have dependencies foreign to foundry
- Download from the chainlink-brownie-contracts repo which already downloads from npm and then packages it nicely for you to use in foundry.
- That is an official repo maintained by the same org
- It downloads from the official release cycle
chainlink/contracts
use (npm) and packages it nicely for digestion from foundry.
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