@yqrashawn/solc

Solidity compiler

Usage no npm install needed!

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README

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solc-js

JavaScript bindings for the Solidity compiler.

Uses the Emscripten compiled Solidity found in the solc-bin repository.

Node.js Usage

To use the latest stable version of the Solidity compiler via Node.js you can install it via npm:

npm install solc

Usage on the Command-Line

If this package is installed globally (npm install -g solc), a command-line tool called solcjs will be available.

To see all the supported features, execute:

solcjs --help

To compile a contract that imports other contracts via relative paths:

solcjs --bin --base-path . ./MainContract.sol

The option --base-path enables automatic loading of imports from the filesystem and takes a path as argument that contains the source files.

Note: this commandline interface is not compatible with solc provided by the Solidity compiler package and thus cannot be used in combination with an Ethereum client via the eth.compile.solidity() RPC method. Please refer to the Solidity compiler documentation for instructions to install solc. Furthermore, the commandline interface to solc-js provides fewer features than the binary release.

Usage in Projects

There are two ways to use solc:

  1. Through a high-level API giving a uniform interface to all compiler versions
  2. Through a low-level API giving access to all the compiler interfaces, which depend on the version of the compiler

High-level API

The high-level API consists of a single method, compile, which expects the Compiler Standard Input and Output JSON.

It also accepts an optional set of callback functions, which include the import and the smtSolver callbacks. Starting 0.6.0 it only accepts an object in place of the callback to supply the callbacks.

The import callback function is used to resolve unmet dependencies. This callback receives a path and must synchronously return either an error or the content of the dependency as a string. It cannot be used together with callback-based, asynchronous, filesystem access. A workaround is to collect the names of dependencies, return an error, and keep re-running the compiler until all of them are resolved.

Example usage without the import callback

Example:

var solc = require('solc');

var input = {
  language: 'Solidity',
  sources: {
    'test.sol': {
      content: 'contract C { function f() public { } }'
    }
  },
  settings: {
    outputSelection: {
      '*': {
        '*': ['*']
      }
    }
  }
};

var output = JSON.parse(solc.compile(JSON.stringify(input)));

// `output` here contains the JSON output as specified in the documentation
for (var contractName in output.contracts['test.sol']) {
  console.log(
    contractName +
      ': ' +
      output.contracts['test.sol'][contractName].evm.bytecode.object
  );
}

Example usage with import callback

var solc = require('solc');

var input = {
  language: 'Solidity',
  sources: {
    'test.sol': {
      content: 'import "lib.sol"; contract C { function f() public { L.f(); } }'
    }
  },
  settings: {
    outputSelection: {
      '*': {
        '*': ['*']
      }
    }
  }
};

function findImports(path) {
  if (path === 'lib.sol')
    return {
      contents:
        'library L { function f() internal returns (uint) { return 7; } }'
    };
  else return { error: 'File not found' };
}

// New syntax (supported from 0.5.12, mandatory from 0.6.0)
var output = JSON.parse(
  solc.compile(JSON.stringify(input), { import: findImports })
);

// `output` here contains the JSON output as specified in the documentation
for (var contractName in output.contracts['test.sol']) {
  console.log(
    contractName +
      ': ' +
      output.contracts['test.sol'][contractName].evm.bytecode.object
  );
}

The smtSolver callback function is used to solve SMT queries generated by Solidity's SMTChecker. If you have an SMT solver installed locally, it can be used to solve the given queries, where the callback must synchronously return either an error or the result from the solver. A default smtSolver callback is distributed by solc-js, which relies on either Z3 or CVC4 being installed locally.

Example usage with smtSolver callback

var solc = require('solc');
var smt = require('smtsolver');
// Note that this example only works via node and not in the browser.

var input = {
  language: 'Solidity',
  sources: {
    'test.sol': {
      content: 'pragma experimental SMTChecker; contract C { function f(uint x) public { assert(x > 0); } }'
    }
  }
};

var output = JSON.parse(
  solc.compile(JSON.stringify(input), { smtSolver: smt.smtSolver })
);

The assertion is clearly false, and an assertion failure warning should be returned.

Low-level API

The low-level API is as follows:

  • solc.lowlevel.compileSingle: the original entry point, supports only a single file
  • solc.lowlevel.compileMulti: this supports multiple files, introduced in 0.1.6
  • solc.lowlevel.compileCallback: this supports callbacks, introduced in 0.2.1
  • solc.lowlevel.compileStandard: this works just like compile above, but is only present in compilers after (and including) 0.4.11

For examples how to use them, please refer to the README of the above mentioned solc-js releases.

Using with Electron

Note: If you are using Electron, nodeIntegration is on for BrowserWindow by default. If it is on, Electron will provide a require method which will not behave as expected and this may cause calls, such as require('solc'), to fail.

To turn off nodeIntegration, use the following:

new BrowserWindow({
  webPreferences: {
    nodeIntegration: false
  }
});

Using a Legacy Version

In order to compile contracts using a specific version of Solidity, the solc.loadRemoteVersion(version, callback) method is available. This returns a new solc object that uses a version of the compiler specified.

You can also load the "binary" manually and use setupMethods to create the familiar wrapper functions described above: var solc = solc.setupMethods(require("/my/local/soljson.js")).

Using the Latest Development Snapshot

By default, the npm version is only created for releases. This prevents people from deploying contracts with non-release versions because they are less stable and harder to verify. If you would like to use the latest development snapshot (at your own risk!), you may use the following example code.

var solc = require('solc');

// getting the development snapshot
solc.loadRemoteVersion('latest', function(err, solcSnapshot) {
  if (err) {
    // An error was encountered, display and quit
  } else {
    // NOTE: Use `solcSnapshot` here with the same interface `solc` has
  }
});

Linking Bytecode

When using libraries, the resulting bytecode will contain placeholders for the real addresses of the referenced libraries. These have to be updated, via a process called linking, before deploying the contract.

The linker module (require('solc/linker')) offers helpers to accomplish this.

The linkBytecode method provides a simple helper for linking:

var linker = require('solc/linker');

bytecode = linker.linkBytecode(bytecode, { MyLibrary: '0x123456...' });

As of Solidity 0.4.11 the compiler supports standard JSON input and output which outputs a link references map. This gives a map of library names to offsets in the bytecode to replace the addresses at. It also doesn't have the limitation on library file and contract name lengths.

There is a method available in the linker module called findLinkReferences which can find such link references in bytecode produced by an older compiler:

var linker = require('solc/linker');

var linkReferences = linker.findLinkReferences(bytecode);

Updating the ABI

The ABI generated by Solidity versions can differ slightly, due to new features introduced. There is a tool included which aims to translate the ABI generated by an older Solidity version to conform to the latest standard.

It can be used as:

var abi = require('solc/abi');

var inputABI = [
  {
    constant: false,
    inputs: [],
    name: 'hello',
    outputs: [{ name: '', type: 'string' }],
    payable: false,
    type: 'function'
  }
];
var outputABI = abi.update('0.3.6', inputABI);
// Output contains: [{"constant":false,"inputs":[],"name":"hello","outputs":[{"name":"","type":"string"}],"payable":true,"type":"function"},{"type":"fallback","payable":true}]

Formatting old JSON assembly output

There is a helper available to format old JSON assembly output into a text familiar to earlier users of Remix IDE.

var translate = require('solc/translate')

// assemblyJSON refers to the JSON of the given assembly and sourceCode is the source of which the assembly was generated from
var output = translate.prettyPrintLegacyAssemblyJSON(assemblyJSON, sourceCode)

Browser Usage

Add the version of solc you want to use into index.html:

<script
  type="text/javascript"
  src="https://solc-bin.ethereum.org/bin/{{ SOLC VERSION }}.js"
></script>

(Alternatively use https://solc-bin.ethereum.org/bin/soljson-latest.js to get the latests version.)

This will load solc into the global variable window.Module. Then use this inside Javascript as:

var wrapper = require('solc/wrapper');
var solc = wrapper(window.Module);

Or in ES6 syntax:

import * as wrapper from 'solc/wrapper';
const solc = wrapper(window.Module);

Alternatively, to iterate the releases, one can load list.js from solc-bin:

<script
  type="text/javascript"
  src="https://solc-bin.ethereum.org/bin/list.js"
></script>

This will result in two global variables, window.soljsonReleases listing all releases and window.soljsonSources listing all nightly builds and releases.