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0.6.0 Mar 14, 2020
0.4.2 Feb 26, 2020
0.3.9 Dec 19, 2019
0.3.7 Nov 23, 2019
0.1.0 Jul 22, 2019

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near-bindgen

Rust library for writing NEAR smart contracts.

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Features | Pre-requisites | Writing Rust Contract | Building Rust Contract

Example

Wrap a struct in #[near_bindgen] and it generates a smart contract compatible with the NEAR blockchain:

#[near_bindgen]
#[derive(Default, BorshDeserialize, BorshSerialize)]
pub struct StatusMessage {
    records: HashMap<String, String>,
}

#[near_bindgen]
impl StatusMessage {
    pub fn set_status(&mut self, message: String) {
        let account_id = env::signer_account_id();
        self.records.insert(account_id, message);
    }

    pub fn get_status(&self, account_id: String) -> Option<String> {
        self.records.get(&account_id).cloned()
    }
}

Features

  • Unit-testable. Writing unit tests is easy with near-bindgen:

    #[test]
    fn set_get_message() {
        let context = get_context(vec![]);
        testing_env!(context);
        let mut contract = StatusMessage::default();
        contract.set_status("hello".to_string());
        assert_eq!("hello".to_string(), contract.get_status("bob_near".to_string()).unwrap());
    }
    

    Run unit test the usual way:

    cargo test --package status-message
    
  • Asynchronous cross-contract calls. Asynchronous cross-contract calls allow parallel execution of multiple contracts in parallel with subsequent aggregation on another contract. env exposes the following methods:

    • promise_create -- schedules an execution of a function on some contract;
    • promise_then -- attaches the callback back to the current contract once the function is executed;
    • promise_and -- combinator, allows waiting on several promises simultaneously, before executing the callback;
    • promise_return -- treats the result of execution of the promise as the result of the current function.

    Follow examples/cross-contract-high-level to see various usages of cross contract calls, including system-level actions done from inside the contract like balance transfer (examples of other system-level actions are: account creation, access key creation/deletion, contract deployment, etc).

  • Initialization methods. We can define an initialization method that can be used to initialize the state of the contract.

    #[near_bindgen]
    impl StatusMessage {
      #[init]
      pub fn new(user: String, status: String) -> Self {
          let mut res = Self::default();
          res.records.insert(user, status);
          res
      }
    }
    

Even if you have initialization method your smart contract is still expected to derive Default trait. If you don't want to disable default initialization then you can prohibit it like this:

impl Default for StatusMessage {
    fn default() -> Self {
        panic!("Contract should be initialized before the usage.")
    }
}

Pre-requisites

To develop Rust contracts you would need to:

curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh
  • Add wasm target to your toolchain:
rustup target add wasm32-unknown-unknown

Writing Rust Contract

You can follow the examples/status-message crate that shows a simple Rust contract.

The general workflow is the following:

  1. Create a crate and configure the Cargo.toml similarly to how it is configured in examples/status-message/Cargo.toml;

  2. Crate needs to have one pub struct that will represent the smart contract itself:

    • The struct needs to implement Default trait which NEAR will use to create the initial state of the contract upon its first usage;
    • The struct also needs to implement BorshSerialize and BorshDeserialize traits which NEAR will use to save/load contract's internal state;

    Here is an example of a smart contract struct:

    #[near_bindgen]
    #[derive(Default, BorshSerialize, BorshDeserialize)]
    pub struct MyContract {
        data: HashMap<u64, u64>
    }
    
  3. Define methods that NEAR will expose as smart contract methods:

    • You are free to define any methods for the struct but only public methods will be exposed as smart contract methods;
    • Methods need to use either &self, &mut self, or self;
    • Decorate the impl section with #[near_bindgen] macro. That is where all the M.A.G.I.C. (Macros-Auto-Generated Injected Code) is happening
    • If you need to use blockchain interface, e.g. to get the current account id then you can access it with env::*;

    Here is an example of smart contract methods:

    #[near_bindgen]
    impl MyContract {
       pub fn insert_data(&mut self, key: u64, value: u64) -> Option<u64> {
           self.data.insert(key)
       }
       pub fn get_data(&self, key: u64) -> Option<u64> {
           self.data.get(&key).cloned()
       }
    }
    

Building Rust Contract

We can build the contract using rustc:

RUSTFLAGS='-C link-arg=-s' cargo build --target wasm32-unknown-unknown --release

Dependencies

~4.5MB
~90K SLoC