Documentation ¶
Overview ¶
Package ethereum defines interfaces for interacting with Ethereum.
Index ¶
Constants ¶
This section is empty.
Variables ¶
var NotFound = errors.New("not found")
NotFound is returned by API methods if the requested item does not exist.
Functions ¶
This section is empty.
Types ¶
type CallMsg ¶
type CallMsg struct { From common.Address // the sender of the 'transaction' To *common.Address // the destination contract (nil for contract creation) Gas uint64 // if 0, the call executes with near-infinite gas GasPrice *big.Int // wei <-> gas exchange ratio Value *big.Int // amount of wei sent along with the call Data []byte // input data, usually an ABI-encoded contract method invocation }
CallMsg contains parameters for contract calls.
type ChainStateReader ¶
type ChainStateReader interface { BalanceAt(ctx context.Context, account common.Address, blockNumber *big.Int) (*big.Int, error) StorageAt(ctx context.Context, account common.Address, key common.Hash, blockNumber *big.Int) ([]byte, error) CodeAt(ctx context.Context, account common.Address, blockNumber *big.Int) ([]byte, error) NonceAt(ctx context.Context, account common.Address, blockNumber *big.Int) (uint64, error) }
ChainStateReader wraps access to the state trie of the canonical blockchain. Note that implementations of the interface may be unable to return state values for old blocks. In many cases, using CallContract can be preferable to reading raw contract storage.
type ContractCaller ¶
type ContractCaller interface {
CallContract(ctx context.Context, call CallMsg, blockNumber *big.Int) ([]byte, error)
}
A ContractCaller provides contract calls, essentially transactions that are executed by the EVM but not mined into the blockchain. ContractCall is a low-level method to execute such calls. For applications which are structured around specific contracts, the abigen tool provides a nicer, properly typed way to perform calls.
type FilterQuery ¶
type FilterQuery struct { FromBlock *big.Int // beginning of the queried range, nil means genesis block ToBlock *big.Int // end of the range, nil means latest block Addresses []common.Address // restricts matches to events created by specific contracts // The Topic list restricts matches to particular event topics. Each event has a list // of topics. Topics matches a prefix of that list. An empty element slice matches any // topic. Non-empty elements represent an alternative that matches any of the // contained topics. // // Examples: // {} or nil matches any topic list // {{A}} matches topic A in first position // {{}, {B}} matches any topic in first position, B in second position // {{A}}, {B}} matches topic A in first position, B in second position // {{A, B}}, {C, D}} matches topic (A OR B) in first position, (C OR D) in second position Topics [][]common.Hash }
FilterQuery contains options for contract log filtering.
type GasEstimator ¶
GasEstimator wraps EstimateGas, which tries to estimate the gas needed to execute a specific transaction based on the pending state. There is no guarantee that this is the true gas limit requirement as other transactions may be added or removed by miners, but it should provide a basis for setting a reasonable default.
type GasPricer ¶
GasPricer wraps the gas price oracle, which monitors the blockchain to determine the optimal gas price given current fee market conditions.
type LogFilterer ¶
type LogFilterer interface { FilterLogs(ctx context.Context, q FilterQuery) ([]types.Log, error) SubscribeFilterLogs(ctx context.Context, q FilterQuery, ch chan<- types.Log) (Subscription, error) }
LogFilterer provides access to contract log events using a one-off query or continuous event subscription.
Logs received through a streaming query subscription may have Removed set to true, indicating that the log was reverted due to a chain reorganisation.
type PendingContractCaller ¶
type PendingContractCaller interface {
PendingCallContract(ctx context.Context, call CallMsg) ([]byte, error)
}
PendingContractCaller can be used to perform calls against the pending state.
type PendingStateEventer ¶
type PendingStateEventer interface {
SubscribePendingTransactions(ctx context.Context, ch chan<- *types.Transaction) (Subscription, error)
}
A PendingStateEventer provides access to real time notifications about changes to the pending state.
type PendingStateReader ¶
type PendingStateReader interface { PendingBalanceAt(ctx context.Context, account common.Address) (*big.Int, error) PendingStorageAt(ctx context.Context, account common.Address, key common.Hash) ([]byte, error) PendingCodeAt(ctx context.Context, account common.Address) ([]byte, error) PendingNonceAt(ctx context.Context, account common.Address) (uint64, error) PendingTransactionCount(ctx context.Context) (uint, error) }
A PendingStateReader provides access to the pending state, which is the result of all known executable transactions which have not yet been included in the blockchain. It is commonly used to display the result of ’unconfirmed’ actions (e.g. wallet value transfers) initiated by the user. The PendingNonceAt operation is a good way to retrieve the next available transaction nonce for a specific account.
type Subscription ¶
type Subscription interface { // Unsubscribe cancels the sending of events to the data channel // and closes the error channel. Unsubscribe() // Err returns the subscription error channel. The error channel receives // a value if there is an issue with the subscription (e.g. the network connection // delivering the events has been closed). Only one value will ever be sent. // The error channel is closed by Unsubscribe. Err() <-chan error }
Subscription represents an event subscription where events are delivered on a data channel.
Directories ¶
Path | Synopsis |
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cmd
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utils
Package utils contains internal helper functions for go-ethereum commands.
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Package utils contains internal helper functions for go-ethereum commands. |
internal
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debug
Package debug interfaces Go runtime debugging facilities.
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Package debug interfaces Go runtime debugging facilities. |
Package log15 provides an opinionated, simple toolkit for best-practice logging that is both human and machine readable.
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Package log15 provides an opinionated, simple toolkit for best-practice logging that is both human and machine readable. |