The Schema tool will (re-)generate the entire interface library and implementation
skeleton for a smart contract from a schema definition file. The idea behind the Schema
tool is that the programmer will be relieved from as many burdens as possible. This means
that the Schema tool will generate code a lot of boilerplate code within a standardized
folder structure. It will also provide a strongly typed interface to the smart contract
function parameters, return values, and to the smart contract's state storage.
The code generator of the Schema tool has been thoroughly tested, which means that you can
be sure that the generated code is bug-free, and you can focus on the implementation of
the smart contract without distractions. Any time changes are made to the smart contract
interface by the programmer in the schema definition file, the Schema tool will
automatically re-generate any affected code to reflect these changes.
Usage
Usage of schema:
-init string
generate new folder with schema file for smart contract named <string>
-go
generate Go code
-rs
generate Rust code
-ts
generate TypScript code
-force
force code generation
-build
build wasm target for specified languages
-clean
clean up files that can be re-generated for specified languages
-version
show schema tool version
Setting up an initial smart contract folder
You can use the Schema tool to generate an initial folder with a default schema
definition file by using schema -init MyContractName
where MyContractName
is a
user-defined camel-case name for the smart contract.
The Schema tool will create a sub-folder mycontractname
(all lower case) for the smart
contract, with a default schema.yaml
in it that describes a minimal contract with the
provided name, and can be used to generate a complete working contract later on.
The initial schema.yaml
contains all sections necessary to completely define the smart
contract interface. You will modify this schema definition file to include additional
interface requirements for your smart contract and then use the Schema tool to
(re-)generate the interface in the desired language(s).
You can check out our demo smart contracts in the contracts/wasm folder of the
Wasp repository to see how to use the different
sections, or check the (somewhat outdated, coming soon) documentation on the
IOTA wiki.
The initial schema.yaml
looks like this:
name: MyContractName
description: MyContractName description
author: Eric Hop <eric@iota.org>
events: {}
structs: {}
typedefs: {}
state:
owner: AgentID # current owner of this smart contract
funcs:
init:
params:
owner: AgentID? # optional owner of this smart contract
setOwner:
access: owner # current owner of this smart contract
params:
owner: AgentID # new owner of this smart contract
views:
getOwner:
results:
owner: AgentID # current owner of this smart contract
Generating the smart contract interface
Once schema.yaml
has been modified to your liking you can use the Schema tool to
(re-)generate the interface code in the desired language(s). To do this you navigate into
the folder that contains schema.yaml
and run the Schema tool with one or more of the
language flags:
schema -go
to generate the Go interface and implementation
schema -rs
to generate the Rust interface and implementation
schema -ts
to generate the Typescript interface and implementation
You can provide multiple language flags if you want. For example schema -go -rs -ts
will generate all three language interfaces and implementations.
Normally the Schema tool will only generate new code when the schema definition file
or the Schema tool itself is newer than the last generated code. If for some reason you
need to override this behavior you can use the -force
flag to force code generation.
The Schema tool will generate a sub-folder for each separate language. These sub-folders
will each have a several sub-folders:
mycontractname
This library/crate sub-folder contains the interface code that can be
used to invoke the smart contract functions from within a smart contract, from within a
test environment, or from within a client application. This code is completely under
control of the Schema tool and should never be modified by the user.
mycontractnameimpl
This library/crate sub-folder contains the implementation code for
the smart contract functions. The generated code is specific to the functioning of the
smart contract. The only file in this sub-folder that you should modify is funcs.xx
,
which contains the user-defined function implementations for the smart contract.
mycontractnamewasm
This crate sub-folder will only be generated for Rust code. The
crate contains the Wasm stub that combines the interface code and implementation code
when building the Wasm binary file. The other languages achieve the same thing by using
a single stub source file called main.xx
, which does not need its own sub-folder.
Building the smart contract
The Schema tool will also build the smart contract for you. To be able to do that it
requires that the proper compilers have already been installed and can be reached through
your execution PATH. These are the required compilers for each language:
The Schema tool will standardize the naming and location of the generated Wasm code so
that the Solo
stand-alone test environment will automatically be able to find the Wasm
code and deploy it for you in your tests.
To build the desired Wasm binaries simply add the -build
flag to the desired language
flags. For example, schema -go -rs -ts -build
will build the Wasm binaries for all
supported languages.
Cleaning up after yourself
The Schema tool will normally generate quite a lot of code. Sometimes you will want to
be able to clean up all generated artifacts. To that end the Schema tool provides the
-clean
flag. Add this flag to the desired language flags to clean up the artifacts
for the specified languages.
You may want to make sure that the artifact files do not end up in your repository,
since they can be re-generated at any time. There is a .gitignore
file in the
contracts/wasm
folder of the Wasp repository that shows how to achieve this.