- Sample contracts
- Basic Greeter contract with an external interface.
- Foundry setup
- Foundry configuration with multiple custom profiles and remappings.
- Deployment scripts
- Sample scripts to deploy contracts on both mainnet and testnet.
- Sample Integration, Unit, Property-based fuzzed and symbolic tests
- Example tests showcasing mocking, assertions and configuration for mainnet forking. As well it includes everything needed in order to check code coverage.
- Unit tests are built based on the Branched-Tree Technique, using Bulloak.
- Linter
- Simple and fast solidity linting thanks to forge fmt.
- Find missing natspec automatically.
- Github workflows CI
- Run all tests and see the coverage as you push your changes.
- Export your Solidity interfaces and contracts as packages, and publish them to NPM.
- Install Foundry by following the instructions from their repository.
- Copy the
.env.examplefile to.envand fill in the variables. - Install rust dependencies with cargo:
cargo install lintspeccargo install bulloak
- Install the dependencies by running:
yarn install. In case there is an error with the commands, runfoundryupand try them again.
The default way to build the code is suboptimal but fast, you can run it via:
yarn buildIn order to build a more optimized code (via IR), run:
yarn build:optimizedUnit tests should be isolated from any externalities, while Integration usually run in a fork of the blockchain. In this boilerplate you will find example of both.
In order to run both unit and integration tests, run:
yarn testIn order to just run unit tests, run:
yarn test:unitIn order to run unit tests and run way more fuzzing than usual (5x), run:
yarn test:unit:deepIn order to just run integration tests, run:
yarn test:integrationIn order to check your current code coverage, run:
yarn coverageIn order to create a new .t.sol file from a .tree bulloak file, run:
yarn test:bulloak:scaffoldIn order to fix or add missing tests to a .t.sol file after changing a .tree bulloak file, run:
yarn test:bulloak:fixConfigure the .env variables and source them:
source .envImport your private keys into Foundry's encrypted keystore:
cast wallet import $MAINNET_DEPLOYER_NAME --interactivecast wallet import $SEPOLIA_DEPLOYER_NAME --interactiveyarn deploy:sepoliayarn deploy:mainnetThe deployments are stored in ./broadcast
See the Foundry Book for available options.
Export TypeScript interfaces from Solidity contracts and interfaces providing compatibility with TypeChain. Publish the exported packages to NPM.
To enable this feature, make sure you've set the NPM_TOKEN on your org's secrets. Then set the job's conditional to true:
jobs:
export:
name: Generate Interfaces And Contracts
# Remove the following line if you wish to export your Solidity contracts and interfaces and publish them to NPM
if: true
...Also, remember to update the package_name param to your package name:
- name: Export Solidity - ${{ matrix.export_type }}
uses: defi-wonderland/solidity-exporter-action@1dbf5371c260add4a354e7a8d3467e5d3b9580b8
with:
# Update package_name with your package name
package_name: "my-cool-project"
...
- name: Publish to NPM - ${{ matrix.export_type }}
# Update `my-cool-project` with your package name
run: cd export/my-cool-project-${{ matrix.export_type }} && npm publish --access public
...You can take a look at our solidity-exporter-action repository for more information and usage examples.
The primary license for the boilerplate is MIT, see LICENSE
