* server: update server and enable configurable tracer * config validation * fix import cycle * fix start * update fields * c++ * c++
5.3 KiB
Events
Event
s are objects that contain information about the execution of the application. They are
mainly used by service providers like block explorers and wallet to track the execution of various
messages and index transactions. {synopsis}
Pre-requisite Readings
- Cosmos SDK Events {prereq}
- Ethereum's PubSub JSON-RPC API {prereq}
Subscribing to Events
SDK and Tendermint Events
It is possible to subscribe to Events
via Tendermint's Websocket.
This is done by calling the subscribe
RPC method via Websocket:
{
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"method": "subscribe",
"id": "0",
"params": {
"query": "tm.event='eventCategory' AND eventType.eventAttribute='attributeValue'"
}
}
The main eventCategory
you can subscribe to are:
NewBlock
: Containsevents
triggered duringBeginBlock
andEndBlock
.Tx
: Containsevents
triggered duringDeliverTx
(i.e. transaction processing).ValidatorSetUpdates
: Contains validator set updates for the block.
These events are triggered from the state
package after a block is committed. You can get the full
list of event
categories
here.
The type
and attribute
value of the query
allow you to filter the specific event
you are
looking for. For example, a MsgEthereumTx
transaction triggers an event
of type ethermint
and
has sender
and recipient
as attributes
. Subscribing to this event
would be done like so:
{
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"method": "subscribe",
"id": "0",
"params": {
"query": "tm.event='Tx' AND ethereum.recipient='hexAddress'"
}
}
where hexAddress
is an Ethereum hex address (eg: 0x1122334455667788990011223344556677889900
).
Ethereum JSON-RPC Events
Ethermint also supports the Ethereum JSON-RPC filters calls to subscribe to state logs, blocks or pending transactions changes.
Under the hood, it uses the Tendermint RPC client's event system to process subscriptions that are then formatted to Ethereum-compatible events.
curl -X POST --data '{"jsonrpc":"2.0","method":"eth_newBlockFilter","params":[],"id":1}' -H "Content-Type: application/json" http://localhost:8545
{"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":1,"result":"0x3503de5f0c766c68f78a03a3b05036a5"}
Then you can check if the state chages with the eth_getFilterChanges
call:
curl -X POST --data '{"jsonrpc":"2.0","method":"eth_getFilterChanges","params":["0x3503de5f0c766c68f78a03a3b05036a5"],"id":1}' -H "Content-Type: application/json" http://localhost:8545
{"jsonrpc":"2.0","id":1,"result":["0x7d44dceff05d5963b5bc81df7e9f79b27e777b0a03a6feca09f3447b99c6fa71","0x3961e4050c27ce0145d375255b3cb829a5b4e795ac475c05a219b3733723d376","0xd7a497f95167d63e6feca70f344d9f6e843d097b62729b8f43bdcd5febf142ab","0x55d80a4ba6ef54f2a8c0b99589d017b810ed13a1fda6a111e1b87725bc8ceb0e","0x9e8b92c17280dd05f2562af6eea3285181c562ebf41fc758527d4c30364bcbc4","0x7353a4b9d6b35c9eafeccaf9722dd293c46ae2ffd4093b2367165c3620a0c7c9","0x026d91bda61c8789c59632c349b38fd7e7557e6b598b94879654a644cfa75f30","0x73e3245d4ddc3bba48fa67633f9993c6e11728a36401fa1206437f8be94ef1d3"]}
Websocket Connection
Tendermint Websocket
To start a connection with the Tendermint websocket you need to define the address with the --rpc.laddr
flag when starting the node (default tcp://127.0.0.1:26657
):
ethermintd start --rpc.laddr="tcp://127.0.0.1:26657"
Then, start a websocket subscription with ws
# connect to tendermint websocket at port 8080 as defined above
ws ws://localhost:8080/websocket
# subscribe to new Tendermint block headers
> { "jsonrpc": "2.0", "method": "subscribe", "params": ["tm.event='NewBlockHeader'"], "id": 1 }
Ethereum Websocket
Since Ethermint runs uses Tendermint Core as it's consensus Engine and it's built with the Cosmos SDK framework, it inherits the event format from them. However, in order to support the native Web3 compatibility for websockets of the Ethereum's PubSubAPI, Ethermint needs to cast the Tendermint responses retreived into the Ethereum types.
You can start a connection with the Ethereum websocket using the --json-rpc.ws-address
flag when starting
the node (default "0.0.0.0:8546"
):
ethermintd start --json-rpc.address"0.0.0.0:8545" --json-rpc.ws-address="0.0.0.0:8546" --evm.rpc.api="eth,web3,net,txpool,debug" --json-rpc.enable
Then, start a websocket subscription with ws
# connect to tendermint websocet at port 8546 as defined above
ws ws://localhost:8546/
# subscribe to new Ethereum-formatted block Headers
> {"id": 1, "method": "eth_subscribe", "params": ["newHeads", {}]}
< {"jsonrpc":"2.0","result":"0x44e010cb2c3161e9c02207ff172166ef","id":1}