mirror of
https://github.com/ethereum/solidity
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668 lines
29 KiB
ReStructuredText
668 lines
29 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _path-resolution:
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**********************
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Import Path Resolution
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**********************
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In order to be able to support reproducible builds on all platforms, the Solidity compiler has to
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abstract away the details of the filesystem where source files are stored.
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Paths used in imports must work the same way everywhere while the command-line interface must be
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able to work with platform-specific paths to provide good user experience.
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This section aims to explain in detail how Solidity reconciles these requirements.
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.. index:: ! virtual filesystem, ! VFS, ! source unit name
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.. _virtual-filesystem:
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Virtual Filesystem
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==================
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The compiler maintains an internal database (*virtual filesystem* or *VFS* for short) where each
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source unit is assigned a unique *source unit name* which is an opaque and unstructured identifier.
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When you use the :ref:`import statement <import>`, you specify an *import path* that references a
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source unit name.
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.. index:: ! import callback, ! Host Filesystem Loader
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.. _import-callback:
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Import Callback
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---------------
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The VFS is initially populated only with files the compiler has received as input.
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Additional files can be loaded during compilation using an *import callback*, which is different
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depending on the type of compiler you use (see below).
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If the compiler does not find any source unit name matching the import path in the VFS, it invokes
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the callback, which is responsible for obtaining the source code to be placed under that name.
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An import callback is free to interpret source unit names in an arbitrary way, not just as paths.
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If there is no callback available when one is needed or if it fails to locate the source code,
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compilation fails.
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The command-line compiler provides the *Host Filesystem Loader* - a rudimentary callback
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that interprets a source unit name as a path in the local filesystem.
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The `JavaScript interface <https://github.com/ethereum/solc-js>`_ does not provide any by default,
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but one can be provided by the user.
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This mechanism can be used to obtain source code from locations other then the local filesystem
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(which may not even be accessible, e.g. when the compiler is running in a browser).
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For example the `Remix IDE <https://remix.ethereum.org/>`_ provides a versatile callback that
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lets you `import files from HTTP, IPFS and Swarm URLs or refer directly to packages in NPM registry
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<https://remix-ide.readthedocs.io/en/latest/import.html>`_.
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.. note::
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Host Filesystem Loader's file lookup is platform-dependent.
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For example backslashes in a source unit name can be interpreted as directory separators or not
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and the lookup can be case-sensitive or not, depending on the underlying platform.
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For portability it is recommended to avoid using import paths that will work correctly only
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with a specific import callback or only on one platform.
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For example you should always use forward slashes since they work as path separators also on
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platforms that support backslashes.
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Initial Content of the Virtual Filesystem
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-----------------------------------------
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The initial content of the VFS depends on how you invoke the compiler:
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#. **solc / command-line interface**
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When you compile a file using the command-line interface of the compiler, you provide one or
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more paths to files containing Solidity code:
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.. code-block:: bash
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solc contract.sol /usr/local/dapp-bin/token.sol
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The source unit name of a file loaded this way is constructed by converting its path to a
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canonical form and, if possible, making it relative to either the base path or one of the
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include paths.
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See :ref:`CLI Path Normalization and Stripping <cli-path-normalization-and-stripping>` for
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a detailed description of this process.
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.. index:: standard JSON
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#. **Standard JSON**
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When using the :ref:`Standard JSON <compiler-api>` API (via either the `JavaScript interface
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<https://github.com/ethereum/solc-js>`_ or the ``--standard-json`` command-line option)
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you provide input in JSON format, containing, among other things, the content of all your source
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files:
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.. code-block:: json
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{
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"language": "Solidity",
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"sources": {
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"contract.sol": {
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"content": "import \"./util.sol\";\ncontract C {}"
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},
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"util.sol": {
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"content": "library Util {}"
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},
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"/usr/local/dapp-bin/token.sol": {
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"content": "contract Token {}"
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}
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},
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"settings": {"outputSelection": {"*": { "*": ["metadata", "evm.bytecode"]}}}
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}
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The ``sources`` dictionary becomes the initial content of the virtual filesystem and its keys
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are used as source unit names.
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.. _initial-vfs-content-standard-json-with-import-callback:
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#. **Standard JSON (via import callback)**
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With Standard JSON it is also possible to tell the compiler to use the import callback to obtain
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the source code:
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.. code-block:: json
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{
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"language": "Solidity",
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"sources": {
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"/usr/local/dapp-bin/token.sol": {
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"urls": [
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"/projects/mytoken.sol",
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"https://example.com/projects/mytoken.sol"
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]
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}
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},
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"settings": {"outputSelection": {"*": { "*": ["metadata", "evm.bytecode"]}}}
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}
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If an import callback is available, the compiler will give it the strings specified in
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``urls`` one by one, until one is loaded successfully or the end of the list is reached.
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The source unit names are determined the same way as when using ``content`` - they are keys of
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the ``sources`` dictionary and the content of ``urls`` does not affect them in any way.
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.. index:: standard input, stdin, <stdin>
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#. **Standard input**
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On the command line it is also possible to provide the source by sending it to compiler's
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standard input:
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.. code-block:: bash
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echo 'import "./util.sol"; contract C {}' | solc -
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``-`` used as one of the arguments instructs the compiler to place the content of the standard
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input in the virtual filesystem under a special source unit name: ``<stdin>``.
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Once the VFS is initialized, additional files can still be added to it only through the import
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callback.
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.. index:: ! import; path
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Imports
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=======
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The import statement specifies an *import path*.
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Based on how the import path is specified, we can divide imports into two categories:
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- :ref:`Direct imports <direct-imports>`, where you specify the full source unit name directly.
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- :ref:`Relative imports <relative-imports>`, where you specify a path starting with ``./`` or ``../``
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to be combined with the source unit name of the importing file.
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.. code-block:: solidity
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:caption: contracts/contract.sol
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import "./math/math.sol";
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import "contracts/tokens/token.sol";
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In the above ``./math/math.sol`` and ``contracts/tokens/token.sol`` are import paths while the
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source unit names they translate to are ``contracts/math/math.sol`` and ``contracts/tokens/token.sol``
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respectively.
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.. index:: ! direct import, import; direct
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.. _direct-imports:
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Direct Imports
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--------------
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An import that does not start with ``./`` or ``../`` is a *direct import*.
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.. code-block:: solidity
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import "/project/lib/util.sol"; // source unit name: /project/lib/util.sol
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import "lib/util.sol"; // source unit name: lib/util.sol
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import "@openzeppelin/address.sol"; // source unit name: @openzeppelin/address.sol
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import "https://example.com/token.sol"; // source unit name: https://example.com/token.sol
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After applying any :ref:`import remappings <import-remapping>` the import path simply becomes the
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source unit name.
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.. note::
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A source unit name is just an identifier and even if its value happens to look like a path, it
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is not subject to the normalization rules you would typically expect in a shell.
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Any ``/./`` or ``/../`` seguments or sequences of multiple slashes remain a part of it.
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When the source is provided via Standard JSON interface it is entirely possible to associate
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different content with source unit names that would refer to the same file on disk.
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When the source is not available in the virtual filesystem, the compiler passes the source unit name
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to the import callback.
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The Host Filesystem Loader will attempt to use it as a path and look up the file on disk.
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At this point the platform-specific normalization rules kick in and names that were considered
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different in the VFS may actually result in the same file being loaded.
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For example ``/project/lib/math.sol`` and ``/project/lib/../lib///math.sol`` are considered
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completely different in the VFS even though they refer to the same file on disk.
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.. note::
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Even if an import callback ends up loading source code for two different source unit names from
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the same file on disk, the compiler will still see them as separate source units.
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It is the source unit name that matters, not the physical location of the code.
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.. index:: ! relative import, ! import; relative
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.. _relative-imports:
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Relative Imports
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----------------
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An import starting with ``./`` or ``../`` is a *relative import*.
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Such imports specify a path relative to the source unit name of the importing source unit:
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.. code-block:: solidity
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:caption: /project/lib/math.sol
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import "./util.sol" as util; // source unit name: /project/lib/util.sol
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import "../token.sol" as token; // source unit name: /project/token.sol
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.. code-block:: solidity
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:caption: lib/math.sol
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import "./util.sol" as util; // source unit name: lib/util.sol
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import "../token.sol" as token; // source unit name: token.sol
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.. note::
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Relative imports **always** start with ``./`` or ``../`` so ``import "util.sol"``, unlike
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``import "./util.sol"``, is a direct import.
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While both paths would be considered relative in the host filesystem, ``util.sol`` is actually
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absolute in the VFS.
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Let us define a *path segment* as any non-empty part of the path that does not contain a separator
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and is bounded by two path separators.
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A separator is a forward slash or the beginning/end of the string.
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For example in ``./abc/..//`` there are three path segments: ``.``, ``abc`` and ``..``.
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The compiler computes a source unit name from the import path in the following way:
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1. First a prefix is computed
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- Prefix is initialized with the source unit name of the importing source unit.
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- The last path segment with preceding slashes is removed from the prefix.
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- Then, the leading part of the normalized import path, consisting only of ``/`` and ``.``
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characters is considered.
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For every ``..`` segment found in this part the last path segment with preceding slashes is
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removed from the prefix.
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2. Then the prefix is prepended to the normalized import path.
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If the prefix is non-empty, a single slash is inserted between it and the import path.
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The removal of the last path segment with preceding slashes is understood to
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work as follows:
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1. Everything past the last slash is removed (i.e. ``a/b//c.sol`` becomes ``a/b//``).
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2. All trailing slashes are removed (i.e. ``a/b//`` becomes ``a/b``).
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The normalization rules are the same as for UNIX paths, namely:
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- All the internal ``.`` segments are removed.
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- Every internal ``..`` segment backtracks one level up in the hierarchy.
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- Multiple slashes are squashed into a single one.
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Note that normalization is performed only on the import path.
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The source unit name of the importing module that is used for the prefix remains unnormalized.
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This ensures that the ``protocol://`` part does not turn into ``protocol:/`` if the importing file
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is identified with a URL.
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If your import paths are already normalized, you can expect the above algorithm to produce very
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intuitive results.
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Here are some examples of what you can expect if they are not:
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.. code-block:: solidity
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:caption: lib/src/../contract.sol
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import "./util/./util.sol"; // source unit name: lib/src/../util/util.sol
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import "./util//util.sol"; // source unit name: lib/src/../util/util.sol
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import "../util/../array/util.sol"; // source unit name: lib/src/array/util.sol
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import "../.././../util.sol"; // source unit name: util.sol
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import "../../.././../util.sol"; // source unit name: util.sol
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.. note::
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The use of relative imports containing leading ``..`` segments is not recommended.
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The same effect can be achieved in a more reliable way by using direct imports with
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:ref:`base path and include paths <base-and-include-paths>`.
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.. index:: ! base path, ! --base-path, ! include paths, ! --include-path
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.. _base-and-include-paths:
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Base Path and Include Paths
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===========================
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The base path and include paths represent directories that the Host Filesystem Loader will load files from.
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When a source unit name is passed to the loader, it prepends the base path to it and performs a
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filesystem lookup.
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If the lookup does not succeed, the same is done with all directories on the include path list.
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It is recommended to set the base path to the root directory of your project and use include paths to
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specify additional locations that may contain libraries your project depends on.
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This lets you import from these libraries in a uniform way, no matter where they are located in the
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filesystem relative to your project.
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For example, if you use npm to install packages and your contract imports
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``@openzeppelin/contracts/utils/Strings.sol``, you can use these options to tell the compiler that
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the library can be found in one of the npm package directories:
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.. code-block:: bash
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solc contract.sol \
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--base-path . \
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--include-path node_modules/ \
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--include-path /usr/local/lib/node_modules/
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Your contract will compile (with the same exact metadata) no matter whether you install the library
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in the local or global package directory or even directly under your project root.
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By default the base path is empty, which leaves the source unit name unchanged.
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When the source unit name is a relative path, this results in the file being looked up in the
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directory the compiler has been invoked from.
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It is also the only value that results in absolute paths in source unit names being actually
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interpreted as absolute paths on disk.
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If the base path itself is relative, it is interpreted as relative to the current working directory
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of the compiler.
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.. note::
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Include paths cannot have empty values and must be used together with a non-empty base path.
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.. note::
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Include paths and base path can overlap as long as it does not make import resolution ambiguous.
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For example, you can specify a directory inside base path as an include directory or have an
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include directory that is a subdirectory of another include directory.
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The compiler will only issue an error if the source unit name passed to the Host Filesystem
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Loader represents an existing path when combined with multiple include paths or an include path
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and base path.
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.. _cli-path-normalization-and-stripping:
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CLI Path Normalization and Stripping
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------------------------------------
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On the command line the compiler behaves just as you would expect from any other program:
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it accepts paths in a format native to the platform and relative paths are relative to the current
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working directory.
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The source unit names assigned to files whose paths are specified on the command line, however,
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should not change just because the project is being compiled on a different platform or because the
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compiler happens to have been invoked from a different directory.
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To achieve this, paths to source files coming from the command line must be converted to a canonical
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form, and, if possible, made relative to the base path or one of the include paths.
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The normalization rules are as follows:
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- If a path is relative, it is made absolute by prepending the current working directory to it.
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- Internal ``.`` and ``..`` segments are collapsed.
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- Platform-specific path separators are replaced with forward slashes.
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- Sequences of multiple consecutive path separators are squashed into a single separator (unless
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they are the leading slashes of an `UNC path <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Path_(computing)#UNC>`_).
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- If the path includes a root name (e.g. a drive letter on Windows) and the root is the same as the
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root of the current working directory, the root is replaced with ``/``.
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- Symbolic links in the path are **not** resolved.
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- The only exception is the path to the current working directory prepended to relative paths in
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the process of making them absolute.
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On some platforms the working directory is reported always with symbolic links resolved so for
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consistency the compiler resolves them everywhere.
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- The original case of the path is preserved even if the filesystem is case-insensitive but
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`case-preserving <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Case_preservation>`_ and the actual case on
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disk is different.
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.. note::
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There are situations where paths cannot be made platform-independent.
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For example on Windows the compiler can avoid using drive letters by referring to the root
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directory of the current drive as ``/`` but drive letters are still necessary for paths leading
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to other drives.
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You can avoid such situations by ensuring that all the files are available within a single
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directory tree on the same drive.
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After normalization the compiler attempts to make the source file path relative.
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It tries the base path first and then the include paths in the order they were given.
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If the base path is empty or not specified, it is treated as if it was equal to the path to the
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current working directory (with all symbolic links resolved).
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The result is accepted only if the normalized directory path is the exact prefix of the normalized
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file path.
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Otherwise the file path remains absolute.
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This makes the conversion unambiguous and ensures that the relative path does not start with ``../``.
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The resulting file path becomes the source unit name.
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.. note::
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The relative path produced by stripping must remain unique within the base path and include paths.
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For example the compiler will issue an error for the following command if both
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``/project/contract.sol`` and ``/lib/contract.sol`` exist:
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.. code-block:: bash
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solc /project/contract.sol --base-path /project --include-path /lib
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.. note::
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Prior to version 0.8.8, CLI path stripping was not performed and the only normalization applied
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was the conversion of path separators.
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When working with older versions of the compiler it is recommended to invoke the compiler from
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the base path and to only use relative paths on the command line.
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.. index:: ! allowed paths, ! --allow-paths, remapping; target
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.. _allowed-paths:
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Allowed Paths
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=============
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As a security measure, the Host Filesystem Loader will refuse to load files from outside of a few
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locations that are considered safe by default:
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- Outside of Standard JSON mode:
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- The directories containing input files listed on the command line.
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- The directories used as :ref:`remapping <import-remapping>` targets.
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If the target is not a directory (i.e does not end with ``/``, ``/.`` or ``/..``) the directory
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containing the target is used instead.
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- Base path and include paths.
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- In Standard JSON mode:
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- Base path and include paths.
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Additional directories can be whitelisted using the ``--allow-paths`` option.
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The option accepts a comma-separated list of paths:
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.. code-block:: bash
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cd /home/user/project/
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solc token/contract.sol \
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lib/util.sol=libs/util.sol \
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--base-path=token/ \
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--include-path=/lib/ \
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--allow-paths=../utils/,/tmp/libraries
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When the compiler is invoked with the command shown above, the Host Filesystem Loader will allow
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importing files from the following directories:
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- ``/home/user/project/token/`` (because ``token/`` contains the input file and also because it is
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the base path),
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- ``/lib/`` (because ``/lib/`` is one of the include paths),
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- ``/home/user/project/libs/`` (because ``libs/`` is a directory containing a remapping target),
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- ``/home/user/utils/`` (because of ``../utils/`` passed to ``--allow-paths``),
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- ``/tmp/libraries/`` (because of ``/tmp/libraries`` passed to ``--allow-paths``),
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.. note::
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The working directory of the compiler is one of the paths allowed by default only if it
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happens to be the base path (or the base path is not specified or has an empty value).
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.. note::
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The compiler does not check if allowed paths actually exist and whether they are directories.
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Non-existent or empty paths are simply ignored.
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If an allowed path matches a file rather than a directory, the file is considered whitelisted, too.
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.. note::
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Allowed paths are case-sensitive even if the filesystem is not.
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The case must exactly match the one used in your imports.
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For example ``--allow-paths tokens`` will not match ``import "Tokens/IERC20.sol"``.
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.. warning::
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Files and directories only reachable through symbolic links from allowed directories are not
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automatically whitelisted.
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For example if ``token/contract.sol`` in the example above was actually a symlink pointing at
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``/etc/passwd`` the compiler would refuse to load it unless ``/etc/`` was one of the allowed
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paths too.
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.. index:: ! remapping; import, ! import; remapping, ! remapping; context, ! remapping; prefix, ! remapping; target
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.. _import-remapping:
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Import Remapping
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================
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Import remapping allows you to redirect imports to a different location in the virtual filesystem.
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The mechanism works by changing the translation between import paths and source unit names.
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For example you can set up a remapping so that any import from the virtual directory
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``github.com/ethereum/dapp-bin/library/`` would be seen as an import from ``dapp-bin/library/`` instead.
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You can limit the scope of a remapping by specifying a *context*.
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This allows creating remappings that apply only to imports located in a specific library or a specific file.
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Without a context a remapping is applied to every matching import in all the files in the virtual
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filesystem.
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Import remappings have the form of ``context:prefix=target``:
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- ``context`` must match the beginning of the source unit name of the file containing the import.
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- ``prefix`` must match the beginning of the source unit name resulting from the import.
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- ``target`` is the value the prefix is replaced with.
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For example, if you clone https://github.com/ethereum/dapp-bin/ locally to ``/project/dapp-bin``
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and run the compiler with:
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.. code-block:: bash
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solc github.com/ethereum/dapp-bin/=dapp-bin/ --base-path /project source.sol
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you can use the following in your source file:
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.. code-block:: solidity
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import "github.com/ethereum/dapp-bin/library/math.sol"; // source unit name: dapp-bin/library/math.sol
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The compiler will look for the file in the VFS under ``dapp-bin/library/math.sol``.
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If the file is not available there, the source unit name will be passed to the Host Filesystem
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Loader, which will then look in ``/project/dapp-bin/library/iterable_mapping.sol``.
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.. warning::
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Information about remappings is stored in contract metadata.
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Since the binary produced by the compiler has a hash of the metadata embedded in it, any
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modification to the remappings will result in different bytecode.
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For this reason you should be careful not to include any local information in remapping targets.
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For example if your library is located in ``/home/user/packages/mymath/math.sol``, a remapping
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like ``@math/=/home/user/packages/mymath/`` would result in your home directory being included in
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the metadata.
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To be able to reproduce the same bytecode with such a remapping on a different machine, you
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would need to recreate parts of your local directory structure in the VFS and (if you rely on
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Host Filesystem Loader) also in the host filesystem.
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To avoid having your local directory structure embedded in the metadata, it is recommended to
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designate the directories containing libraries as *include paths* instead.
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For example, in the example above ``--include-path /home/user/packages/`` would let you use
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imports starting with ``mymath/``.
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Unlike remapping, the option on its own will not make ``mymath`` appear as ``@math`` but this
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can be achieved by creating a symbolic link or renaming the package subdirectory.
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As a more complex example, suppose you rely on a module that uses an old version of dapp-bin that
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you checked out to ``/project/dapp-bin_old``, then you can run:
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.. code-block:: bash
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solc module1:github.com/ethereum/dapp-bin/=dapp-bin/ \
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module2:github.com/ethereum/dapp-bin/=dapp-bin_old/ \
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--base-path /project \
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source.sol
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This means that all imports in ``module2`` point to the old version but imports in ``module1``
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point to the new version.
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Here are the detailed rules governing the behaviour of remappings:
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#. **Remappings only affect the translation between import paths and source unit names.**
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Source unit names added to the VFS in any other way cannot be remapped.
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For example the paths you specify on the command-line and the ones in ``sources.urls`` in
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Standard JSON are not affected.
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.. code-block:: bash
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solc /project/=/contracts/ /project/contract.sol # source unit name: /project/contract.sol
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In the example above the compiler will load the source code from ``/project/contract.sol`` and
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place it under that exact source unit name in the VFS, not under ``/contract/contract.sol``.
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#. **Context and prefix must match source unit names, not import paths.**
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- This means that you cannot remap ``./`` or ``../`` directly since they are replaced during
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the translation to source unit name but you can remap the part of the name they are replaced
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with:
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.. code-block:: bash
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solc ./=a/ /project/=b/ /project/contract.sol # source unit name: /project/contract.sol
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.. code-block:: solidity
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:caption: /project/contract.sol
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import "./util.sol" as util; // source unit name: b/util.sol
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- You cannot remap base path or any other part of the path that is only added internally by an
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import callback:
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.. code-block:: bash
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solc /project/=/contracts/ /project/contract.sol --base-path /project # source unit name: contract.sol
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.. code-block:: solidity
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:caption: /project/contract.sol
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import "util.sol" as util; // source unit name: util.sol
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#. **Target is inserted directly into the source unit name and does not necessarily have to be a valid path.**
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- It can be anything as long as the import callback can handle it.
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In case of the Host Filesystem Loader this includes also relative paths.
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When using the JavaScript interface you can even use URLs and abstract identifiers if
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your callback can handle them.
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- Remapping happens after relative imports have already been resolved into source unit names.
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This means that targets starting with ``./`` and ``../`` have no special meaning and are
|
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relative to the base path rather than to the location of the source file.
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- Remapping targets are not normalized so ``@root/=./a/b//`` will remap ``@root/contract.sol``
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to ``./a/b//contract.sol`` and not ``a/b/contract.sol``.
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- If the target does not end with a slash, the compiler will not add one automatically:
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.. code-block:: bash
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solc /project/=/contracts /project/contract.sol # source unit name: /project/contract.sol
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|
.. code-block:: solidity
|
|
:caption: /project/contract.sol
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|
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|
import "/project/util.sol" as util; // source unit name: /contractsutil.sol
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#. **Context and prefix are patterns and matches must be exact.**
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- ``a//b=c`` will not match ``a/b``.
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- source unit names are not normalized so ``a/b=c`` will not match ``a//b`` either.
|
|
- Parts of file and directory names can match as well.
|
|
``/newProject/con:/new=old`` will match ``/newProject/contract.sol`` and remap it to
|
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``oldProject/contract.sol``.
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|
#. **At most one remapping is applied to a single import.**
|
|
|
|
- If multiple remappings match the same source unit name, the one with the longest matching
|
|
prefix is chosen.
|
|
- If prefixes are identical, the one specified last wins.
|
|
- Remappings do not work on other remappings. For example ``a=b b=c c=d`` will not result in ``a``
|
|
being remapped to ``d``.
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|
|
|
#. **Prefix cannot be empty but context and target are optional.**
|
|
|
|
- If ``target`` is the empty string, ``prefix`` is simply removed from import paths.
|
|
- Empty ``context`` means that the remapping applies to all imports in all source units.
|
|
|
|
.. index:: Remix IDE, file://
|
|
|
|
Using URLs in imports
|
|
=====================
|
|
|
|
Most URL prefixes such as ``https://`` or ``data://`` have no special meaning in import paths.
|
|
The only exception is ``file://`` which is stripped from source unit names by the Host Filesystem
|
|
Loader.
|
|
|
|
When compiling locally you can use import remapping to replace the protocol and domain part with a
|
|
local path:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: bash
|
|
|
|
solc :https://github.com/ethereum/dapp-bin=/usr/local/dapp-bin contract.sol
|
|
|
|
Note the leading ``:``, which is necessary when the remapping context is empty.
|
|
Otherwise the ``https:`` part would be interpreted by the compiler as the context.
|