mirror of
https://github.com/ethereum/solidity
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157 lines
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ReStructuredText
157 lines
5.5 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. index:: ! event, ! event; anonymous, ! event; indexed, ! event; topic
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.. _events:
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******
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Events
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******
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Solidity events give an abstraction on top of the EVM's logging functionality.
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Applications can subscribe and listen to these events through the RPC interface of an Ethereum client.
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Events are inheritable members of contracts. When you call them, they cause the
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arguments to be stored in the transaction's log - a special data structure
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in the blockchain. These logs are associated with the address of the contract,
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are incorporated into the blockchain, and stay there as long as a block is
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accessible (forever as of now, but this might
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change with Serenity). The Log and its event data is not accessible from within
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contracts (not even from the contract that created them).
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It is possible to request a Merkle proof for logs, so if
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an external entity supplies a contract with such a proof, it can check
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that the log actually exists inside the blockchain. You have to supply block headers
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because the contract can only see the last 256 block hashes.
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You can add the attribute ``indexed`` to up to three parameters which adds them
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to a special data structure known as :ref:`"topics" <abi_events>` instead of
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the data part of the log.
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A topic can only hold a single word (32 bytes) so if you use a :ref:`reference type
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<reference-types>` for an indexed argument, the Keccak-256 hash of the value is stored
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as a topic instead.
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All parameters without the ``indexed`` attribute are :ref:`ABI-encoded <ABI>`
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into the data part of the log.
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Topics allow you to search for events, for example when filtering a sequence of
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blocks for certain events. You can also filter events by the address of the
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contract that emitted the event.
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For example, the code below uses the web3.js ``subscribe("logs")``
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`method <https://web3js.readthedocs.io/en/1.0/web3-eth-subscribe.html#subscribe-logs>`_ to filter
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logs that match a topic with a certain address value:
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.. code-block:: javascript
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var options = {
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fromBlock: 0,
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address: web3.eth.defaultAccount,
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topics: ["0x0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000", null, null]
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};
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web3.eth.subscribe('logs', options, function (error, result) {
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if (!error)
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console.log(result);
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})
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.on("data", function (log) {
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console.log(log);
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})
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.on("changed", function (log) {
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});
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The hash of the signature of the event is one of the topics, except if you
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declared the event with the ``anonymous`` specifier. This means that it is
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not possible to filter for specific anonymous events by name, you can
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only filter by the contract address. The advantage of anonymous events
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is that they are cheaper to deploy and call. It also allows you to declare
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four indexed arguments rather than three.
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.. note::
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Since the transaction log only stores the event data and not the type,
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you have to know the type of the event, including which parameter is
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indexed and if the event is anonymous in order to correctly interpret
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the data.
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In particular, it is possible to "fake" the signature of another event
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using an anonymous event.
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.. index:: ! selector; of an event
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Members of Events
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=================
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- ``event.selector``: For non-anonymous events, this is a ``bytes32`` value
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containing the ``keccak256`` hash of the event signature, as used in the default topic.
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Example
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=======
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.. code-block:: solidity
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// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-3.0
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pragma solidity >=0.4.21 <0.9.0;
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contract ClientReceipt {
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event Deposit(
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address indexed from,
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bytes32 indexed id,
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uint value
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);
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function deposit(bytes32 id) public payable {
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// Events are emitted using `emit`, followed by
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// the name of the event and the arguments
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// (if any) in parentheses. Any such invocation
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// (even deeply nested) can be detected from
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// the JavaScript API by filtering for `Deposit`.
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emit Deposit(msg.sender, id, msg.value);
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}
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}
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The use in the JavaScript API is as follows:
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.. code-block:: javascript
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var abi = /* abi as generated by the compiler */;
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var ClientReceipt = web3.eth.contract(abi);
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var clientReceipt = ClientReceipt.at("0x1234...ab67" /* address */);
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var depositEvent = clientReceipt.Deposit();
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// watch for changes
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depositEvent.watch(function(error, result){
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// result contains non-indexed arguments and topics
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// given to the `Deposit` call.
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if (!error)
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console.log(result);
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});
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// Or pass a callback to start watching immediately
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var depositEvent = clientReceipt.Deposit(function(error, result) {
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if (!error)
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console.log(result);
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});
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The output of the above looks like the following (trimmed):
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.. code-block:: json
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{
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"returnValues": {
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"from": "0x1111…FFFFCCCC",
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"id": "0x50…sd5adb20",
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"value": "0x420042"
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},
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"raw": {
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"data": "0x7f…91385",
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"topics": ["0xfd4…b4ead7", "0x7f…1a91385"]
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}
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}
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Additional Resources for Understanding Events
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=============================================
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- `Javascript documentation <https://github.com/ethereum/web3.js/blob/1.x/docs/web3-eth-contract.rst#events>`_
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- `Example usage of events <https://github.com/ethchange/smart-exchange/blob/master/lib/contracts/SmartExchange.sol>`_
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- `How to access them in js <https://github.com/ethchange/smart-exchange/blob/master/lib/exchange_transactions.js>`_
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