This project provides a thin shim between FireFly and an ERC1155 contract exposed via ethconnect or evmconnect.
This service is entirely stateless - it maps incoming REST operations directly to blockchain calls, and maps blockchain events to outgoing websocket events.
This connector is designed to interact with ERC1155 smart contracts on an Ethereum blockchain which conform to a few different patterns. The repository includes sample Solidity contracts that conform to some of the ABIs expected.
At the very minimum, all contracts must implement the events and methods defined in the
ERC1155 standard, including the optional uri()
method.
Beyond this, there are a few methods for creating a contract that the connector can utilize.
The most flexible and robust token functionality is achieved by teaching FireFly about your token contract, then allowing it to teach the token connector. This is optional in the sense that there are additional methods used by the token connector to guess at the contract ABI (detailed later), but is the preferred method for most use cases.
To leverage this capability in a running FireFly environment, you must:
- Upload the token contract ABI to FireFly as a contract interface.
- Include the
interface
parameter when creating the pool on FireFly.
This will cause FireFly to parse the interface and provide ABI details to this connector, so it can determine the best methods from the ABI to be used for each operation. When this procedure is followed, the connector can find and call any variant of mint/burn/transfer/approval that is listed in the source code for erc1155.ts. This list includes methods in the base standards, methods in the IERC1155MixedFungible interface defined in this repository, and common method variants from the OpenZeppelin Wizard. Additional variants can be added to the list by building a custom version of this connector or by proposing them via pull request.
In the absence of being provided with ABI details, the token connector will assume that the contract
conforms to the IERC1155MixedFungible
interface defined in this repository.
The APIs of this connector conform to the FireFly fftokens standard, and are designed to be called by FireFly. They should generally not be called directly by anything other than FireFly.
Below are some of the specific considerations and extra requirements enforced by this connector on top of the fftokens standard.
If config.address
, config.startId
, and config.endId
are all specified, the connector will assume
that a token pool has already been created on the specified contract, using the specified subset of
token IDs (inclusive). Note: Because ERC1155 defines the token ID as uint256, the range of possible IDs
is 0x0
to 0xffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffffff
.
If config.address
is specified, the connector will invoke the create()
method (as defined in the
IERC1155Factory interface) of the ERC1155 token
contract at the specified address.
If config.address
is not specified, and CONTRACT_ADDRESS
is set in the connector's
environment, the create()
method of that contract will be invoked.
Any name
and symbol
provided from FireFly are ignored by this connector.
For fungible token pools, tokenIndex
and uri
will be ignored.
For non-fungible token pools, tokenIndex
and amount
will be handled differently depending on the
underlying ABI. The sample contract in this repository uses auto-indexing, so tokenIndex
must be
omitted and amount
may be 1 or greater (to mint 1 or more unique NFTs). The samples generated by
OpenZeppelin generally use manual indexing, so tokenIndex
must be specified (as an offset from
the pool's startId
) and amount
must be 1.
For non-fungible token pools, tokenIndex
is required, and amount
must be 1.
For non-fungible token pools, tokenIndex
is required, and amount
must be 1.
All approvals are global and will apply to all tokens across all pools on a particular ERC1155 contract.
The following APIs are not part of the fftokens standard, but are exposed under /api/v1
:
GET /balance
- Get token balanceGET /receipt/:id
- Get receipt for a previous request
The easiest way to run this service is as part of a stack created via firefly-cli.
To run manually, you first need to run an Ethereum blockchain node and an instance of firefly-ethconnect, and deploy the ERC1155 smart contract.
Then, adjust your configuration to point at the deployed contract by editing .env or by setting the environment values directly in your shell.
Install and run the application using npm:
# install
$ npm install
# run in development mode
$ npm run start
# run in watch mode
$ npm run start:dev
# run in production mode
$ npm run start:prod
View the Swagger UI at http://localhost:3000/api
View the generated OpenAPI spec at http://localhost:3000/api-json
# unit tests
$ npm run test
# e2e tests
$ npm run test:e2e
# lint
$ npm run lint
# formatting
$ npm run format
Most short-term outages should be handled by the blockchain connector. For example if the blockchain node returns HTTP 429
due to rate limiting
it is the blockchain connector's responsibility to use appropriate back-off retries to attempt to make the required blockchain call successfully.
There are cases where the token connector may need to perform its own back-off retry for a blockchain action. For example if the blockchain connector microservice has crashed and is in the process of restarting just as the token connector is trying to query an NFT token URI to enrich a token event, if the token connector doesn't perform a retry then the event will be returned without the token URI populated.
The token connector has configurable retry behaviour for all blockchain related calls. By default the connector will perform up to 15 retries with a back-off
interval between each one. The default first retry interval is 100ms and doubles up to a maximum of 10s per retry interval. Retries are only performed where
the error returned from the REST call matches a configurable regular expression retry condition. The default retry condition is .*ECONN.*
which ensures
retries take place for common TCP errors such as ECONNRESET
and ECONNREFUSED
.
The configurable retry settings are:
RETRY_BACKOFF_FACTOR
(default2
)RETRY_BACKOFF_LIMIT_MS
(default10000
)RETRY_BACKOFF_INITIAL_MS
(default100
)RETRY_CONDITION
(default.*ECONN.*
)RETRY_MAX_ATTEMPTS
(default15
)
Setting RETRY_CONDITION
to ""
disables retries. Setting RETRY_MAX_ATTEMPTS
to -1
causes it to retry indefinitely.
Note, the token connector will make a total of RETRY_MAX_ATTEMPTS
+ 1 calls for a given retryable call (1 original attempt and RETRY_MAX_ATTEMPTS
retries)
Mutual TLS can be enabled by providing three environment variables:
TLS_CA
TLS_CERT
TLS_KEY
Each should be a path to a file on disk. Providing all three environment variables will result in a token connector running with TLS enabled, and requiring all clients to provide client certificates signed by the certificate authority.