Game1.sol Game2.sol Game3.sol Game4.sol Game5.sol
- Run our local node -
npx hardhat node
0.1 This will spin up a local, persistent hardhat blockchain on your port 8545. - Deploy the contract to local hardhat network
npx hardhat run scripts/deploy.js
2.1 If you do this successfully you should see two things in the two terminals: 2.2- Your Script Terminal - A message saying "Game1 deployed to address: 0x..." (copy the contract address) 2.3- Hardhat Node Terminal - A contract deployed to your local hardhat blockchain (notice all the JSON RPC methods being logged!) npx hardhat run scripts/game1.js
Let's work on our solidity skills while deploying against a local hardhat blockchain! Inside this repository you'll find 5 smart contracts labled Game1
to Game5
. The goal of each smart contract is to:
- Deploy it to our local hardhat network
- Send some transaction(s) to emit the Winner event!
If you see the Winner event in the transaction receipt: congratulations, you're a winner! Let's talk about how to setup and run each game.
Install all depedencies with npm i
. This will install everything you need, including hardhat
.
Next, take a look at the hardhat.config.js
file. Specifically this line:
module.exports = {
solidity: '0.8.17',
defaultNetwork: 'localhost', // <-- this one!
};
The defaultNetwork
is going to set our scripts to run, by default, against our local node.
Let's go ahead and run our local node. You can do so by running npx hardhat node
. This will spin up a local, persistent hardhat blockchain on your port 8545.
Its time to deploy a contract! We can use the deploy script to do this. Open up a second terminal and keep your hardhat node running. In this new terminal run npx hardhat run scripts/deploy.js
. If you do this successfully you should see two things in the two terminals:
- Your Script Terminal - A message saying "Game1 deployed to address: 0x..." (copy the contract address)
- Hardhat Node Terminal - A contract deployed to your local hardhat blockchain (notice all the JSON RPC methods being logged!)
How is this working? To understand, take a look at your scripts/deploy.js
script:
const contractName = 'Game1'; // <-- use the contract name here
async function main() {
const Game = await hre.ethers.getContractFactory(contractName); // <-- hardhat compiles and grabs the contract abi/bytecode using the name
const game = await Game.deploy(); // <-- the transaction to deploy your contract to the blockchain
console.log(`${contractName} deployed to address: ${game.address}`); // <-- our log telling us the address!
}
We've deployed Game1
, now its time to win!
Use the address you deployed your contract from step 3. Paste it into the scripts/win.js
file where the comments direct you to.
You can keep the contract name as Game1
for now. When you attempt Game2
later on, you'll need to change this! Hardhat uses this contract name to go fetch the ABI for the contract from the artifacts
folder.
Now run npx hardhat run scripts/win.js
, this will go ahead and call win
on your Game1
contract. If you're successful you should see a transaction receipt with a Winner
event inside of the events
array.
Try each game! See if you can emit the Winner event on each one. Remember to:
- Change the
contractName
inscripts/deploy.js
- Deploy each new game to your local hardhat environment
- Copy the address into the
scripts/win.js
- Change the
contractName
inscripts/win.js
- Modify the win script to succesfully complete the challenge. You may need to run multiple transactions in order to win each game!
- Gas Estimation Error - if you see a gas estimation error, this means that the blockchain node was unable to estimate the gas. The reason for this is often because the transaction reverted!
game.[method]
is not a function - this typically happens because you forgot to change the contract name. More technically, there's function that you think should exist on the contract, but hardhat is not able to call it because the ABI it fetched from theartifacts
folder does not have that method defined.
pragma solidity ^0.8.17;
import "hardhat/console.sol";
contract Game1 {
event Winner(address winner);
function win() public {
console.log(22);
emit Winner(msg.sender);
}
}
Now when you call win
on Game1
you will see 22
show up in your local hardhat node. This will happen even if the transaction reverts!