Rust Ethereum Virtual Machine
Revm is an EVM written in Rust that is focused on speed and simplicity.
It has a fast and flexible implementation with a simple interface and embedded Host.
It passes all ethereum/tests
test suites.
Here is a list of guiding principles that Revm follows.
- EVM compatibility and stability - this goes without saying but it is nice to put it here. In the blockchain industry, stability is the most desired attribute of any system.
- Speed - is one of the most important things and most decisions are made to complement this.
- Simplicity - simplification of internals so that it can be easily understood and extended, and interface that can be easily used or integrated into other projects.
- interfacing -
[no_std]
so that it can be used as wasm lib and integrate with JavaScript and cpp binding if needed.
Structure:
- crates
- revm -> main EVM library.
- revm-primitives -> Primitive data types.
- revm-interpreter -> Execution loop with instructions
- revm-precompile -> EVM precompiles
- bins:
- revme: cli binary, used for running state test jsons
This project tends to use the newest rust version, so if you're encountering a build error try running rustup update
first.
There were some big efforts on optimization of revm:
- Optimizing interpreter loop: bluealloy#7
- Introducing Bytecode format (and better bytecode analysis): bluealloy#121
- Unification of instruction signatures: bluealloy#283
git clone https://github.com/bluealloy/revm.git
cd revm
cargo build --release
Note: clang
is required for building revm with c-kzg
or secp256k1
feature flags as they depend on C
libraries. If you don't have it installed, you can install it with apt install clang
.
go to cd bins/revme/
Download eth tests from (this will take some time): git clone https://github.com/ethereum/tests
run tests with command: cargo run --release -- statetest tests/GeneralStateTests/ tests/LegacyTests/Constantinople/GeneralStateTests
GeneralStateTests
contains all tests related to EVM.
Benches can be found in crates/revm/benches
.
Currently, available benches include the following.
- analysis
- snailtracer
- transfer
To run the snailtracer
bench, execute the cargo bench
subcommand below.
cargo bench --package revm --profile release -- snailtracer
Using flamegraph, you can create a visualization breaking down the runtime of various
sections of the bench execution - a flame graph. Executing the cargo flamegraph
subcommand requires
installing flamegraph by running cargo install flamegraph
.
cargo flamegraph --root --freq 4000 --min-width 0.001 --package revm --bench bench -- snailtracer
This command will produce a flamegraph image output to flamegraph.svg
.
Flamegraph also requires sudo mode to run (hence the --root
cli arg) and will prompt you for your password if not in sudo mode already.
cargo run -p revm --features ethersdb --example fork_ref_transact
Generate block traces and write them to json files in a new traces/
directory.
Each file corresponds to a transaction in the block and is named as such: <tx index>.json
.
cargo run -p revm --features std,serde-json,ethersdb --example generate_block_traces
- Foundry is a blazing fast, portable and modular toolkit for Ethereum application development written in Rust.
- Helios is a fully trustless, efficient, and portable Ethereum light client written in Rust.
- Reth Modular, contributor-friendly and blazing-fast implementation of the Ethereum protocol
- Arbiter is a framework for stateful Ethereum smart-contract simulation
- Zeth is an open-source ZK block prover for Ethereum built on the RISC Zero zkVM.
- VERBS an open-source Ethereum agent-based modelling and simulation library with a Python API.
- Hardhat is a development environment to compile, deploy, test, and debug your Ethereum software.
- Trin is Portal Network client. An execution and consensus layer Ethereum light client written in Rust. Portal Network client's provide complete, provable, and distributed execution archival access.
- Simular is a Python smart-contract API with a fast, embedded, Ethereum Virtual Machine.
- ...
(If you want to add project to the list, ping me or open the PR)
The book can be found at github page here: https://bluealloy.github.io/revm/
The documentation (alas needs some love) can be found here: https://bluealloy.github.io/revm/docs/
To serve the mdbook documentation in a local environment, ensure you have mdbook installed (if not install it with cargo) and then run:
mdbook serve documentation
There is public telegram group: https://t.me/+Ig4WDWOzikA3MzA0
Or if you want to contact me directly, here is my email: dragan0rakita@gmail.com and telegram: https://t.me/draganrakita