* feat: partial wasm32 support
* make compile for wasm32
* feat: att async-trait attr
* make compatible with wasm
* add type alias for archs
* rustfmt
* add wasm ci
* make compile with wasm-pack test
* make compile with wasm-pack test
* make compile with wasm-pack test
* make compile with wasm-pack test
* ci: disable wasmpack
* feat: use wasm timer delay
* feat: add wasm provider
* rustfmt
* misc refactor
* add wasm example
* make example a directory
* untrack error log
* move profile to root
* fix unused imports
* ci: enable wasm-pack test
* style: unify websocket implementations
* fix: typos
* fix: make policy compatible with wasm target
* chore: do not include ethers-wasm example as top level workspace member
* chore: modify wasm32 dependencies
* chore: make note about getrandom
Co-authored-by: Georgios Konstantopoulos <me@gakonst.com>
* fix(block): fix block decoding from ws
* feat(pubsub): add pubsub traits and sub stream
Also use DeserializeOwned alias
* feat(transports): add notification type
* feat(ws): rewrite Ws for subscription support
* feat(provider): add eth_subscribe
* fix(celo): disable some celo tests due to ganache incompatibilities
* test(rinkeby): fix flaky test
* feat(contract): WS subscription bindings (#101)
* feat(middleware): add subscriptions to middleware methods
* feat(contract): add subscribe method to contracts
* feat(provider): allow specifying a default polling interval param
This parameter is going to be used for all subsequent client calls by default. It can still be overriden with the internal
`interval` calls
* feat(contract): replace reference to Client with Arc
* feat(abigen): adjusts codegen to use Arcs
* fix(ethers): adjust examples to new apis
* fix(provider): return TxHash instead of PendingTransaction on tx submission
Returning a PendingTransaction allowed us to have nice ethers.js-like syntax where you submit
a transaction and then can immediately await it. Unfortunately, now that we use Arcs and not lifetimes
this meant that we would need to bind the function call in a variable, and then await on it, which is pretty
bad UX.
To fix this, we revert back to returning a TxHash and introduce a convenience method on the provider and the
contract which takes a tx_hash and returns a PendingTransaction object. The syntax ends up being slightly
more verbose (although more explicit), but the issue is fixed.
* fix: relax trait bounds on JsonRpcClient
* refactor(provider): move http client to separate dir
* feat(provider): add initial Websocket support over Stream/Sink + Tungstenite
* test(provider): add websocket test
* feat(provider): add convenience method using tokio/async-std behind a feature flag
* test(provider): add websocket ssl test
* feat(provider): add TLS websockets for tokio/async-std
* docs(provider): add websocket docs / examples
* fix(provider): make tokio an optional dep
* feat(provider): implement Streamed logs
This utilizes eth_getFilterChanges. The stream struct must be instantiated with a factory that yields logs/hashes.
Consumers are expected to use the `FilterStream` trait in order to simplify their type definitions
* feat(provider): expose streaming methods
* test(provider): add new blocks/pending txs test
* feat(contract): allow events to be streamed
* test(contract): add integration test for streaming event logs
* perf(contract-factory): take abi and bytecode by value instead of reference
The abi, bytecode and the factory's deploy method now consume the structs instead of being passed by reference. While this means that
consumers might need to clone before using them, this gives us some more flexiblity around factories inside helper functions
* refactor(contract): use test helpers to reduce code dup
* chore: make clippy happy