There are two ways of doing this: first one is to emit all notifications
parameter data into rpcbindings configuration on compile time (event if
the parameter has a simple type), and the second one is to fetch parameter
type from the manifest on rpcbinding file generation if needed (we always
have manifest at this stage, thus it's not a problem to retrieve necessary
information). The latter case is chosen to reduce the bindings configuration
file size.
Signed-off-by: Anna Shaleva <shaleva.ann@nspcc.ru>
Notification and its parameters may have any UTF8-compatible name
which is inappropriate for bindings configuration and for the resulting
RPC bindings file. This commit stores the prettified version of
notification's name and parameters that are ready to be used in the
resulting RPC binding without any changes.
Signed-off-by: Anna Shaleva <shaleva.ann@nspcc.ru>
The user should specify it via parameter's `extendedtype` field and
via upper-level `namedtypes` field of the contract configuration YAML.
Also, as we have proper event structure source, make the `--guess-eventtype`
compilation option and make event types guess optional.
Signed-off-by: Anna Shaleva <shaleva.ann@nspcc.ru>
New rule for writing blocks of code to our template: new line before
the block starts and new line after the block ends. This rule is the
same as the one we use during manual typing.
Signed-off-by: Anna Shaleva <shaleva.ann@nspcc.ru>
It's enough to specify the input file only to get the standard output:
```
$ neo-go contract compile -i ./1-print/1-print.go
$ neo-go contract compile -i ./1-print/
```
Signed-off-by: Anna Shaleva <shaleva.ann@nspcc.ru>
Everywhere including examples, external interop APIs, bindings generators
code and in other valuable places. A couple of `interface{}` usages are
intentionally left in the CHANGELOG.md, documentation and tests.
* strip NEP-XX methods before going into generator to avoid unused imports
* nepXX.Invoker types already include Call
* always import util, it's used for Hash
Share parameters parsing code between 'contract invokefunction' and
'vm run' commands. It allows VM CLI to parse more complicated parameter
types including arrays and file-backed bytestrings.
Refs. #2379, but not completely solves it, one package seriously outweights
others:
? github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/cli [no test files]
ok github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/cli/app 0.036s coverage: 100.0% of statements
ok github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/cli/cmdargs 0.011s coverage: 60.8% of statements
ok github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/cli/flags 0.009s coverage: 97.7% of statements
? github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/cli/input [no test files]
ok github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/cli/options 0.033s coverage: 50.0% of statements
? github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/cli/paramcontext [no test files]
ok github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/cli/query 2.155s coverage: 45.3% of statements
ok github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/cli/server 1.373s coverage: 67.8% of statements
ok github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/cli/smartcontract 8.819s coverage: 94.3% of statements
ok github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/cli/util 0.006s coverage: 10.9% of statements
? github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/cli/vm [no test files]
ok github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/cli/wallet 72.103s coverage: 88.2% of statements
Still a nice thing to have.