@ethereumjs/verkle
Verkle trees are a cryptographic data structure proposed for use in Ethereum to optimize storage and transaction verification. They combine features of Merkle Patricia Tries and Vector Commitment Trees to offer efficient data verification with smaller proof sizes. The goal is to improve scalability and efficiency in Ethereum's network operations.
This package is currently in early alpha and is a work in progress. It is not intended for use in production environments, but rather for research and development purposes. Any help in improving the package is very much welcome.
Installation
To obtain the latest version, simply require the project using npm
:
npm install @ethereumjs/verkle
Usage
Initialization and Basic Usage
import { VerkleTree } from '@ethereumjs/verkle'
import { bytesToUtf8, utf8ToBytes } from '@ethereumjs/util'
const tree = new VerkleTree()
async function test() {
await tree.put(utf8ToBytes('test'), utf8ToBytes('one'))
const value = await tree.get(utf8ToBytes('test'))
console.log(value ? bytesToUtf8(value) : 'not found')
}
test()
Proofs
Verkle Proofs
The EthereumJS Verkle package is still in its infancy, and as such, it does not currently support Verkle proof creation and verification. Support for Verkle proofs will be added eventually.
Examples
You can find additional examples complete with detailed explanations here.
Browser
With the breaking release round in Summer 2023 we have added hybrid ESM/CJS builds for all our libraries (see section below) and have eliminated many of the caveats which had previously prevented frictionless browser usage.
It is now easily possible to run a browser build of one of the EthereumJS libraries within a modern browser using the provided ESM build. For a setup example see ./examples/browser.html.
API
Docs
Generated TypeDoc API Documentation
Hybrid CJS/ESM Builds
With the breaking releases from Summer 2023 we have started to ship our libraries with both CommonJS (cjs
folder) and ESM builds (esm
folder), see package.json
for the detailed setup.
If you use an ES6-style import
in your code, files from the ESM build will be used:
import { EthereumJSClass } from '@ethereumjs/[PACKAGE_NAME]'
If you use Node.js-specific require
, the CJS build will be used:
const { EthereumJSClass } = require('@ethereumjs/[PACKAGE_NAME]')
Using ESM will give you additional advantages over CJS beyond browser usage like static code analysis / Tree Shaking, which CJS cannot provide.
References
EthereumJS
See our organizational documentation for an introduction to EthereumJS
as well as information on current standards and best practices. If you want to join for work or carry out improvements on the libraries, please review our contribution guidelines first.
License
MIT