ezccip.js
Turnkey EIP-3668: CCIP-Read Handler for ENS and arbitrary functions.
npm i @namestone/ezccip
✓
- see types / uses ethers
- works with any server infrastructure
- uses minimal imports for serverless
- implements multiple protocols:
- used by namestonehq/TheOffchainGateway.js
enableENSIP10()
drop-in support for namestonehq/enson.js Record-type
- supports Multicall-over-CCIP-Read
resolve(name, multicall([...]))
multicall([resolve(name, ...), ...])
multicall([resolve(name, multicall([...])), ...])
- use
serve()
to quickly launch a server
- CCIP Postman ⭐️
- directly debug any CCIP-Read server (no RPC)
Demo
npm run start
— starts a CCIP-Read server for TOR protocol using serve()
- check Postman ← change to
http://localhost:8016
- choose a TOR:
- setup Context:
0xd00d726b2aD6C81E894DC6B87BE6Ce9c5572D2cd http://localhost:8016
Examples
Usage
Create an instance and register some handlers.
import { EZCCIP } from "@namestone/ezccip";
let ezccip = new EZCCIP();
ezccip.register("add(uint256, uint256) returns (uint256)", ([a, b]) => [a + b]);
ezccip.enableENSIP10(async (name, context) => {
return {
async text(key) {
switch (key) {
case "name":
return "Raffy";
case "avatar":
return "https://raffy.antistupid.com/ens.jpg";
}
},
};
});
let abi = new ethers.Interface([
"function f(bytes32 x) returns (string)",
"function g(uint256 a, uint256 b) returns (uint256)",
]);
ezccip.register(abi, {
async ["f(bytes32)"]([x], context, history) {
history.show = [context.sender];
history.name = "Chonk";
return [context.calldata];
},
async ["0xe2179b8e"]([a, b], context) {
context.protocol = "tor";
context.signingKey = ...;
return ethers.toBeHex(1337n, 32);
},
});
When your server has a request for CCIP-Read, use EZCCIP to produce a response.
let { sender, data: calldata } = JSON.parse(req.body);
let { data, history } = await ezccip.handleRead(sender, calldata, {
protocol: "tor",
signingKey,
});
reply.json({ data });
console.log(history.toString());
- implement via
GET
, POST
, or query directly
context
carries useful information about the incoming request
history
collects information as the response is generated
serve()
Start a simple server for an EZCCIP instance or a function representing the enableENSIP10()
handler.
import { serve } from "@namestone/ezccip/serve";
let ccip = await serve(ezccip);
await ccip.shutdown();
await serve(() => {
text: () => "Raffy";
});
Sender vs Origin
- ⚠️
sender
may not be the originating contract
- Best Solution: embed
origin
into the endpoint as a path component:
http://my.server/.../0xABCD/...
origin = 0xABCD
- or, use
parseOrigin(path: string) => string
to extract origin
from an arbitrary path
- or, supply a fallback
origin
- if
origin
is not detected, origin = sender
processENSIP10()
Apply ENSIP-10 calldata
to a Record
-object and generate the corresponding ABI-encoded response. This is a free-function.
let record = {
text(key) { if (key == 'name') return 'raffy'; }
addr(type) { if (type == 60) return '0x1234'; }
};
let calldata = '0x...';
let res = await processENSIP10(record, calldata);