This project generates a type-safe smart contract client in TypeScript for the Algorand Blockchain that wraps the application client in AlgoKit Utils and tailors it to a specific smart contract. It does this by reading an ARC-56 or ARC-32 application spec file and generating a client which exposes methods for each ABI method in the target smart contract, along with helpers to create, update, and delete the application.
To be able to consume the generated file you need to include it in a TypeScript project that has (at least) the following package installed:
npm install @algorandfoundation/algokit-utils
Note: you need at least version 7 of AlgoKit Utils to work with the latest version of the generator. It currently only works with algosdk v2.
The cli can be used to generate a client via the following command.
npx --yes @algorandfoundation/algokit-client-generator generate -a ./application.json -o ./client.generated.ts
Alternatively, a client can be generated from code by invoking the generate
function paired with either writeDocumentPartsToString
or writeDocumentPartsToStream
depending on your needs. We also expose helpers to optionally load and validate an application.json file.
import fs from 'fs'
import {
writeDocumentPartsToStream,
writeDocumentPartsToString,
generate,
loadApplicationJson,
validateApplicationJson,
} from '@algorandfoundation/algokit-client-generator'
import appJson from './application.json'
const appJsonFromFile = loadApplicationJson('./application.json')
const appJsonFromObject = validateApplicationJson(appJson)
const fileStream = fs.createWriteStream('./client.ts', {
flags: 'w',
})
writeDocumentPartsToStream(generate(appJsonFromFile, fileStream))
const clientAsString = writeDocumentPartsToString(appJsonFromObject)
For details on how to use the generated client see the more detailed usage docs
There are a range of examples that you can look at to see a source smart contract (e.g. {contract.py}
), the generated client (client.ts
) and some tests that demonstrate how you can use the client (client.spec.ts
).
If you want to contribute to this project the following information will be helpful.
-
Clone this repository locally
-
Install pre-requisites:
- Install
AlgoKit
- Link: Ensure you can executealgokit --version
. - Bootstrap your local environment; run
algokit bootstrap all
within this folder, which will:- Install
Poetry
- Link: The minimum required version is1.2
. Ensure you can executepoetry -V
and get1.2
+ - Run
poetry install
in the root directory, which will set up a.venv
folder with a Python virtual environment and also install all Python dependencies - Run
npm install
- Install
- Install
-
Open the project and start debugging / developing via:
- VS Code
- Open the repository root in VS Code
- Install recommended extensions
- Run tests via test explorer
- IDEA (e.g. PyCharm)
- Open the repository root in the IDE
- It should automatically detect it's a Poetry project and set up a Python interpreter and virtual environment.
- Run tests
- Other
- Open the repository root in your text editor of choice
- Run
npm run test
- VS Code
- If you update to the latest source code and there are new dependencies you will need to run
algokit bootstrap all
again - Follow step 3 above
In the examples
folder there is a series of example contracts along with their generated client. These contracts are built using Beaker.
If you want to make changes to any of the smart contract examples and re-generate the ARC-0032 application.json files then change the corresponding examples/{contract}/{contract}.py
file and then run:
poetry run python -m examples
Or in Visual Studio Code you can use the default build task (Ctrl+Shift+B).
To regenerate the generated clients run npm run update-approvals
.
This project uses GitHub Actions to define CI/CD workflows, which are located in the .github/workflows
folder.
Making any changes to the generated code will result in the approval tests failing. The approval tests work by generating a version of client
and outputting it to ./examples/APP_NAME/client.generated.ts
then comparing to the approved version ./examples/APP_NAME/client.ts
. If you
make a change and break the approval tests, you will need to update the approved version by overwriting it with the generated version.
You can run npm run update-approvals
to update all approved clients in one go.