title |
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Use Sui CLI to Start and Manage Network |
Welcome to the Sui tutorial on the Sui CLI developed to facilitate experimentation with Sui features using a command line interface. In this document, we describe how to set up the Sui client and execute commands through its command line interface, Sui CLI.
Note, this is an advanced option and an alternative to simply connecting to our public Devnet. Use Devnet to build upon Sui. Use the Sui CLI here to contribute to Sui itself.
Follow the instructions to install Sui binaries.
The genesis
command creates four validators and five user accounts
each with five gas objects. These are Sui objects used
to pay for Sui transactions,
such other object transfers or smart contract (Move) calls. These
numbers represent a sample configuration and have been chosen somewhat
arbitrarily; the process of generating the genesis state can be
customized with additional accounts, objects, code, etc. as described
in Genesis customization.
- Optionally, set
RUST_LOG=debug
for verbose logging. - Initiate
genesis
:$ sui genesis
All of this is contained in configuration and keystore files and an authorities_db
database directory. A client_db
directory is also created upon running the
sui client new-address
command covered later.
The network configuration is stored in network.yaml
and can be used
subsequently to start the network. The client.yaml
and sui.keystore
are also created to be used by the Sui client to manage the newly
created accounts.
By default, these files are placed in your home directory at
~/.sui/sui_config
(created automatically if it does not yet exist). But you
can override this location by providing an alternative path to the --working-dir
argument. Run the command like so to place the files in the dir
directory:
$ sui genesis --working-dir /path/to/sui/config/dir
Note: That path and directory must already exist and will not be created with the
--working-dir
argument.
To recreate Sui genesis state in the same location, which will remove
existing configuration files, pass the --force
option to the sui genesis
command and either run it in the default directory (~/.sui/sui_config
) or specify
it once again, using the --working-dir
argument:
$ sui genesis --force --working-dir /path/to/sui/config/dir
The genesis process creates a configuration file client.yaml
, and a keystore file sui.keystore
for the
Sui client. The config file contains information of the accounts and
the Sui Network server. The keystore file contains all the public-private key pairs of the created accounts.
Sui client uses the network information in client.yaml
to communicate
with the Sui network validators and create transactions using the key
pairs residing in the keystore file.
Here is an example of client.yaml
showing the accounts and key pairs
in the client configuration (with some values omitted):
---
accounts:
- b02b5e57fe3572f94ad5ac2a17392bfb3261f7a0
- b4f5ed3cbe78c7969e6ac073f9a0c525fd07f05a
- 48ff0a932b12976caec91d521265b009ad5b2225
- 08da15bee6a3f5b01edbbd402654a75421d81397
- 3cbf06e9997b3864e3baad6bc0f0ef8ec423cd75
keystore:
File: /Users/user/.sui/sui_config/sui.keystore
gateway:
embedded:
epoch: 0
validator_set:
- public-key: Ot3ov659M4tl59E9Tq1rUj5SccoXstXrMhQSJX7pFKQ=
stake: 1
network-address: /dns/localhost/tcp/57468/http
- public-key: UGfB4wzJ2Lntn+WJvv+83RSigpuf7Vv2AmCPQR28TVY=
stake: 1
network-address: /dns/localhost/tcp/57480/http
- public-key: 5bO8DUgmA9i1SiUka5BT6VjIclMNQBRnbVww2IXxFqw=
stake: 1
network-address: /dns/localhost/tcp/57492/http
- public-key: 8uV0ml/DPUXG9UbrnlP6v08XaBum9pcIDelRT04NanU=
stake: 1
network-address: /dns/localhost/tcp/57504/http
send_timeout:
secs: 4
nanos: 0
recv_timeout:
secs: 4
nanos: 0
buffer_size: 650000
db_folder_path: /Users/user/.sui/sui_config/client_db
active_address: "0xb02b5e57fe3572f94ad5ac2a17392bfb3261f7a0"
The accounts
variable contains the account's address that the client manages. The
gateway
variable contains the information of the Sui network that the client will
be connecting to.
The authorities
variable is part of the embedded gateway configuration. It contains
the Sui network validator's name, host and port information. It is used to establish connections
to the Sui network.
Note send_timeout
, recv_timeout
and buffer_size
are the network
parameters, and db_folder_path
is the path to the account's client state
database. This database stores all the transaction data, certificates
and object data belonging to the account.
The Sui Network Gateway (or simply, Sui Gateway) is an abstraction layer that acts as the entry point to the Sui network. Different gateway implementations can be used by the application layer based on their use cases.
As the name suggests, embedded gateway embeds the gateway logic into the application; all data will be stored locally and the application will make direct connection to the validators.
You can also connect the client to the Sui network via an RPC Gateway;
To use the RPC gateway, update client.yaml
's gateway
section to:
...
gateway:
rpc: "http://localhost:5001"
...
The key pairs are stored in sui.keystore
. However, this is not secure
and shouldn't be used in a production environment. We have plans to
implement more secure key management and support hardware signing in a future release.
Run the following command to start the local Sui network, assuming you accepted the default location for configuration:
$ sui start
This command will look for the Sui network configuration file
network.yaml
in the ~/.sui/sui_config
directory. But you can
override this setting by providing a path to the directory where
this file is stored:
$ sui start --config /path/to/sui/network/config/file
For example:
$ sui start --config /Users/name/tmp/network.yaml
Executing any of these two commands in a terminal window will result in no output but the terminal will be "blocked" by the running Sui instance (it will not return the command prompt). The command can also be run in background.
NOTE: For logs, set RUST_LOG=debug
before invoking sui start
.
If you see errors when trying to start Sui network, particularly if you made some custom changes (e.g, customized client configuration), you should recreate Sui genesis state.
Now start a new terminal since you have the Sui network running in the first terminal.
The following commands are supported by the Sui client:
active-address Default address used for commands when none specified
addresses Obtain the Addresses managed by the client
call Call Move function
clear Clear screen
create-example-nft Create an example NFT
echo Write arguments to the console output
env Print environment
exit Exit the interactive shell
gas Obtain all gas objects owned by the address
help Print this message or the help of the given subcommand(s)
history Print history
merge-coin Merge two coin objects into one coin
new-address Generate new address and keypair
object Get obj info
objects Obtain all objects owned by the address
publish Publish Move modules
split-coin Split a coin object into multiple coins
switch Switch active address and network (e.g., Devnet, local RPC server)
sync Synchronize client state with authorities
transfer Transfer object
transfer-sui Transfer SUI, and pay gas with the same SUI coin object. If amount is
specified, only the amount is transferred; otherwise the entire object
is transferred
Note: The
clear
,echo
,env
andexit
commands exist only in the interactive shell.
Use sui client -h
to see the most up-to-date list of commands.
Use help <command>
to see more information on each command.
You can start the client in two modes: interactive shell or command line interface.
To start the interactive shell, execute the following (in a different
terminal window than one used to execute sui start
). Assuming you
accepted the default location for configuration:
$ sui console
This command will look for the client configuration file
client.yaml
in the ~/.sui/sui_config
directory. But you can
override this setting by providing a path to the directory where this
file is stored:
$ sui console --config /path/to/client/config/file
The Sui interactive client console supports the following shell functionality:
- Command history -
The
history
command can be used to print the interactive shell's command history; you can also use Up, Down or Ctrl-P, Ctrl-N to navigate previous or next matches from history. History search is also supported using Ctrl-R. - Tab completion - Tab completion is supported for all commands using Tab and Ctrl-I keys.
- Environment variable substitution -
The Sui console will substitute inputs prefixed with
$
with environment variables, you can use theenv
command to print out the entire list of variables and useecho
to preview the substitution without invoking any commands.
The client can also be used without the interactive shell, which can be useful if you want to pipe the output of the client to another application or invoke client commands using scripts.
USAGE:
sui client [SUBCOMMAND]
For example, we can use the following command to see the list of accounts available on the platform:
$ sui client addresses
The result of running this command should resemble the following output:
Showing 5 results.
0x66af3898e7558b79e115ab61184a958497d1905a
0xae6fb6036570fec1df71599740c132cdf5b45b9d
0x45cda12e3bafe3017b4b3cd62c493e5fbaad7fb0
0xef999dbdb19ccca504eef5432cec69ea8a1d4a1b
0x4489ab46a230c1876578441d68f25bf968e6f2b0
But the actual address values will most likely differ in your case (as will other values, such as object IDs, in the latter parts of this tutorial). Consequently, do not copy and paste the actual command from this tutorial as they are unlikely to work for you verbatim. Each time you create a config for the client, addresses and object IDs will be assigned randomly. Consequently, you cannot rely on copy-pasting commands that include these values, as they will be different between different users/configs.
Since a Sui CLI client manages multiple disjointed addresses, one might need to specify which address they want to call a command on.
For convenience, one can choose to set a default, or active address that will be used for commands that require an address to operate on. A default address is picked at the start, but this can be changed later.
In order to see what the current active address is, use the command active-address
$ sui client active-address
Which will reveal an address resembling:
0x562f07cf6369e8d22dbf226a5bfedc6300014837
Changing the default address is as easy as calling the switch
command:
$ sui client switch --address 0x913cf36f370613ed131868ac6f9da2420166062e
You will see output like:
Active address switched to 0x913cf36f370613ed131868ac6f9da2420166062e
One can call, for example, the objects
command with or without an address specified.
When not specified, the active address is used.
$ sui client objects
Object ID | Version | Digest | Owner Type | Object Type
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0x66eaa38c8ea99673a92a076a00101ab9b3a06b55 | 0 | j8qLxVk/Bm9iMdhPf9b7HcIMQIAM+qCd8LfPAwKYrFo= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
$ sui client objects --address 0x913cf36f370613ed131868ac6f9da2420166062e
Object ID | Version | Digest | Owner Type | Object Type
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0x66eaa38c8ea99673a92a076a00101ab9b3a06b55 | 0 | j8qLxVk/Bm9iMdhPf9b7HcIMQIAM+qCd8LfPAwKYrFo= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
All commands where address
is omitted will now use the newly specified active address:
0x913cf36f370613ed131868ac6f9da2420166062e
Note that if one calls a command that uses a gas object not owned by the active address, the address owned by the gas object is temporarily used for the transaction.
All Sui transactions require a gas object for payment, as well as a budget. However, specifying the gas object can be cumbersome; so in the CLI, one is allowed to omit the gas object and leave the client to pick an object that meets the specified budget. This gas selection logic is currently rudimentary as it does not combine/split gas as needed but currently picks the first object it finds that meets the budget. Note that one can always specify their own gas if they want to manage the gas themselves.
To see how much gas is in an account, use the gas
command. Note that this command uses the
active-address
, unless otherwise specified.
$ sui client gas
You will see output like:
Object ID | Version | Gas Value
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0x0b8a4620426e526fa42995cf26eb610bfe6bf063 | 0 | 100000
0x3c0763ccdea4ff5a4557505a62ab5e1daf91f4a2 | 0 | 100000
0x45a589a9e760d7f75d399327ac0fcba21495c22e | 0 | 100000
0x4c377a3a9d4b1b9c92189dd12bb1dcd0302a954b | 0 | 100000
0xf2961464ac6860a05d21b48c020b7e121399965c | 0 | 100000
If one does not want to use the active address, the addresses can be specified:
$ sui client gas --address 0x562f07cf6369e8d22dbf226a5bfedc6300014837
Object ID | Version | Gas Value
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0xa8ddc2661a19010e5f85cbf6d905ddfbe4dd0320 | 0 | 100000
0xb2683d0b592e5b002d110989a52943bc9da19158 | 0 | 100000
0xb41bf45b01c9befce3a0a371e2b98e062691438d | 0 | 100000
0xba9e10f319182f3bd584edb92c7899cc6d018723 | 0 | 100000
0xf8bfe77a5b21e7abfa3bc285991f9da4e5cc2d7b | 0 | 100000
Sui's genesis process will create five accounts by default; if that's not enough, there are two ways to add accounts to the Sui CLI client if needed.
To create a new account, execute the new-address
command:
$ sui client new-address ed25519
New address creation requires key scheme flag {ed25519 | secp256k1}
.
The output shows a confirmation after the account has been created:
Created new keypair for address with flag 0: [0xc72cf3adcc4d11c03079cef2c8992aea5268677a]
If you have an existing key pair from an old client config, you can copy the account
address manually to the new client.yaml
's accounts section, and add the key pair to the keystore file;
you won't be able to mutate objects if the account key is missing from the keystore.
Restart the Sui console after the modification; the new accounts will appear in the client if you query the addresses.
You can use the objects
command to view the objects owned by the address.
objects
command usage:
sui-client-objects
Obtain all objects owned by the address
USAGE:
sui client objects [OPTIONS]
OPTIONS:
--address <ADDRESS> Address owning the objects
-h, --help Print help information
--json Return command outputs in json format
To view the objects owned by the addresses created in genesis, run the following command (substituting the address with one of the genesis addresses in your client):
$ sui client objects --address 0x66af3898e7558b79e115ab61184a958497d1905a
The result should resemble the following.
Object ID | Version | Digest | Owner Type | Object Type
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0x66eaa38c8ea99673a92a076a00101ab9b3a06b55 | 0 | j8qLxVk/Bm9iMdhPf9b7HcIMQIAM+qCd8LfPAwKYrFo= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0xc8add7b4073900ffb0a8b4fe7d70a7db454c2e19 | 0 | uCZNPmDWOksKhCKwEaMtST5T4HbTjcgXGHRXP4qTLC8= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0xd1949864f94d87cf25e1fd7b1c8ab4bf685f7801 | 0 | OsTryyECAPW9mnSbWlYWELX+QlRg5er7s/DlkgqhDww= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0xddb6119c320f52f3fef9fbc272af305d985b6883 | 0 | gBCDdel7iJZnXpuf4g9dqIPT4XjaAY/4knNcDxbTons= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0xe1fe79ac8d900342e617e0986f54ff64e4e323de | 0 | qjsWIzAaomo0eqFwQt99EkARsiC/aw2hPDH8quM6pYg= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
Showing 5 results.
If you want to view more information about the objects, you can use the object
command.
Usage of object
command :
sui-client-object
Get object info
USAGE:
sui client object [OPTIONS] --id <ID>
OPTIONS:
-h, --help Print help information
--id <ID> Object ID of the object to fetch
--json Return command outputs in json format
To view the object, use the following command:
$ sui client object --id 0x66eaa38c8ea99673a92a076a00101ab9b3a06b55
This should give you output similar to the following:
----- Move Object (0x66eaa38c8ea99673a92a076a00101ab9b3a06b55[0]) -----
Owner: Account Address ( 0xb02b5e57fe3572f94ad5ac2a17392bfb3261f7a0 )
Version: 0
Storage Rebate: 0
Previous Transaction: AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA=
----- Data -----
type: 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
balance: 100000
id: 0x66eaa38c8ea99673a92a076a00101ab9b3a06b55[0]
The result shows some basic information about the object, the owner, version, ID, if the object is immutable and the type of the object.
Important: To gain a deeper view into the object, include the
--json
flag in thesui client
command to see the raw JSON representation of the object.
Here is example json
output:
{
"data": {
"dataType": "moveObject",
"type": "0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>",
"has_public_transfer": true,
"fields": {
"balance": 100000,
"id": {
"id": "0x66eaa38c8ea99673a92a076a00101ab9b3a06b55",
"version": 0
}
}
},
"owner": {
"AddressOwner": "0xb02b5e57fe3572f94ad5ac2a17392bfb3261f7a0"
},
"previousTransaction": "AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA=",
"storageRebate": 0,
"reference": {
"objectId": "0x66eaa38c8ea99673a92a076a00101ab9b3a06b55",
"version": 0,
"digest": "j8qLxVk/Bm9iMdhPf9b7HcIMQIAM+qCd8LfPAwKYrFo="
}
}
Coins are objects, but they have a specific use case that allows you to use native commands such as transfer
, merge-coin
, and split-coin
. This is different from non-coin objects that you can mutate only using Move calls.
If you inspect a newly created account, you would expect the account does not own any object. Let us inspect the fresh account we create in the Generating a new account section (C72CF3ADCC4D11C03079CEF2C8992AEA5268677A
):
$ sui client objects --address 0xc72cf3adcc4d11c03079cef2c8992aea5268677a
Object ID | Version | Digest
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Showing 0 results.
To add objects to the account, you can invoke a Move function, or you can transfer one of the existing coins from the genesis account to the new account using a dedicated Sui client command. We will explore how to transfer coins using the Sui CLI client in this section.
transfer
command usage:
sui-client-transfer
Transfer object
USAGE:
sui client transfer [OPTIONS] --to <TO> --object-id <COIN_OBJECT_ID> --gas-budget <GAS_BUDGET>
OPTIONS:
--coin-object-id <COIN_OBJECT_ID>
Coin to transfer, in 20 bytes Hex string
--gas <GAS>
ID of the gas object for gas payment, in 20 bytes Hex string If not provided, a gas
object with at least gas_budget value will be selected
--gas-budget <GAS_BUDGET>
Gas budget for this transfer
-h, --help
Print help information
--json
Return command outputs in json format
--to <TO>
Recipient address
To transfer a coin object to a recipient, you will need the recipient's address, the object ID of the coin that you want to transfer, and optionally the coin object ID for the transaction fee payment. If a gas coin is not specified, one that meets the budget is picked. Gas budget sets a cap for how much gas you want to spend. We are still finalizing our gas metering mechanisms. For now, just set something large enough.
Here is an example transfer of an object to account 0xf456ebef195e4a231488df56b762ac90695be2dd
:
$ sui client transfer --to 0xf456ebef195e4a231488df56b762ac90695be2dd --object-id 0x66eaa38c8ea99673a92a076a00101ab9b3a06b55 --gas-budget 100
With output like:
Transfer confirmed after 16896 us
----- Certificate ----
Transaction Hash: mjj1+0Wn+lER1oSD7fwXmoaxzoZW1pmMOqHQJgniy8U=
Transaction Signature: YLbToj+MjgQnaix24ObbE+BdXna6bB9gSSm+YMa/VHsX5g68T9+5vRnGbvDECGoioluUQP0k/zSPvQU5Y/uXCA==@BE/TaOYjyEtJUqF0Db4FEcVT4umrPmp760gFLQIGA1E=
Signed Authorities : [k#f2e5749a5fc33d45c6f546eb9e53fabf4f17681ba6f697080de9514f4e0d6a75, k#3adde8bfae7d338b65e7d13d4ead6b523e5271ca17b2d5eb321412257ee914a4, k#5067c1e30cc9d8b9ed9fe589beffbcdd14a2829b9fed5bf602608f411dbc4d56]
Transaction Kind : Public Transfer Object
Recipient : 0xf456ebef195e4a231488df56b762ac90695be2dd
Object ID : 0x66eaa38c8ea99673a92a076a00101ab9b3a06b55
Version : SequenceNumber(1)
Object Digest : NFDitxwq+bXetYmBxsw9RYEFqq+NWIbRxVoyv3JJXSE=
----- Transaction Effects ----
Status : Success
Mutated Objects:
- ID: 0x66eaa38c8ea99673a92a076a00101ab9b3a06b55 , Owner: Account Address ( 0xf456ebef195e4a231488df56b762ac90695be2dd )
- ID: 0xc8add7b4073900ffb0a8b4fe7d70a7db454c2e19 , Owner: Account Address ( 0xb02b5e57fe3572f94ad5ac2a17392bfb3261f7a0 )
The account will now have one object:
$ sui client objects --address 0xc72cf3adcc4d11c03079cef2c8992aea5268677a
Object ID | Version | Digest | Owner Type | Object Type
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0x66eaa38c8ea99673a92a076a00101ab9b3a06b55 | 1 | j8qLxVk/Bm9iMdhPf9b7HcIMQIAM+qCd8LfPAwKYrFo= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
You may create an NFT-like object on Sui using the following command:
$ sui client create-example-nft
You will see output resembling:
Successfully created an ExampleNFT:
----- Move Object (0x524f9fae3ca4554e01354415daf58a05e5bf26ac[1]) -----
Owner: Account Address ( 0xb02b5e57fe3572f94ad5ac2a17392bfb3261f7a0 )
Version: 1
Storage Rebate: 25
Previous Transaction: 98HbDxEwEUknQiJzyWM8AiYIM479BEKuGwxrZOGtAwk=
----- Data -----
type: 0x2::devnet_nft::DevNetNFT
description: An NFT created by the Sui Command Line Tool
id: 0x524f9fae3ca4554e01354415daf58a05e5bf26ac[1]
name: Example NFT
url: ipfs://bafkreibngqhl3gaa7daob4i2vccziay2jjlp435cf66vhono7nrvww53ty
The command will invoke the mint
function in the devnet_nft
module, which mints a Sui object with three attributes: name, description, and image URL with default values and transfers the object to your address. You can also provide custom values using the following instructions:
create-example-nft
command usage:
sui-client-create-example-nft
Create an example NFT
USAGE:
sui client create-example-nft [OPTIONS]
OPTIONS:
--description <DESCRIPTION> Description of the NFT
--gas <GAS> ID of the gas object for gas payment, in 20 bytes Hex string
If not provided, a gas object with at least gas_budget value
will be selected
--gas-budget <GAS_BUDGET> Gas budget for this transfer
-h, --help Print help information
--json Return command outputs in json format
--name <NAME> Name of the NFT
--url <URL> Display url(e.g., an image url) of the NFT
Overtime, the account might receive coins from other accounts and will become unmanageable when the number of coins grows; contrarily, the account might need to split the coins for payment or for transfer to another account.
We can use the merge-coin
command and split-coin
command to consolidate or split coins, respectively.
Usage of merge-coin
:
sui-client-merge-coin
Merge two coin objects into one coin
USAGE:
sui client merge-coin [OPTIONS] --primary-coin <PRIMARY_COIN> --coin-to-merge <COIN_TO_MERGE> --gas-budget <GAS_BUDGET>
OPTIONS:
--coin-to-merge <COIN_TO_MERGE>
Coin to be merged, in 20 bytes Hex string
--gas <GAS>
ID of the gas object for gas payment, in 20 bytes Hex string If not provided, a gas
object with at least gas_budget value will be selected
--gas-budget <GAS_BUDGET>
Gas budget for this call
-h, --help
Print help information
--json
Return command outputs in json format
--primary-coin <PRIMARY_COIN>
Coin to merge into, in 20 bytes Hex string
Here is an example of how to merge coins. To merge coins, you will need at lease three coin objects -
two coin objects for merging, and one for the gas payment.
You also need to specify the maximum gas budget that should be expanded for the coin merge operations.
Let us examine objects owned by address 0x3cbf06e9997b3864e3baad6bc0f0ef8ec423cd75
and use the first coin (gas) object as the one to be the result of the merge, the second one to be merged, and the third one to be used as payment:
$ sui client objects --address 0x3cbf06e9997b3864e3baad6bc0f0ef8ec423cd75
And its output:
Object ID | Version | Digest | Owner Type | Object Type
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0x1e90389f5d70d7fa6ce973155460e1c04deae194 | 0 | BC5O8Bf6Uw8S1LV1y4RCI6+kz1KhZG/aOpeqq9kTAvs= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0x351f08f03709cebea85dcd20e24b00fbc1851c92 | 0 | 9aYvavAzY6chYbOUtMtJj0g/5GNc+KBsqptCX5pmQ2Y= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0x3c720502f9eabb17a52a999859fbbaeb408b1d14 | 0 | WUPT6P40veMZ/C7GiQpv92I4EH+hvh5BbkBt+7p9yH0= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0x7438af4677b9cea2094848f611143346183c11d1 | 0 | 55B56RG/kCeHrN6GXdIq0IvnyYD/hng9J7I7FNRykQ4= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0x9d5f2b2564ad2255c24a03556785bddc85381508 | 0 | rmyYjq/UEED0xR0hE3Da8OYgBAu3MYxKQ3v76pGTDek= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
Showing 5 results.
Then we merge:
$ sui client merge-coin --primary-coin 0x1e90389f5d70d7fa6ce973155460e1c04deae194 --coin-to-merge 0x351f08f03709cebea85dcd20e24b00fbc1851c92 --gas-budget 1000
With results resembling:
----- Certificate ----
Transaction Hash: kxxpeggKaMpiWTpSrCNYcu3EDBfNWBJiIPnqae99Znw=
Transaction Signature: /4jxUHC8iZRaHlgbgfOr962BqIRb7AavVJE8GUlY6EMehedF8iVxPf8URe5wFyrxD8IvEclN3Z1qJ4UweYCQAA==@cQeSjZ1xq4QC+7G5/MlAhnZuie6ZrukU/ps2LHmX3D8=
Signed Authorities : [k#3adde8bfae7d338b65e7d13d4ead6b523e5271ca17b2d5eb321412257ee914a4, k#e5b3bc0d482603d8b54a25246b9053e958c872530d4014676d5c30d885f116ac, k#5067c1e30cc9d8b9ed9fe589beffbcdd14a2829b9fed5bf602608f411dbc4d56]
Transaction Kind : Call
Package ID : 0x2
Module : coin
Function : join
Arguments : ["0x1e90389f5d70d7fa6ce973155460e1c04deae194", "0x351f08f03709cebea85dcd20e24b00fbc1851c92"]
Type Arguments : ["0x2::sui::SUI"]
----- Merge Coin Results ----
Updated Coin : Coin { id: 0x1e90389f5d70d7fa6ce973155460e1c04deae194, value: 200000 }
Updated Gas : Coin { id: 0x3c720502f9eabb17a52a999859fbbaeb408b1d14, value: 99444 }
Usage of split-coin
:
sui-client-split-coin
Split a coin object into multiple coins
USAGE:
sui client split-coin [OPTIONS] --coin-id <COIN_ID> --gas-budget <GAS_BUDGET> <--amounts <AMOUNTS>...|--count <COUNT>>
OPTIONS:
--amounts <AMOUNTS>... Specific amounts to split out from the coin
--coin-id <COIN_ID> Coin to Split, in 20 bytes Hex string
--count <COUNT> Count of equal-size coins to split into
--gas <GAS> ID of the gas object for gas payment, in 20 bytes Hex string If
not provided, a gas object with at least gas_budget value will
be selected
--gas-budget <GAS_BUDGET> Gas budget for this call
-h, --help Print help information
--json Return command outputs in json format
For splitting coins, you will need at least two coins to execute the split-coin
command,
one coin to split, one for the gas payment.
Let us examine objects owned by address 0x08da15bee6a3f5b01edbbd402654a75421d81397
:
$ sui client objects --address 0x08da15bee6a3f5b01edbbd402654a75421d81397
With output resembling:
Object ID | Version | Digest | Owner Type | Object Type
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0x4a2853304fd2c243dae7d1ba58260bb7c40724e1 | 0 | uNcjv6KP8AXgQHTFmiEPV3tpWZcYHb1HmBR0B2pMsAo= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0x692c179dc434ceb0eaa51cdd198bb905b5ab27c4 | 0 | /ug6IGGld90PqnmL9qijciCqn25V11nn5/PAsKjxMY0= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0x7f7b7c1589aceb073a7c8740b1d47d05e4d89e3c | 0 | N5+qKRenKWqb7Y6WKZuFD+fRDB6pj/OtIyri+FSQ3Q0= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0xe42558e82e315c9c81ee5b9f1ac3db819ece5c1d | 0 | toHeih0DeFrqxQhGzVUi9EkVwAZSbLx6hv2gpMgNBbs= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0xfa322fee6a7f4c266ad4840e85bf3d87689b6de0 | 0 | DxjnkJTSl0o6HlzeOX5K/If61bbFwvRDydjzd2bq8ho= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
Showing 5 results.
Here is an example of splitting coins using specific amounts. We are splitting out three new coins
from the original coin (first one on the list above), with values of 1000, 5000 and 3000,
respectively; note the --amounts
argument accepts a list of values. We use the second coin on the
list to pay for this transaction.
$ sui client split-coin --coin-id 0x4a2853304fd2c243dae7d1ba58260bb7c40724e1 --amounts 1000 5000 3000 --gas-budget 1000
You will see output resembling:
----- Certificate ----
Transaction Hash: qpxpv+EySl6tkz7OZ+/h/cpOlC/q1kBepr/qrDHsg7k=
Transaction Signature: BsuWPuG9iBnvc/cQBbpBvDsBnzLXrhxPpoblpZ7ZcTQ78X9AtPO7knOaPjEbLxEJMGpOCPTIWa0eMPpoqT/SDQ==@ZXB4tfniuC6Oir8aVtIR5C00Md/tG3WSZRNN7nDDZLs=
Signed Authorities : [k#3adde8bfae7d338b65e7d13d4ead6b523e5271ca17b2d5eb321412257ee914a4, k#5067c1e30cc9d8b9ed9fe589beffbcdd14a2829b9fed5bf602608f411dbc4d56, k#f2e5749a5fc33d45c6f546eb9e53fabf4f17681ba6f697080de9514f4e0d6a75]
Transaction Kind : Call
Package ID : 0x2
Module : coin
Function : split_vec
Arguments : ["0x4a2853304fd2c243dae7d1ba58260bb7c40724e1", [1000,5000,3000]]
Type Arguments : ["0x2::sui::SUI"]
----- Split Coin Results ----
Updated Coin : Coin { id: 0x4a2853304fd2c243dae7d1ba58260bb7c40724e1, value: 91000 }
New Coins : Coin { id: 0x1da8193ac29f94f8207b0222bd5941b7814c1668, value: 3000 },
Coin { id: 0x3653bae7851c36e0e5e827b7c1a2978ef78efd7e, value: 5000 },
Coin { id: 0xd5b694f67410d5b6cd293128cd48953aaa0a3dce, value: 1000 }
Updated Gas : Coin { id: 0x692c179dc434ceb0eaa51cdd198bb905b5ab27c4, value: 99385 }
$ sui client objects --address 0x08da15bee6a3f5b01edbbd402654a75421d81397
Object ID | Version | Digest | Owner Type | Object Type
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0x1da8193ac29f94f8207b0222bd5941b7814c1668 | 1 | nAMEV3NZ0zscjO10QQUt1drLvhNXTk4MVLAg1FXTQxw= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0x3653bae7851c36e0e5e827b7c1a2978ef78efd7e | 1 | blMuVATrI89PRvqA4Kuv6rNkbuAb+bYhmkMocY7pavw= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0x4a2853304fd2c243dae7d1ba58260bb7c40724e1 | 1 | uhfauig0guMidpxFyCO6FzhzDfucss+eA6xWzAVF3sU= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0x692c179dc434ceb0eaa51cdd198bb905b5ab27c4 | 1 | sWTy2PUbt3UFEKx1Km32dEG7cQscSK+eVc3ChaZCkkA= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0x7f7b7c1589aceb073a7c8740b1d47d05e4d89e3c | 0 | N5+qKRenKWqb7Y6WKZuFD+fRDB6pj/OtIyri+FSQ3Q0= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0xd5b694f67410d5b6cd293128cd48953aaa0a3dce | 1 | 4V0BC6eopxkN6wIOdm2FVgwN3psNbPvLKQ9/zrYtsDM= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0xe42558e82e315c9c81ee5b9f1ac3db819ece5c1d | 0 | toHeih0DeFrqxQhGzVUi9EkVwAZSbLx6hv2gpMgNBbs= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0xfa322fee6a7f4c266ad4840e85bf3d87689b6de0 | 0 | DxjnkJTSl0o6HlzeOX5K/If61bbFwvRDydjzd2bq8ho= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
Showing 8 results.
From the result, we can see three new coins were created in the transaction.
Here is an example of splitting coins into equal parts without needing to specify the individual amount for every new coin.
$ sui client split-coin --coin-id 0x4a2853304fd2c243dae7d1ba58260bb7c40724e1 --count 3 --gas-budget 1000
You will see output resembling:
----- Certificate ----
Transaction Hash: qpxpv+EySl6tkz7OZ+/h/cpOlC/q1kBepr/qrDHsg7k=
Transaction Signature: BsuWPuG9iBnvc/cQBbpBvDsBnzLXrhxPpoblpZ7ZcTQ78X9AtPO7knOaPjEbLxEJMGpOCPTIWa0eMPpoqT/SDQ==@ZXB4tfniuC6Oir8aVtIR5C00Md/tG3WSZRNN7nDDZLs=
Signed Authorities : [k#3adde8bfae7d338b65e7d13d4ead6b523e5271ca17b2d5eb321412257ee914a4, k#5067c1e30cc9d8b9ed9fe589beffbcdd14a2829b9fed5bf602608f411dbc4d56, k#f2e5749a5fc33d45c6f546eb9e53fabf4f17681ba6f697080de9514f4e0d6a75]
Transaction Kind : Call
Package ID : 0x2
Module : coin
Function : split_n
Arguments : ["0x4a2853304fd2c243dae7d1ba58260bb7c40724e1", 3]
Type Arguments : ["0x2::sui::SUI"]
----- Split Coin Results ----
Updated Coin : Coin { id: 0x4a2853304fd2c243dae7d1ba58260bb7c40724e1, value: 33334 }
New Coins : Coin { id: 0x1da8193ac29f94f8207b0222bd5941b7814c1668, value: 33333 },
Coin { id: 0x3653bae7851c36e0e5e827b7c1a2978ef78efd7e, value: 33333 }
Updated Gas : Coin { id: 0x692c179dc434ceb0eaa51cdd198bb905b5ab27c4, value: 99385 }
From the result, we can see three coins with values of roughly one-third of 100000.
The genesis state of the Sui platform includes Move code that is immediately ready to be called from Sui CLI. Please see our Move developer documentation for the first look at Move source code and a description of the following function we will be calling in this tutorial:
public entry fun transfer(c: coin::Coin<SUI>, recipient: address) {
transfer::transfer(c, Address::new(recipient))
}
Please note that there is no real need to use a Move call to transfer coins as this can be accomplished with a built-in Sui client command - we chose this example due to its simplicity.
Let us examine objects owned by address 0x48ff0a932b12976caec91d521265b009ad5b2225
:
$ sui client objects --address 0x48ff0a932b12976caec91d521265b009ad5b2225
Object ID | Version | Digest | Owner Type | Object Type
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0x471c8e241d0473c34753461529b70f9c4ed3151b | 0 | MCQIALghS9kQUWMclChmsd6jCuLiUxNjEn9VRV+AhSA= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0x53b50e3020a01e1fd6acf832a871feee240183f0 | 0 | VIbuA4fcsitOUmJLQ+FugZWIn7bg6LnVO8eTIAUDzkg= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0x5c846224b8704683a1c576aec7c8d9c3413d87c1 | 0 | KO0Fr9uCPnT3KxOEishyzas33le4J9fAGg7iEOOzo7A= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0x6fe4cf8d2c21f23f2aacf60f30c98ff9e2c78226 | 0 | p2evKbTirwEoF1PxGIu5USAsSdkxzh1sUD/OxBfpdNE= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0xa28dd252ab5b984a8c1da699bbe10e7f09947a12 | 0 | 6VT+8479aijA8tYmab7YatVgjXm1TWy5jItooC416YQ= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
Showing 5 results.
Now that we know which objects are owned by that address,
we can transfer one of them to another address, say the fresh one
we created in the Generating a new account section
(0xc72cf3adcc4d11c03079cef2c8992aea5268677a
). We can try any object,
but for the sake of this exercise, let's choose the last one on the
list.
We will perform the transfer by calling the transfer
function from
the sui module using the following Sui client command:
$ sui client call --function transfer --module sui --package 0x2 --args 0x471c8e241d0473c34753461529b70f9c4ed3151b 0x3cbf06e9997b3864e3baad6bc0f0ef8ec423cd75 --gas-budget 1000
This is a pretty complicated command so let's explain all of its parameters one-by-one:
--function
- name of the function to be called--module
- name of the module containing the function--package
- ID of the package object where the module containing the function is located. (Remember that the ID of the genesis Sui package containing the GAS module is defined in its manifest file, and is equal to0x2
.)--args
- a list of function arguments formatted as SuiJSON values (hence the preceding0x
in address and object ID):- ID of the gas object representing the
c
parameter of thetransfer
function - address of the new gas object owner
- ID of the gas object representing the
--gas
- an optional object containing gas used to pay for this function call--gas-budget
- a decimal value expressing how much gas we are willing to pay for thetransfer
call to be completed to avoid accidental drain of all gas in the gas pay)
Note the third argument to the transfer
function representing
TxContext
does not have to be specified explicitly - it
is a required argument for all functions callable from Sui and is
auto-injected by the platform at the point of a function call.
Important: If you use a shell that interprets square brackets ([ ]) as special characters (such as the
zsh
shell), you must enclose the brackets in single quotes. For example, instead of[7,42]
you must use'[7,42]'
.Additionally, when you specify a vector of object IDs, you must enclose each ID in double quotes. For example,
'["0x471c8e241d0473c34753461529b70f9c4ed3151b","0x53b50e3020a01e1fd6acf832a871feee240183f0"]'
To gain a deeper view into the object, include the
--json
flag in thesui client
command to see the raw JSON representation of the object.
The output of the call command is a bit verbose, but the important information that should be printed at the end indicates objects changes as a result of the function call:
----- Certificate ----
Transaction Hash: KT7sEHzxavRFkLijfKGDqj6kM5bVl1QA1IawJPV2+Go=
Transaction Signature: GIUaa8yAPgy/eSVypVz+fmbjC2mL5kHuYNodUyNcIUMvlUN5XxyPYdL8C25vvH6rYt/ZUDY2ntZU1NHUp4yPCg==@iocJzkLCMJMh1VGZ6sUsw0okqoDP71ed9a4Vf2vWlx4=
Signed Authorities : [k#5067c1e30cc9d8b9ed9fe589beffbcdd14a2829b9fed5bf602608f411dbc4d56, k#e5b3bc0d482603d8b54a25246b9053e958c872530d4014676d5c30d885f116ac, k#3adde8bfae7d338b65e7d13d4ead6b523e5271ca17b2d5eb321412257ee914a4]
Transaction Kind : Call
Package ID : 0x2
Module : sui
Function : transfer
Arguments : ["0x471c8e241d0473c34753461529b70f9c4ed3151b", "0x3cbf06e9997b3864e3baad6bc0f0ef8ec423cd75"]
Type Arguments : []
----- Transaction Effects ----
Status : Success
Mutated Objects:
- ID: 0x471c8e241d0473c34753461529b70f9c4ed3151b , Owner: Account Address ( 0x3cbf06e9997b3864e3baad6bc0f0ef8ec423cd75 )
- ID: 0x53b50e3020a01e1fd6acf832a871feee240183f0 , Owner: Account Address ( 0x48ff0a932b12976caec91d521265b009ad5b2225 )
This output indicates the gas object
was updated to collect gas payment for the function call, and the
transferred object was updated as its owner had been
modified. We can confirm the latter (and thus a successful execution
of the transfer
function) by querying objects that are now owned by
the sender:
$ sui client objects --address 0x48ff0a932b12976caec91d521265b009ad5b2225
Object ID | Version | Digest | Owner Type | Object Type
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0x53b50e3020a01e1fd6acf832a871feee240183f0 | 1 | st6KVE+nTPsQgtEtxSbgJZCzSSuSB2ZsJAMbXFNLw/k= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0x5c846224b8704683a1c576aec7c8d9c3413d87c1 | 0 | KO0Fr9uCPnT3KxOEishyzas33le4J9fAGg7iEOOzo7A= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0x6fe4cf8d2c21f23f2aacf60f30c98ff9e2c78226 | 0 | p2evKbTirwEoF1PxGIu5USAsSdkxzh1sUD/OxBfpdNE= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0xa28dd252ab5b984a8c1da699bbe10e7f09947a12 | 0 | 6VT+8479aijA8tYmab7YatVgjXm1TWy5jItooC416YQ= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
Showing 4 results.
We can now see this address no longer owns the transferred object. And if we inspect this object, we can see it has the new owner, different from the original one:
$ sui client object --id 0x471c8e241d0473c34753461529b70f9c4ed3151b
Resulting in:
----- Move Object (0x471c8e241d0473c34753461529b70f9c4ed3151b[1]) -----
Owner: Account Address ( 0x3cbf06e9997b3864e3baad6bc0f0ef8ec423cd75 )
Version: 1
Storage Rebate: 15
Previous Transaction: KT7sEHzxavRFkLijfKGDqj6kM5bVl1QA1IawJPV2+Go=
----- Data -----
type: 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
balance: 100000
id: 0x471c8e241d0473c34753461529b70f9c4ed3151b[1]
In order for user-written code to be available in Sui, it must be
published to Sui's distributed ledger.
Please see the Move developer documentation for a
description on how to write a simple Move code package,
which we can publish using Sui client's publish
command.
Important: All calls to functions in the
debug
module must be removed from no-test code before the new module can be published (test code is marked with the#[test]
annotation).
The publish command
requires us to specify a directory where the user-defined package lives.
It's the path to the my_move_package
as per the
package creation description, a gas
object that will be used to pay for publishing the package (we use the
same gas object we used to pay for the function call in the
Calling Move code) section, and gas budget to put
an upper limit we use 1000 as our gas budget.
Let us use the same address for publishing that we used for calling Move code in the previous section (0x3cbf06e9997b3864e3baad6bc0f0ef8ec423cd75
) which now has 4 objects left:
$ sui client objects --address 0x3cbf06e9997b3864e3baad6bc0f0ef8ec423cd75
Outputting:
Object ID | Version | Digest | Owner Type | Object Type
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0x53b50e3020a01e1fd6acf832a871feee240183f0 | 1 | st6KVE+nTPsQgtEtxSbgJZCzSSuSB2ZsJAMbXFNLw/k= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0x5c846224b8704683a1c576aec7c8d9c3413d87c1 | 0 | KO0Fr9uCPnT3KxOEishyzas33le4J9fAGg7iEOOzo7A= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0x6fe4cf8d2c21f23f2aacf60f30c98ff9e2c78226 | 0 | p2evKbTirwEoF1PxGIu5USAsSdkxzh1sUD/OxBfpdNE= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
0xa28dd252ab5b984a8c1da699bbe10e7f09947a12 | 0 | 6VT+8479aijA8tYmab7YatVgjXm1TWy5jItooC416YQ= | AddressOwner | 0x2::coin::Coin<0x2::sui::SUI>
Showing 4 results.
The whole command to publish a package for address
0x3cbf06e9997b3864e3baad6bc0f0ef8ec423cd75
resembles the following (assuming
that the location of the package's sources is in the PATH_TO_PACKAGE
environment variable):
$ sui client publish --path $PATH_TO_PACKAGE/my_move_package --gas-budget 30000
The result of running this command should look as follows:
----- Certificate ----
Transaction Hash: evmJUz0+a2oFMbsTza2U+vC9q2KHeDVVV9XUma8OXv8=
Transaction Signature: 7Lqy/KQW86Tq81cUxLMW07AQw1S+D4QLFC9/jMNKrau81eABHpxG2lgaVaAh0c+d5ldYhp75SmpY0pxq0FSLBA==@BE/TaOYjyEtJUqF0Db4FEcVT4umrPmp760gFLQIGA1E=
Signed Authorities : [k#5067c1e30cc9d8b9ed9fe589beffbcdd14a2829b9fed5bf602608f411dbc4d56, k#f2e5749a5fc33d45c6f546eb9e53fabf4f17681ba6f697080de9514f4e0d6a75, k#e5b3bc0d482603d8b54a25246b9053e958c872530d4014676d5c30d885f116ac]
Transaction Kind : Publish
----- Publish Results ----
The newly published package object ID: 0xdbcee02bd4eb326122ced0a8540f15a057d82850
List of objects created by running module initializers:
----- Move Object (0x4ac2df49c3698baaef11ae23b3d8417d7e5ed65f[1]) -----
Owner: Account Address ( 0xb02b5e57fe3572f94ad5ac2a17392bfb3261f7a0 )
Version: 1
Storage Rebate: 12
Previous Transaction: evmJUz0+a2oFMbsTza2U+vC9q2KHeDVVV9XUma8OXv8=
----- Data -----
type: 0xdbcee02bd4eb326122ced0a8540f15a057d82850::m1::Forge
id: 0x4ac2df49c3698baaef11ae23b3d8417d7e5ed65f[1]
swords_created: 0
Updated Gas : Coin { id: 0xc8add7b4073900ffb0a8b4fe7d70a7db454c2e19, value: 96929 }
Please note that running this command resulted in creating an object representing the published package.
From now on, we can use the package object ID (0xdbcee02bd4eb326122ced0a8540f15a057d82850
) in the Sui client's call
command just like we used 0x2
for built-in packages in the
Calling Move code section.
Another object created as a result of package publishing is a
user-defined object (of type Forge
) crated inside initializer
function of the (only) module included in the published package - see
the part of Move developer documentation concerning module
initializers for more details on module
initializers.
Finally, we see that the gas object that was used to pay for publishing was updated as well.
Important: If the publishing attempt results in an error regarding verification failure, build your package locally (using the
sui move build
command) to get a more verbose error message.
The genesis process can be customized by providing a genesis configuration
file using the --config
flag.
$ sui genesis --config <Path to genesis config file>
Example genesis.yaml
:
---
validator_genesis_info: ~
committee_size: 4
accounts:
- gas_objects:
- object_id: "0xdbac75c4e5a5064875cb8566a533547957092f93"
gas_value: 100000
gas_object_ranges: []
move_packages: ["<Paths to custom move packages>"]
sui_framework_lib_path: ~
move_framework_lib_path: ~