This is a Hardhat network provider plugin for Ape. Hardhat is a development framework written in Node.js for Ethereum that includes a local network implementation. Use this plugin to manage a Hardhat node process or connect to an existing one.
- python3 version 3.8 up to 3.11.
- Node.js, NPM, and Hardhat 2.12.0 or greater. See Hardhat's Installation documentation for steps.
You can install the latest release via pip
:
pip install ape-hardhat
You can clone the repository and use setuptools
for the most up-to-date version:
git clone https://github.com/ApeWorX/ape-hardhat.git
cd ape-hardhat
python3 setup.py install
To use the plugin, first install Hardhat locally into your Ape project directory:
cd your-ape-project
npm install --save-dev hardhat
After that, you can use the --network ethereum:local:hardhat
command line flag to use the hardhat network (if it's not already configured as the default).
This network provider takes additional Hardhat-specific configuration options. To use them, add these configs in your project's ape-config.yaml
:
hardhat:
host: 127.0.0.1:8555
To select a random port, use a value of "auto":
hardhat:
host: auto
NOTE: If you plan on running multiple Hardhat nodes of any kind, you likely will want to use auto
or configure multiple hosts (see examples below).
This is useful for multiprocessing and starting up multiple providers.
You can also adjust the request timeout setting:
hardhat:
request_timeout: 20 # Defaults to 30
fork_request_timeout: 600 # Defaults to 300
The ape-hardhat
plugin also includes a mainnet fork provider. It requires using another provider that has access to mainnet.
Use it in most commands like this:
ape console --network :mainnet-fork:hardhat
Specify the upstream archive-data provider in your ape-config.yaml
:
hardhat:
fork:
ethereum:
mainnet:
upstream_provider: alchemy
Otherwise, it defaults to the default mainnet provider plugin. You can also specify a block_number
.
NOTE: Make sure you have the upstream provider plugin installed for ape.
If you wish to run both a forked network and the local Hardhat network simultaneously, you may configure a separate host for the forked network(s).
hardhat:
fork:
ethereum:
mainnet:
upstream_provider: alchemy
host: 127.0.0.1:8555
polygon:
mainnet:
upstream_provider: alchemy
host: 127.0.0.1:8556
Hardhat deployments are disabled for forks for performance reasons. If you want your contract deployments to run on your fork, you can set enable_hardhat_deployments
to true
in your config:
hardhat:
fork:
ethereum:
mainnet:
upstream_provider: alchemy
enable_hardhat_deployments: true
ape plugins install alchemy
To connect to a Hardhat node, set up your config like this:
hardhat:
host: https://hardhat.example.com
Now, instead of launching a local process, it will attempt to connect to the remote Hardhat node and use this plugin as the ape interace.
By default, Ape generates and uses a basic config file for starting up a Hardhat node and having the same test accounts that Ape expects.
To avoid conflict with other pre-existing Hardhat config files, Ape generates one in $HOME/.ape/hardhat
and always refers to that one.
To use a different one, such as the one in your local project instead, add the following to your ape-config.yaml
:
hardhat:
hardhat_config_file: ./hardhat.config.ts
NOTE: You can refer to either a Hardhat JS file or a Hardhat TS file.
Please see the contributing guide to learn more how to contribute to this project. Comments, questions, criticisms and pull requests are welcomed.