Skip to content

Write tests once, run them both on NEAR TestNet and a controlled NEAR Sandbox local environment

License

GPL-3.0, Apache-2.0 licenses found

Licenses found

GPL-3.0
LICENSE
Apache-2.0
LICENSE-APACHE
Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

near/near-workspaces-js

NEAR Workspaces (TypeScript/JavaScript Edition)

Project license Project license Discord NPM version Size on NPM

NEAR Workspaces is a library for automating workflows and writing tests for NEAR smart contracts. You can use it as is or integrate with test runner of your choise (AVA, Jest, Mocha, etc.). If you don't have a preference, we suggest you to use AVA.

Quick Start (without testing frameworks)

To get started with Near Workspaces you need to do only two things:

  1. Initialize a Worker.

    const worker = await Worker.init();
    const root = worker.rootAccount;
    
    const alice = await root.createSubAccount('alice');
    const contract = await root.devDeploy('path/to/compiled.wasm');

    Let's step through this.

    1. Worker.init initializes a new SandboxWorker or TestnetWorker depending on the config. SandboxWorker contains NEAR Sandbox, which is essentially a local mini-NEAR blockchain. You can create one Worker per test to get its own data directory and port (for Sandbox) or root account (for Testnet), so that tests can run in parallel without race conditions in accessing states. If there's no state intervention. you can also reuse the Worker to speedup the tests.
    2. The worker has a root account. For SandboxWorker, it's test.near. For TestnetWorker, it creates a unique account. The following accounts are created as subaccounts of the root account. The name of the account will change from different runs, so you should not refer to them by hard coded account name. You can access them via the account object, such as root, alice and contract above.
    3. root.createSubAccount creates a new subaccount of root with the given name, for example alice.<root-account-name>.
    4. root.devDeploy creates an account with random name, then deploys the specified Wasm file to it.
    5. path/to/compiled.wasm will resolve relative to your project root. That is, the nearest directory with a package.json file, or your current working directory if no package.json is found. To construct a path relative to your test file, you can use path.join(__dirname, '../etc/etc.wasm') (more info).
    6. worker contains a reference to this data directory, so that multiple tests can use it as a starting point.
    7. If you're using a test framework, you can save the worker object and account objects root, alice, contract to test context to reuse them in subsequent tests.
    8. At the end of test, call await worker.tearDown() to shuts down the Worker. It gracefully shuts down the Sandbox instance it ran in the background. However, it keeps the data directory around. That's what stores the state of the two accounts that were created (alice and contract-account-name with its deployed contract).
  2. Writing tests.

    near-workspaces is designed for concurrency. Here's a simple way to get concurrent runs using plain JS:

    import {strict as assert} from 'assert';
    
    await Promise.all([
      async () => {
        await alice.call(
          contract,
          'some_update_function',
          {some_string_argument: 'cool', some_number_argument: 42}
        );
        const result = await contract.view(
          'some_view_function',
          {account_id: alice}
        );
        assert.equal(result, 'whatever');
      },
      async () => {
        const result = await contract.view(
          'some_view_function',
          {account_id: alice}
        );
        /* Note that we expect the value returned from `some_view_function` to be
        a default here, because this `fork` runs *at the same time* as the
        previous, in a separate local blockchain */
        assert.equal(result, 'some default');
      }
    ]);

    Let's step through this.

    1. worker and accounts such as alice are created before.
    2. call syntax mirrors near-cli and either returns the successful return value of the given function or throws the encountered error. If you want to inspect a full transaction and/or avoid the throw behavior, you can use callRaw instead.
    3. While call is invoked on the account doing the call (alice.call(contract, …)), view is invoked on the account being viewed (contract.view(…)). This is because the caller of a view is irrelevant and ignored.

See the tests directory in this project for more examples.

Quick Start with AVA

Since near-workspaces is designed for concurrency, AVA is a great fit, because it runs tests concurrently by default. To useNEAR Workspaces with AVA:

  1. Start with the basic setup described here.
  2. Add custom script for running tests on Testnet (if needed). Check instructions in Running on Testnet section.
  3. Add your tests following these example:
import {Worker} from 'near-workspaces';
import anyTest, {TestFn} from 'ava'

const test = anyTest as TestFn<{
  worker: Worker;
  accounts: Record<string, NearAccount>;
}>;

/* If using `test.before`, each test is reusing the same worker;
If you'd like to make a copy of the worker, use `beforeEach` after `afterEach`,
which allows you to isolate the state for each test */
test.before(async t => {
  const worker = await Worker.init();
  const root = worker.rootAccount;
  const contract = await root.devDeploy('path/to/contract/file.wasm');
  /* Account that you will be able to use in your tests */
  const ali = await root.createSubAccount('ali');
  t.context.worker = worker;
  t.context.accounts = {root, contract, ali};
})

test('Test name', async t => {
  const {ali, contract} = t.context.accounts;
  await ali.call(contract, 'set_status', {message: 'hello'});
  const result: string = await contract.view('get_status', {account_id: ali});
  t.is(result, 'hello');
});

test.after(async t => {
  // Stop Sandbox server
  await t.context.worker.tearDown().catch(error => {
    console.log('Failed to tear down the worker:', error);
  });
});

"Spooning" Contracts from Testnet and Mainnet

Spooning a blockchain is copying the data from one network into a different network. near-workspaces makes it easy to copy data from Mainnet or Testnet contracts into your local Sandbox environment:

const refFinance = await root.importContract({
  mainnetContract: 'v2.ref-finance.near',
  blockId: 50_000_000,
  withData: true,
});

This would copy the Wasm bytes and contract state from v2.ref-finance.near to your local blockchain as it existed at block 50_000_000. This makes use of Sandbox's special patch state feature to keep the contract name the same, even though the top level account might not exist locally (note that this means it only works in Sandbox testing mode). You can then interact with the contract in a deterministic way the same way you interact with all other accounts created with near-workspaces.

Gotcha: withData will only work out-of-the-box if the contract's data is 50kB or less. This is due to the default configuration of RPC servers; see the "Heads Up" note here. Some teams at NEAR are hard at work giving you an easy way to run your own RPC server, at which point you can point tests at your custom RPC endpoint and get around the 50kB limit.

See an example of spooning contracts.

Running on Testnet

near-workspaces is set up so that you can write tests once and run them against a local Sandbox node (the default behavior) or against NEAR TestNet. Some reasons this might be helpful:

  • Gives higher confidence that your contracts work as expected
  • You can test against deployed testnet contracts
  • If something seems off in Sandbox mode, you can compare it to testnet

In order to use Workspaces JS in testnet mode you will need to have a testnet account. You can create one here.

You can switch to testnet mode in three ways.

  1. When creating Worker set network to testnet and pass your master account:

    const worker = await Worker.init({
      network: 'testnet',
      testnetMasterAccountId: '<yourAccountName>',
    })
  2. Set the NEAR_WORKSPACES_NETWORK and TESTNET_MASTER_ACCOUNT_ID environment variables when running your tests:

    NEAR_WORKSPACES_NETWORK=testnet TESTNET_MASTER_ACCOUNT_ID=<your master account Id> node test.js

    If you set this environment variables and pass {network: 'testnet', testnetMasterAccountId: <masterAccountId>} to Worker.init, the config object takes precedence.

  3. If using near-workspaces with AVA, you can use a custom config file. Other test runners allow similar config files; adjust the following instructions for your situation.

    Create a file in the same directory as your package.json called ava.testnet.config.cjs with the following contents:

    module.exports = {
      ...require('near-workspaces/ava.testnet.config.cjs'),
      ...require('./ava.config.cjs'),
    };
    module.exports.environmentVariables = {
         TESTNET_MASTER_ACCOUNT_ID: '<masterAccountId>',
    };

    The near-workspaces/ava.testnet.config.cjs import sets the NEAR_WORKSPACES_NETWORK environment variable for you. A benefit of this approach is that you can then easily ignore files that should only run in Sandbox mode.

    Now you'll also want to add a test:testnet script to your package.json's scripts section:

     "scripts": {
       "test": "ava",
    +  "test:testnet": "ava --config ./ava.testnet.config.cjs"
     }

Stepping through a testnet example

Let's revisit a shortened version of the example from How It Works above, describing what will happen in Testnet.

  1. Create a Worker.

    const worker = await Worker.init();

    Worker.init creates a unique testnet account as root account.

  2. Write tests.

    await Promise.all([
      async () => {
        await alice.call(
          contract,
          'some_update_function',
          {some_string_argument: 'cool', some_number_argument: 42}
        );
        const result = await contract.view(
          'some_view_function',
          {account_id: alice}
        );
        assert.equal(result, 'whatever');
      },
      async () => {
        const result = await contract.view(
          'some_view_function',
          {account_id: alice}
        );
        assert.equal(result, 'some default');
      }
    ]);

Note: Sometimes account creation rate limits are reached on testnet, simply wait a little while and try again.

Running tests only in Sandbox

If some of your runs take advantage of Sandbox-specific features, you can skip these on testnet in two ways:

  1. You can skip entire sections of your files by checking getNetworkFromEnv() === 'sandbox'.
let worker = Worker.init();
// things make sense to any network
const root = worker.rootAccount;
const alice = await root.createSubAccount('alice');


if (getNetworkFromEnv() === 'sandbox') {
  // thing that only makes sense with sandbox
}
  1. Use a separate testnet config file, as described under the "Running on Testnet" heading above. Specify test files to include and exclude in config file.

Patch State on the Fly

In Sandbox-mode, you can add or modify any contract state, contract code, account or access key with patchState.

You cannot perform arbitrary mutation on contract state with transactions since transactions can only include contract calls that mutate state in a contract-programmed way. For example, with an NFT contract, you can perform some operation with NFTs you have ownership of, but you cannot manipulate NFTs that are owned by other accounts since the smart contract is coded with checks to reject that. This is the expected behavior of the NFT contract. However, you may want to change another person's NFT for a test setup. This is called "arbitrary mutation on contract state" and can be done with patchState. Alternatively you can stop the node, dump state at genesis, edit genesis, and restart the node. The later approach is more complicated to do and also cannot be performed without restarting the node.

It is true that you can alter contract code, accounts, and access keys using normal transactions via the DeployContract, CreateAccount, and AddKey actions. But this limits you to altering your own account or sub-account. patchState allows you to perform these operations on any account.

To see an example of how to do this, see the patch-state test.

Time Traveling

In Sandbox-mode, you can forward time-related state (the block height, timestamp and epoch height) with fastForward.

This means contracts which require time sensitive data do not need to sit and wait the same amount of time for blocks on the sandbox to be produced. We can simply just call the api to get us further in time.

For an example, see the fast-forward test

Note: fastForward does not speed up an in-flight transactions.

Pro Tips

  • NEAR_WORKSPACES_DEBUG=true – run tests with this environment variable set to get copious debug output and a full log file for each Sandbox instance.

  • Worker.init config – you can pass a config object as the first argument to Worker.init. This lets you do things like:

    • skip initialization if specified data directory already exists (the default behavior)

      Worker.init(
        { rm: false, homeDir: './test-data/alice-owns-an-nft' },
      )
    • always recreate such data directory instead with rm: true

    • specify which port to run on

    • and more!

Env variables

NEAR_CLI_MAINNET_RPC_SERVER_URL
NEAR_CLI_TESTNET_RPC_SERVER_URL

Clear them in case you want to get back to the default RPC server.

Example:

export NEAR_CLI_MAINNET_RPC_SERVER_URL=<put_your_rpc_server_url_here>

here is a testcase: jsonrpc.ava.js

About

Write tests once, run them both on NEAR TestNet and a controlled NEAR Sandbox local environment

Resources

License

GPL-3.0, Apache-2.0 licenses found

Licenses found

GPL-3.0
LICENSE
Apache-2.0
LICENSE-APACHE

Code of conduct

Security policy

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages