Using Solang on the command line ================================ The Solang compiler is run on the command line. The solidity source file names are provided as command line arguments; the output is an optimized WebAssembly or Solana SBF file which is ready for deployment on a chain, and an metadata file (also known as the abi). The following targets are supported right now: `Solana `_ and `Polkadot `_ (via the ``contracts`` pallet runtime). Solang supports auto-completion for multiple shells. Use ``solang shell-complete --help`` to learn whether your favorite shell is supported. If so, evaluate the output of ``solang shell-complete `` in order to activate it. Example installation with ``bash``: .. code-block:: bash echo 'source <(solang shell-complete bash)' >> ~/.bashrc Compiler Usage ______________ solang compile [OPTIONS]... [SOLIDITY SOURCE FILE]... This means that the command line is ``solang compile`` followed by any options described below, followed by one or more solidity source filenames. Options: -v, \-\-verbose Make the output more verbose. The compiler tell you what contracts have been found in the source, and what files are generated. Without this option Solang will be silent if there are no errors or warnings. \-\-target *target* This takes one argument, which can either be ``solana`` or ``polkadot``. The target must be specified. \-\-address\-length *length-in-bytes* Change the default address length on Polkadot. By default, Substate uses an address type of 32 bytes. This option is ignored for any other target. \-\-value\-length *length-in-bytes* Change the default value length on Polkadot. By default, Substate uses an value type of 16 bytes. This option is ignored for any other target. -o, \-\-output *directory* Sets the directory where the output should be saved. This defaults to the current working directory if not set. \-\-output\-meta *directory* Sets the directory where metadata should be saved. For Solana, the metadata is the Anchor IDL file, and, for Polkadot, the .contract file. If this option is not set, the directory specified by ``--output`` is used, and if that is not set either, the current working directory is used. \-\-contract *contract-name* [, *contract-name*]... Only compile the code for the specified contracts. If any those contracts cannot be found, produce an error. -O *optimization level* This takes one argument, which can either be ``none``, ``less``, ``default``, or ``aggressive``. These correspond to llvm optimization levels. \-\-importpath *directory* When resolving ``import`` directives, search this directory. By default ``import`` will only search the current working directory. This option can be specified multiple times and the directories will be searched in the order specified. \-\-importmap *map=directory* When resolving ``import`` directives, if the first part of the path matches *map*, search the directory provided for the file. This option can be specified multiple times with different values for map. \-\-help, -h This displays a short description of all the options \-\-standard-json This option causes Solang to emulate the behaviour of Solidity `standard json output `_. No output files are written, all the output will be in json on stdout. \-\-emit *phase* This option is can be used for debugging Solang itself. This is used to output early phases of compilation. Phase: ast-dot Output Abstract Syntax Tree as a graphviz dot file. This can be viewed with xdot or any other tool that can visualize graphviz dot files. cfg Output control flow graph. llvm-ir Output llvm IR as text. llvm-bc Output llvm bitcode as binary file. asm Output assembly text file. object Output wasm object file; this is the contract before final linking. \-\-no\-constant\-folding Disable the :ref:`constant-folding` codegen optimization \-\-no\-strength\-reduce Disable the :ref:`strength-reduce` codegen optimization \-\-no\-dead\-storage Disable the :ref:`dead-storage` optimization \-\-no\-vector\-to\-slice Disable the :ref:`vector-to-slice` optimization \-\-no\-cse Disable the :ref:`common-subexpression-elimination` optimization \-\-no\-log\-runtime\-errors Disable the :ref:`no-log-runtime-errors` debugging feature \-\-no\-prints Disable the :ref:`no-print` debugging feature \-\-release Disable all debugging features for :ref:`release` \-\-config-file Read compiler configurations from a ``.toml`` file. The minimal fields required in the configuration file are: .. code-block:: toml [package] input_files = ["flipper.sol"] # Solidity files to compile [target] name = "solana" # Target name Fields not explicitly present in the .toml acquire the compiler's default value. If any other argument is provided in the command line, for example, ``solang compile --config-file --target polkadot``, the argument will be overridden. The priority for the args is given as follows: 1. Command line 2. Configuration file 3. Default values. The default name for the toml file is "solang.toml". If two configuration files exist in the same directory, priority will be given to the one passed explicitly to this argument. \-\-wasm-opt wasm-opt passes for Wasm targets (0, 1, 2, 3, 4, s or z; see the wasm-opt help for more details). \-\-contract-authors Specify authors for all contracts. If a `@author` tag is present, it will override this argument for the targeted contract. For specifying multiple authors, use this format: `--contract-authors author1,author2,..` .. note:: This will only affect the metadata in case of substrate target. \-\-version Specify contracts version. According to `semver `_, a normal version number must take the form X.Y.Z where X, Y, and Z are non-negative integers, and must not contain leading zeroes. .. warning:: If multiple Solidity source files define the same contract name, you will get a single compiled contract file for this contract name. As a result, you will only have a single contract with the duplicate name without knowing from which Solidity file it originated. Solang will not give a warning about this problem. Starting a new project ______________________________ solang new \-\-target solana my_project A solang project is a directory in which there are one or more solidity files and a ``solang.toml`` file where the compilation options are defined. Given these two components, a user can run ``solang compile`` in a similar fashion as ``cargo build``. The ``solang new`` command creates a new solang project with an example `flipper `_ contract, and a default ``solang.toml`` configuration file. Generating Documentation Usage ______________________________ Generate documentation for the given Solidity files as a single html page. This uses the doccomment tags. The result is saved in ``soldoc.html``. See :ref:`tags` for further information. solang doc [OPTIONS]... [SOLIDITY SOURCE FILE]... This means that the command line is ``solang doc`` followed by any options described below, followed by one or more solidity source filenames. Options: \-\-target *target* This takes one argument, which can either be ``solana`` or ``polkadot``. The target must be specified. \-\-address\-length *length-in-bytes* Change the default address length on Polkadot. By default, Substate uses an address type of 32 bytes. This option is ignored for any other target. \-\-value\-length *length-in-bytes* Change the default value length on Polkadot. By default, Substate uses an value type of 16 bytes. This option is ignored for any other target. \-\-importpath *directory* When resolving ``import`` directives, search this directory. By default ``import`` will only search the current working directory. This option can be specified multiple times and the directories will be searched in the order specified. \-\-importmap *map=directory* When resolving ``import`` directives, if the first part of the path matches *map*, search the directory provided for the file. This option can be specified multiple times with different values for map. \-\-help, -h This displays a short description of all the options .. _idl_command: Generate Solidity interface from IDL ____________________________________ This command converts Anchor IDL into Solidity import files, so they can be used to call Anchor Programs from Solidity. solang idl [--output DIR] [IDLFILE]... For each idl file provided, a Solidity file is written. See :ref:`call_anchor` for an example of how to use this. .. note:: There is only supported on Solana. Running Solang using a container ________________________________ First pull the last Solang container from `solang containers `_: .. code-block:: bash docker image pull ghcr.io/hyperledger/solang And if you are using podman: .. code-block:: bash podman image pull ghcr.io/hyperledger/solang Now you can run Solang like so: .. code-block:: bash docker run --rm -it ghcr.io/hyperledger/solang --version Or podman: .. code-block:: bash podman container run --rm -it ghcr.io/hyperledger/solang --version If you want to compile some Solidity files, the source files need to be available inside the container. You can do this via the ``-v`` docker command line. In this example ``/local/path`` should be replaced with the absolute path to your solidity files: .. code-block:: bash docker run --rm -it -v /local/path:/sources ghcr.io/hyperledger/solang compile -o /sources /sources/flipper.sol On Windows, you need to specify absolute paths: .. code-block:: text docker run --rm -it -v C:\Users\User:/sources ghcr.io/hyperledger/solang compile -o /sources /sources/flipper.sol