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Writing Contracts using the Factory Pattern

This guide presents a factory pattern for simple counter contracts to showcase the Casper APIs that support this pattern. The example contract in this guide is a modified counter contract found here.

The factory pattern is a widely recognized software design concept used in various programming contexts. DApp developers may use factory implementations to create smart contracts from a given source (or factory), such as a factory method or entry point. A factory pattern ensures that the contracts produced maintain a specified behavior, such as specific entry points and arguments. In general, factories produce other smart contracts according to a template.

Casper factories are created using the entry point type called EntryPointType::Install, which marks an entry point as a factory method responsible for creating and installing contracts on the chain. An installer entry point will derive new Wasm based on the original session Wasm and create a new contract with different sets of entry points as required. In other words, these installer entry points marked with EntryPointType::Install are the contract factories. When referring to the factory contract on this page, we mean the contract containing the factory entry points.

The EntryPointAccess::Template marks an entry point that exists in the bytecode but is not callable. Thus, regular entry points can be referenced from within installer entry points marked with EntryPointType::Install. In object-oriented terms, entry points marked with EntryPointAccess::Template act as virtual abstract methods and cannot be called from session code.

note

This factory pattern poses a known drawback when using Wasm. All the smart contracts created with the factory pattern share the same Wasm installed on the chain. Thus, developers cannot modify the Wasm once installed and create modified contracts using the factory pattern. Developers must specify all the possible entry points in the parent contract and tag them with the EntryPointAccess::Template marker.

The Counter Factory Example

This section dives into a simple counter that uses factory methods to describe how to implement the factory pattern on a Casper network. The Counter on the Testnet Tutorial demonstrates the non-factory version of the counter contract.

Let's start by exploring the session code, where the contract entry points are defined.

Two installer entry points are marked with EntryPointType::Install, meaning these entry points will produce new counter contracts once this Wasm is installed in global state. They are also marked with EntryPointAccess::Public so that they can be called from the session code.

let entry_point: EntryPoint = EntryPoint::new(
CONTRACT_FACTORY_ENTRY_POINT.to_string(),
Parameters::new(),
CLType::Unit,
EntryPointAccess::Public,
EntryPointType::Install,
);
entry_points.add_entry_point(entry_point);
let entry_point: EntryPoint = EntryPoint::new(
CONTRACT_FACTORY_DEFAULT_ENTRY_POINT.to_string(),
Parameters::new(),
CLType::Unit,
EntryPointAccess::Public,
EntryPointType::Install,
);

These two installers show how to declare multiple factory entry points and use them to initialize the Wasm they produce with different values. On line 61, the contract_factory entry point creates a counter contract with a given name and initial value.

#[no_mangle]
pub extern "C" fn contract_factory() {
let name: String = runtime::get_named_arg(ARG_NAME);
let initial_value: U512 = runtime::get_named_arg(ARG_INITIAL_VALUE);
installer(name, initial_value);
}

On line 68, the contract_factory_default entry point creates a counter contract with a given name and a zero initial value.

#[no_mangle]
pub extern "C" fn contract_factory_default() {
let name: String = runtime::get_named_arg(ARG_NAME);
installer(name, U512::zero());
}
note

The factory pattern can produce contracts with different entry points. Suppose the session code defines entry points A, B, C, and D as templates. One installer factory entry point could use entry points A and B to create a contract, and the other installer entry point might use entry points C and D. Such support at the API level enables the implementation of more complex use cases.

The installer function creates a new counter contract by specifying its named keys and entry points. The named keys include the counter's initial value, and the entry points define the counter's decrement and increment functionality. These entry points are defined just like in any other smart contract, with EntryPointAccess::Public and EntryPointType::Contract, and they are callable for all the counters created. To learn how to call the increment and decrement functions, see the Counter on the Testnet Tutorial, which is the non-factory version of the counter contract.

Sample installer code for a counter factory
fn installer(name: String, initial_value: U512) {
let named_keys = {
let new_uref = storage::new_uref(initial_value);
let mut named_keys = NamedKeys::new();
named_keys.insert(CURRENT_VALUE_KEY.to_string(), new_uref.into());
named_keys
};

let entry_points = {
let mut entry_points = EntryPoints::new();
let entry_point: EntryPoint = EntryPoint::new(
INCREASE_ENTRY_POINT.to_string(),
Parameters::new(),
CLType::Unit,
EntryPointAccess::Public,
EntryPointType::Contract,
);
entry_points.add_entry_point(entry_point);
let entry_point: EntryPoint = EntryPoint::new(
DECREASE_ENTRY_POINT.to_string(),
Parameters::new(),
CLType::Unit,
EntryPointAccess::Public,
EntryPointType::Contract,
);
entry_points.add_entry_point(entry_point);

entry_points
};

let (contract_hash, contract_version) = storage::new_contract(
entry_points,
Some(named_keys),
Some(PACKAGE_HASH_KEY_NAME.to_string()),
Some(ACCESS_KEY_NAME.to_string()),
);

runtime::put_key(CONTRACT_VERSION, storage::new_uref(contract_version).into());
runtime::put_key(&name, contract_hash.into());
}

It is important to note that the installer logic saves the newly created contract version and contract hash under the factory contract's named keys. The installer logic runs within the factory contract context, not as part of the session code running within the account context. For more details, see the comparison between session and contract context.

runtime::put_key(CONTRACT_VERSION, storage::new_uref(contract_version).into());
runtime::put_key(&name, contract_hash.into());

For example, if you install the factory counter contract, you will see only one named key for this contract in your account, with the two installer entry points contract_factory and contract_factory_default. See lines 155-163.

If you call the installer three times to create 3 different counters, you will see 3 named keys for each counter in the factory contract's named keys. The counter contracts produced will have the increment and decrement entry points.

As explained above, developers must define all the possible non-installer entry points in the factory contract and tag them with the EntryPointAccess::Template and EntryPointType::Contract markers. See lines 135-139:

let entry_point: EntryPoint = EntryPoint::new(
INCREASE_ENTRY_POINT.to_string(),
Parameters::new(),
CLType::Unit,
EntryPointAccess::Template,
EntryPointType::Contract,
);
entry_points.add_entry_point(entry_point);
let entry_point: EntryPoint = EntryPoint::new(
DECREASE_ENTRY_POINT.to_string(),
Parameters::new(),
CLType::Unit,
EntryPointAccess::Template,
EntryPointType::Contract,
);
danger

Suppose developers forget to declare an entry point in the outermost session logic (the call function) and mark it with EntryPointAccess::Template; that Wasm export will be removed when the factory contract is installed in global state. Creating the entry point in the installer logic is not sufficient.

Unit tests

Developers can test contracts that follow the factory pattern using the Casper testing framework described under Unit Testing Smart Contracts. The testing process is the same, but this section highlights a particular test called should_install_and_use_factory_pattern found in the unit test suite of the counter factory. As the name suggests, the test installs a contract that uses the factory pattern and checks its behavior.

On line 120, the test starts building a request to call the contract_factory entry point with counter name new-counter-1 and value 1. On line 134, the test calls another factory entry point called contract_factory_default with counter name new-counter-2. The default counter value is 0.

Once the requests are processed, the test checks the contract hashes of the contracts created:

The test proceeds to get the contract Wasm for each counter produced and test the Wasm exports, which are the increment and decrement entry points in each counter contract.

The setup function on line 209 is a helper function for installing the factory contract on the chain and getting the contract factory hash.

The other tests in this file are also interesting:

What's Next?