Ape compiler plugin around VVM
- python3 version 3.10 up to 3.12.
You can install the latest release via pip:
pip install ape-vyperYou can clone the repository and use setuptools for the most up-to-date version:
git clone https://github.com/ApeWorX/ape-vyper.git
cd ape-vyper
python3 setup.py installFirst, place Vyper contract source files (files with extension .vy) in your Ape project's contracts folder.
An example Vyper contract can be found here.
Then, from your root Ape project folder, run the command:
ape compileThe .vy files in your project will compile into ContractTypes that you can deploy and interact with in Ape.
For ease of publishing, validation, and some other cases it's sometimes useful to "flatten" your contract into a single file. This combines your contract and any imported interfaces together in a way the compiler can understand. You can do so with a command like this:
ape vyper flatten contracts/MyContract.vy build/MyContractFlattened.vyWarning
This feature is experimental. Please report any bugs you find when trying it out.
By default, the ape-vyper plugin uses version pragma for version specification.
However, you can also configure the version directly in your pyproject.toml file:
[tool.vyper.version]
version = "0.3.7"By default, ape-vyper will use whatever version of EVM rules are set as default in the compiler version that gets used,
or based on what the #pragma evm-version ... pragma comment specifies (available post-v0.3.10).
Sometimes, you might want to use a different version, such as deploying on Arbitrum or Optimism where new opcodes are not supported yet.
If you want to require a different version of EVM rules to use in the configuration of the compiler, set it in your ape-config.yaml like this:
[tool.ape.vyper]
evm_version = "paris"NOTE: The config value chosen will not override if a pragma is set in a contract.
You can not compile interface source files directly.
Thus, you must place interface files in a directory named interfaces in your contracts_folder e.g. contracts/interfaces/IFace.vy.
Then, these files can be imported in other .vy sources files via:
import interfaces.IFace as IFaceAlternatively, use JSON interfaces from dependency contract types by listing them under the import_remapping key:
[[tool.ape.dependencies]]
name = "VyperVoting"
github = "vyperlang/vyper"
contracts_folder = "examples/voting/"
version = "v0.3.8"
[tool.ape.vyper]
import_remapping = ["voting=VyperVoting@v0.3.8"]Import the voting contract types like this:
# @version 0.3.10
import voting.ballot as ballotTo use decimals on Vyper 0.4, use the following config:
[tool.ape.vyper]
enable_decimals = trueApe-Vyper supports Vyper 0.3.10's new pragma formats
#pragma version 0.3.10#pragma evm-version paris#pragma optimize codesizeYou can install versions of Vyper using the ape vyper vvm CLI tools.
List installed versions using:
ape vyper vvm listTo list the available Vyper versions, do:
ape vyper vvm list --availableInstall more versions using the command:
ape vyper vvm install 0.3.7 0.3.10To customize Vyper's output format (like the native -f flag), you can configure the output format:
For example, to only get the ABI, do:
[tool.ape.vyper]
output_format = ["abi"]To do this using the CLI only (adhoc), use the following command:
ape compile --config-override '{"vyper": {"output_format": ["abi"]}}'ape-vyper supports the socl_json format.
To use this format, configure ape-vyper like:
[tool.ape.vyper]
output_format = ["solc_json"]Note: Normally, in Vyper, you cannot use solc_json with other formats.
However, ape-vyper handles this by running separately for the solc_json request.
Be sure to use the --force flag when compiling to ensure you get the solc JSON output.
ape compile file_needing_solc_json_format.vy -fTo get a dependency source file in this format, configure and compile the dependency.
[[tool.ape.dependencies]]
name = "my_dep"
config_override = { "vyper" = { "output_format" = ["solc_json"] } }And then run:
ape pm compile --force