- Byzantium status codes recognized and returned as "VM Exception" for backward compatibility with ganache
- Support for overloaded solidity methods -> web3 syntax used to call them
- Truffle does not
evm_revert
at all. this makes tests stable. - On reverting constant calls, ganache behavior (to return 'VM Exception') is returned (web3 mod)
- Does not save migrations step in Migrations contract. all references removed. use
-f
parameter to set step - Removed new block filters when waiting for contract deployment to make sure it works with new parity post Petersburg
** PLEASE NOTE THAT BUNDLE IS MANUALLY UPDATED NOW, WHAT HAPPENS IN BUNDLE STAYS IN BUNDLE**
Truffle is a development environment, testing framework and asset pipeline for Ethereum, aiming to make life as an Ethereum developer easier. With Truffle, you get:
- Built-in smart contract compilation, linking, deployment and binary management.
- Automated contract testing with Mocha and Chai.
- Configurable build pipeline with support for custom build processes.
- Scriptable deployment & migrations framework.
- Network management for deploying to many public & private networks.
- Interactive console for direct contract communication.
- Instant rebuilding of assets during development.
- External script runner that executes scripts within a Truffle environment.
$ npm install -g truffle
For a default set of contracts and tests, run the following within an empty project directory:
$ truffle init
From there, you can run truffle compile
, truffle migrate
and truffle test
to compile your contracts, deploy those contracts to the network, and run their associated unit tests.
Be sure you're connected to an ethereum client before running these commands. If you're new, install testrpc to run a local blockchain RPC server. After that, simply run testrpc
in a new tab.
See the documentation for more details.
Please see the Official Truffle Documentation for guides, tips, and examples.
This package is a distribution package of the Truffle command line tool. Please see truffle-core to contribute to the main core code.
MIT