Files
pezkuwi-subxt/new/examples/storage_iterating_dynamic.rs
T
2025-11-25 12:29:13 +00:00

43 lines
1.8 KiB
Rust

#![allow(missing_docs)]
use subxt::ext::futures::StreamExt;
use subxt::utils::AccountId32;
use subxt::{
OnlineClient, PolkadotConfig,
dynamic::{At, Value},
};
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> {
// Create a new API client, configured to talk to Polkadot nodes.
let api = OnlineClient::<PolkadotConfig>::new().await?;
// Build a dynamic storage query to access account information.
// here, we assume that there is one value to provide at this entry
// to access a value; an AccountId32. In this example we don't know the
// return type and so we set it to `Value`, which anything can decode into.
let storage_query = subxt::dynamic::storage::<(AccountId32,), Value>("System", "Account");
// Use that query to access a storage entry, iterate over it and decode values.
let client_at = api.storage().at_latest().await?;
let mut values = client_at.entry(storage_query)?.iter(()).await?;
while let Some(kv) = values.next().await {
let kv = kv?;
// The key decodes into the first type we provided in the address. Since there's just
// one key, it is a tuple of one entry, an AccountId32. If we didn't know how many
// keys or their type, we could set the key to `Vec<Value>` instead.
let (account_id32,) = kv.key()?.decode()?;
// The value decodes into the second type we provided in the address. In this example,
// we just decode it into our `Value` type and then look at the "data" field in this
// (which implicitly assumes we get a struct shaped thing back with such a field).
let value = kv.value().decode()?;
let value_data = value.at("data").unwrap();
println!("{account_id32}:\n {value_data}");
}
Ok(())
}