Files
pezkuwi-subxt/substrate/frame/examples/kitchensink/src/lib.rs
T
Kian Paimani 6f79a9e941 add pallet macro kitchensink example/template (#14052)
* add pallet macro kitchen-sink pallet

* update

* Adds benchmarking setup

* Updates APIs

* Fixes benchmark

* Uses derive_impl for frame_system

* Adds benchmarks

* Minor update

* Adds license

* Adds examples crate

* ".git/.scripts/commands/fmt/fmt.sh"

* Update frame/examples/kitchensink/src/tests.rs

Co-authored-by: Kian Paimani <5588131+kianenigma@users.noreply.github.com>

* Update frame/examples/kitchensink/src/lib.rs

Co-authored-by: Kian Paimani <5588131+kianenigma@users.noreply.github.com>

* Update frame/examples/kitchensink/src/lib.rs

Co-authored-by: Kian Paimani <5588131+kianenigma@users.noreply.github.com>

* Addresses review comments

* Addresses review comments

* ".git/.scripts/commands/fmt/fmt.sh"

---------

Co-authored-by: Nikhil Gupta <17176722+gupnik@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: command-bot <>
Co-authored-by: command-bot <ci@gitlab.parity.io>
2023-06-06 13:47:34 +00:00

331 lines
11 KiB
Rust

// This file is part of Substrate.
// Copyright (C) Parity Technologies (UK) Ltd.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
//! # Kitchensink Example Pallet
//!
//! **This pallet serves as an example and is not meant to be used in production.**
//!
//! The kitchen-sink catalog of the the FRAME macros and their various syntax options.
//!
//! This example does not focus on pallet instancing, `dev_mode`, and does nto include any 'where'
//! clauses on `T`. These will both incur additional complexity to the syntax, but are not discussed
//! here.
#![cfg_attr(not(feature = "std"), no_std)]
// Re-export pallet items so that they can be accessed from the crate namespace.
pub use pallet::*;
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests;
#[cfg(feature = "runtime-benchmarks")]
mod benchmarking;
#[cfg(feature = "try-runtime")]
use sp_runtime::TryRuntimeError;
pub mod weights;
pub use weights::*;
#[frame_support::pallet]
pub mod pallet {
use super::*;
use frame_support::pallet_prelude::*;
use frame_system::pallet_prelude::*;
/// The config trait of the pallet. You can basically do anything with the config trait that you
/// can do with a normal rust trait: import items consisting of types, constants and functions.
///
/// A very common pattern is for a pallet to import implementations of traits such as
/// [`frame_support::traits::Currency`], [`frame_support::traits::fungibles::Inspect`] and
/// [`frame_support::traits::Get`]. These are all types that the pallet is delegating to the top
/// level runtime to provide to it.
///
/// The `FRAME`-specific syntax are:
///
/// * the use of `#[pallet::constant]`([`frame_support::procedural`]), which places a `Get`
/// implementation in the metadata.
/// * `type RuntimeEvent`, which is mandatory if your pallet has events. See TODO.
/// * Needless to say, because [`Config`] is bounded by [`frame_system::Config`], you can use
/// all the items from [`frame_system::Config`] as well, such as `AccountId`.
/// * `#[pallet::disable_frame_system_supertrait_check]` would remove the need for
/// `frame_system::Config` to exist, which you should almost never need.
#[pallet::config]
pub trait Config: frame_system::Config {
/// The overarching runtime event type.
type RuntimeEvent: From<Event<Self>> + IsType<<Self as frame_system::Config>::RuntimeEvent>;
/// Type representing the weight of this pallet
type WeightInfo: WeightInfo;
/// This is a normal Rust type, nothing specific to FRAME here.
type Currency: frame_support::traits::tokens::fungible::Inspect<Self::AccountId>;
/// Similarly, let the runtime decide this.
fn some_function() -> u32;
/// And this
const FOO: u32;
/// This is a FRAME-specific item. It will be placed in the metadata of the pallet, and
/// therefore can be queried by offchain applications.
#[pallet::constant]
type InMetadata: Get<u32>;
}
/// Allows you to define some extra constants to be added into constant metadata.
#[pallet::extra_constants]
impl<T: Config> Pallet<T> {
#[allow(non_snake_case)]
fn SomeValue() -> u32 {
unimplemented!()
}
#[pallet::constant_name(OtherValue)]
fn arbitrary_name() -> u32 {
unimplemented!()
}
}
const STORAGE_VERSION: frame_support::traits::StorageVersion = StorageVersion::new(1);
/// The pallet struct. There's nothing special to FRAME about this; it can implement functions
/// in an impl blocks, traits and so on.
#[pallet::pallet]
#[pallet::without_storage_info]
#[pallet::storage_version(STORAGE_VERSION)]
pub struct Pallet<T>(_);
/// Allows you to define some origin for the pallet.
#[pallet::origin]
pub type Origin<T> = frame_system::RawOrigin<<T as frame_system::Config>::AccountId>;
// first, we showcase all the possible storage types, with most of their details.
/// A storage value. We mark this as unbounded, alter its prefix, and define a custom storage
/// getter for it.
///
/// The value is stored a single trie node, and therefore can be retrieved with a single
/// database access.
#[pallet::storage]
#[pallet::unbounded] // optional
#[pallet::storage_prefix = "OtherFoo"] // optional
#[pallet::getter(fn foo)] // optional
pub type Foo<T> = StorageValue<Value = u32>;
#[pallet::type_value]
pub fn DefaultForFoo() -> u32 {
1
}
#[pallet::storage]
pub type FooWithDefault<T> =
StorageValue<Value = u32, QueryKind = ValueQuery, OnEmpty = DefaultForFoo>;
/// A storage map. This creates a mapping from keys of type `u32` to values of type `u32`.
///
/// Keys and values can be iterated, albeit each value is stored under a unique trie key,
/// meaning that an iteration consists of many database accesses.
#[pallet::storage]
pub type Bar<T> = StorageMap<Hasher = Blake2_128Concat, Key = u32, Value = u32>;
/// Conceptually same as `StorageMap<>` where the key is a tuple of `(u32, u32)`. On top, it
/// provides some functions to iterate or remove items based on only the first key.
#[pallet::storage]
pub type Qux<T> = StorageDoubleMap<
Hasher1 = Blake2_128Concat,
Key1 = u32,
Hasher2 = Blake2_128Concat,
Key2 = u32,
Value = u32,
>;
/// Same as `StorageDoubleMap`, but with arbitrary number of keys.
#[pallet::storage]
pub type Quux<T> = StorageNMap<
Key = (
NMapKey<Blake2_128Concat, u8>,
NMapKey<Blake2_128Concat, u16>,
NMapKey<Blake2_128Concat, u32>,
),
Value = u64,
>;
/// In all of these examples, we chose a syntax where the storage item is defined using the
/// explicit generic syntax (`X = Y`). Alternatively:
#[pallet::storage]
pub type AlternativeSyntax<T> = StorageMap<_, Blake2_128Concat, u32, u32>;
/// Lastly, all storage items, as you saw, had to be generic over `T`. If they want to use an
/// item from `Config`, `<T: Config>` should be used.
#[pallet::storage]
pub type AlternativeSyntax2<T: Config> = StorageMap<_, Blake2_128Concat, T::AccountId, u32>;
/// The genesis config type. This allows the pallet to define how it should initialized upon
/// genesis.
///
/// It can be generic over `T` or not, depending on whether it is or not.
#[pallet::genesis_config]
pub struct GenesisConfig<T: Config> {
pub foo: u32,
pub bar: T::BlockNumber,
}
impl<T: Config> Default for GenesisConfig<T> {
fn default() -> Self {
Self { foo: 0, bar: Default::default() }
}
}
/// Allows you to define how `genesis_configuration is built.
#[pallet::genesis_build]
impl<T: Config> GenesisBuild<T> for GenesisConfig<T> {
fn build(&self) {
Foo::<T>::put(self.foo);
}
}
/// The call declaration. This states the entry points that we handle. The
/// macro takes care of the marshalling of arguments and dispatch.
#[pallet::call]
impl<T: Config> Pallet<T> {
#[pallet::call_index(0)]
#[pallet::weight(T::WeightInfo::set_foo_benchmark())]
pub fn set_foo(
_: OriginFor<T>,
new_foo: u32,
#[pallet::compact] _other_compact: u128,
) -> DispatchResult {
Foo::<T>::set(Some(new_foo));
Ok(())
}
}
/// The event type. This exactly like a normal Rust enum.
///
/// It can or cannot be generic over `<T: Config>`. Note that unlike a normal enum, if none of
/// the variants actually use `<T: Config>`, the macro will generate a hidden `PhantomData`
/// variant.
///
/// The `generate_deposit` macro generates a function on `Pallet` called `deposit_event` which
/// will properly convert the error type of your pallet into `RuntimeEvent` (recall `type
/// RuntimeEvent: From<Event<Self>>`, so it can be converted) and deposit it via
/// `frame_system::Pallet::deposit_event`.
#[pallet::event]
#[pallet::generate_deposit(pub fn deposit_event)]
pub enum Event<T: Config> {
/// A simple tuple style variant.
SomethingHappened(u32),
/// A simple struct-style variant. Note that we use `AccountId` from `T` because `T:
/// Config`, which by extension implies `T: frame_system::Config`.
SomethingDetailedHappened { at: u32, to: T::AccountId },
/// Another variant.
SomeoneJoined(T::AccountId),
}
/// The error enum. Must always be generic over `<T>`, which is expanded to `<T: Config>`.
#[pallet::error]
pub enum Error<T> {
SomethingWentWrong,
SomethingBroke,
}
/// All the possible hooks that a pallet can have. See [`frame_support::traits::Hooks`] for more
/// info.
#[pallet::hooks]
impl<T: Config> Hooks<T::BlockNumber> for Pallet<T> {
fn integrity_test() {}
fn offchain_worker(_n: T::BlockNumber) {
unimplemented!()
}
fn on_initialize(_n: T::BlockNumber) -> Weight {
unimplemented!()
}
fn on_finalize(_n: T::BlockNumber) {
unimplemented!()
}
fn on_idle(_n: T::BlockNumber, _remaining_weight: Weight) -> Weight {
unimplemented!()
}
fn on_runtime_upgrade() -> Weight {
unimplemented!()
}
#[cfg(feature = "try-runtime")]
fn pre_upgrade() -> Result<Vec<u8>, TryRuntimeError> {
unimplemented!()
}
#[cfg(feature = "try-runtime")]
fn post_upgrade(_state: Vec<u8>) -> Result<(), TryRuntimeError> {
unimplemented!()
}
#[cfg(feature = "try-runtime")]
fn try_state(_n: T::BlockNumber) -> Result<(), TryRuntimeError> {
unimplemented!()
}
}
/// Allows you to define an enum on the pallet which will then instruct
/// `construct_runtime` to amalgamate all similarly-named enums from other
/// pallets into an aggregate enum.
#[pallet::composite_enum]
pub enum HoldReason {
Staking,
}
/// Allows the pallet to validate some unsigned transaction. See
/// [`sp_runtime::traits::ValidateUnsigned`] for more info.
#[pallet::validate_unsigned]
impl<T: Config> ValidateUnsigned for Pallet<T> {
type Call = Call<T>;
fn validate_unsigned(_: TransactionSource, _: &Self::Call) -> TransactionValidity {
unimplemented!()
}
fn pre_dispatch(_: &Self::Call) -> Result<(), TransactionValidityError> {
unimplemented!()
}
}
/// Allows the pallet to provide some inherent. See [`frame_support::inherent::ProvideInherent`]
/// for more info.
#[pallet::inherent]
impl<T: Config> ProvideInherent for Pallet<T> {
type Call = Call<T>;
type Error = MakeFatalError<()>;
const INHERENT_IDENTIFIER: [u8; 8] = *b"test1234";
fn create_inherent(_data: &InherentData) -> Option<Self::Call> {
unimplemented!();
}
fn is_inherent(_call: &Self::Call) -> bool {
unimplemented!()
}
}
}