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revive-differential-tests/README.md
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Cyrill Leutwiler 8009f5880c update README.md
Signed-off-by: Cyrill Leutwiler <bigcyrill@hotmail.com>
2025-03-31 16:44:16 +02:00

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# revive-differential-tests
The revive differential testing framework allows to define smart contract tests in a declarative manner in order to compile and execute them against different Ethereum-compatible blockchain implmentations. This is useful to:
- Analyze observable differences in contract compilation and execution across different blockchain implementations, including contract storage, account balances, transaction output and emitted events on a per-transaction base.
- Collect and compare benchmark metrics such as code size, gas usage or transaction throughput per seconds (TPS) of different blockchain implementations.
- Ensure reproducible contract builds across multiple compiler implementations or multiple host platforms.
- Implement end-to-end regression tests for Ethereum-compatible smart contract stacks.
# Declarative test format
For now, the format used to write tests is the [matter-labs era compiler format](https://github.com/matter-labs/era-compiler-tests?tab=readme-ov-file#matter-labs-simplecomplex-format). This allows us to re-use many tests from their corpora.
# The `retester` utility
The `retester` helper utilty is used to run the tests. To get an idea of what `retester` can do, please consults its command line help:
```
cargo run -p revive-dt-core -- --help
```
For example, to run the [complex Solidity tests](https://github.com/matter-labs/era-compiler-tests/tree/main/solidity/complex), define a corpus structure as follows:
```json
{
"name": "ML Solidity Complex",
"path": "/path/to/era-compiler-tests/solidity/complex"
}
```
Assuming this to be saved in a `ml-solidity-complex.json` file, the following command will try to compile and execute the tests found inside the corpus:
```bash
RUST_LOG=debug cargo r --release -p revive-dt-core -- --corpus ml-solidity-complex.json
```