- git
- You'll know you did it right if you can run
git --version
and you see a response likegit version x.x.x
- You'll know you did it right if you can run
- foundry
- You'll know you did it right if you can run
forge --version
and you see a response likeforge 0.2.0 (26e6e57 2024-04-28T00:20:40.226241185Z)
- You'll know you did it right if you can run
git clone https://github.com/wali-hu/foundry-fund-me-f23
cd foundry-fund-me-f23
forge build
forge script script/DeployFundMe.s.sol
forge test
or
// Only run test functions matching the specified regex pattern.
"forge test -m testFunctionName" is deprecated. Please use
forge test --match-test testFunctionName
or
forge test --fork-url $SEPOLIA_RPC_URL
forge coverage
- Setup environment variables
You'll want to set your SEPOLIA_RPC_URL
and PRIVATE_KEY
as environment variables. You can add them to a .env
file.
PRIVATE_KEY
: The private key of your account (like from metamask). NOTE: FOR DEVELOPMENT, PLEASE USE A KEY THAT DOESN'T HAVE ANY REAL FUNDS ASSOCIATED WITH IT.- You can learn how to export it here.
SEPOLIA_RPC_URL
: This is url of the sepolia testnet node you're working with. You can get setup with one for free from Alchemy
Optionally, add your ETHERSCAN_API_KEY
if you want to verify your contract on Etherscan.
- Get testnet ETH
Head over to faucets.chain.link and get some testnet ETH. You should see the ETH show up in your metamask.
- Deploy
forge script script/DeployFundMe.s.sol --rpc-url $SEPOLIA_RPC_URL --private-key $PRIVATE_KEY --broadcast --verify --etherscan-api-key $ETHERSCAN_API_KEY
After deploying to a testnet or local net, you can run the scripts.
Using cast deployed locally example:
cast send <FUNDME_CONTRACT_ADDRESS> "fund()" --value 0.1ether --private-key <PRIVATE_KEY>
or
forge script script/Interactions.s.sol:FundFundMe --rpc-url sepolia --private-key $PRIVATE_KEY --broadcast
forge script script/Interactions.s.sol:WithdrawFundMe --rpc-url sepolia --private-key $PRIVATE_KEY --broadcast
cast send <FUNDME_CONTRACT_ADDRESS> "withdraw()" --private-key <PRIVATE_KEY>
You can estimate how much gas things cost by running:
forge snapshot
And you'll see an output file called .gas-snapshot
To run code formatting:
forge fmt