Smart contracts with access control by Guild, via Chainlink oracles.
Currently 5 types of checks are supported:
- joined a specific guild
- is the owner of a specific guild
- is an admin of a specific guild
- satisfies requirements for a specific role
- has a specific role
The GuildOracle contract is suitable for creating any kind of Guild-gated contracts by building upon it. Find out how in USAGE.md.
The first examples leveraging this new feature:
- GatedDistributor: an ERC20 airdrop contract for guild-related actions.
- GatedERC721: an ERC721 Non-Fungible Token that can be claimed only after completing guild-related actions.
A detailed documentation can be found in the docs folder.
To run the project you need Node.js development environment.
Pull the repository from GitHub, then install its dependencies by executing this command:
npm install
Certain actions, like deploying to a public network or verifying source code on block explorers, need environment variables in a file named .env
. See .env.example for more info.
To deploy the smart contracts to a network, replace [networkName] with the name of the network and [scriptName] with the name of the script you wish to run in this command:
npx hardhat run scripts/[scriptName] --network [networkName]
Networks can be configured in hardhat.config.ts. We've preconfigured the following:
hardhat
(for local testing, default)ethereum
(Ethereum Mainnet)goerli
(Görli Ethereum Testnet)sepolia
(Sepolia Ethereum Testnet)bsc
(BNB Smart Chain)bsctest
(BNB Smart Chain Testnet)polygon
(Polygon Mainnet (formerly Matic))mumbai
(Matic Mumbai Testnet)gnosis
(Gnosis Chain (formerly xDai Chain))arbitrum
(Arbitrum One (Mainnet))base
(Base Mainnet)optimism
(Optimism Mainnet)cronos
(Cronos Mainnet)mantle
(Mantle Network Mainnet)ontology
(Ontology EVM Mainnet)linea
(Linea Mainnet)cyber
(Cyber Mainnet)
For source code verification on block explorers, you can use the Etherscan plugin:
npx hardhat verify [contractAddress] [constructorArguments] --network [networkName]
Note: the contract's address and the constructor arguments are printed by the deploy script, so they can easily be copied to this command.
For more detailed instructions, check out the plugin's documentation here.
The project uses Solhint for Solidity smart contracts and ESLint for TypeScript files. To lint all files, simply execute:
npm run lint
To lint only the Solidity files:
npm run lint-contracts
To lint only the TypeScript files:
npm run lint-ts
To run the unit tests written for this project, execute this command in a terminal:
npm test
To run the unit tests only in a specific file, just append the path to the command. For example, to run tests just for GatedERC721:
npm test test/GatedERC721.spec.ts
The documentation for the contracts is generated via the solidity-docgen package. Run the tool via the following command:
npm run docgen
The output can be found in the docs folder.