EIP2069 - Recommendation for using YAML ABI in ERCs/EIPs
# Simple Summary
Recommendation for including contract ABI descriptions in EIPs and ERCs as YAML.
# Motivation
In the past, most ERCs/EIPs included an ABI description purely as a Solidity contract and/or interface. This has several drawbacks:
- Prefers a single language over others and could hinder the development of new languages.
- Locks the specification to a certain version of the Solidity language.
- Allows the use of syntactical elements and features of the Solidity language, which may not be well representable in the ABI. This puts other languages at even more disadvantage.
This proposal aims to solve all these issues.
# Specification
The Standard Contract ABI (opens new window) is usually represented as a JSON object. This works well and several tools – including compilers and clients – support it to handle data encoding.
One shortcoming of the JSON description is its inability to contain comments. To counter this, we suggest the use of YAML for providing user readable specifications. Given YAML was designed to be compatible with JSON, several tools exists to convert between the two formats.
The following example contains a single function, transfer
with one input and one output in YAML:
# The transfer function. Takes the recipient address
# as an input and returns a boolean signaling the result.
- name: transfer
type: function
payable: false
constant: false
stateMutability: nonpayable
inputs:
- name: recipient
type: address
- name: amount
type: uint256
outputs:
- name: ''
type: bool
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Specifications are encouraged to include comments in the YAML ABI.
For details on what fields and values are valid in the ABI, please consult the Standard Contract ABI (opens new window) specification.
The same in JSON:
[
{
"name": "transfer",
"type": "function",
"payable": false,
"constant": false,
"stateMutability": "nonpayable",
"inputs": [
{
"name": "recipient",
"type": "address"
},
{
"name": "amount",
"type": "uint256"
}
],
"outputs": [
{
"name": "",
"type": "bool"
}
]
}
]
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# Rationale
The aim was to chose a representation which is well supported by tools and supports comments. While inventing a more concise description language seems like a good idea, it felt as an unnecessary layer of complexity.
# Backwards Compatibility
This has no effect on backwards compatibility.
# Test Cases
TBA
# Implementation
yamabi (opens new window) is a Javascript tool to convert between the above YAML and the more widely used JSON format.
# Copyright
Copyright and related rights waived via CC0 (opens new window).