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@foundry-rs/foundry-toolchain

v1.0.8

Published

This GitHub Action installs [Foundry](https://github.com/foundry-rs/foundry), the blazing fast, portable and modular toolkit for Ethereum application development.

Downloads

1

Readme

foundry-toolchain Action

This GitHub Action installs Foundry, the blazing fast, portable and modular toolkit for Ethereum application development.

Example workflow

on: [push]

name: test

jobs:
  check:
    name: Foundry project
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@v3
        with:
          submodules: recursive

      - name: Install Foundry
        uses: foundry-rs/foundry-toolchain@v1

      - name: Run tests
        run: forge test -vvv

      - name: Run snapshot
        run: forge snapshot

Inputs

| Name | Required | Default | Description | Type | | --------- | ------------ | ----------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | -------- | | version | No | nightly | Version to install, e.g. nightly or 1.0.0. Note: Foundry only has nightly builds for the time being. | string |

RPC Caching

This action matches Forge's behavior and caches all RPC responses in the ~/.foundry/cache/rpc directory. This is done to speed up the tests and avoid hitting the rate limit of your RPC provider.

The logic of the caching is as follows:

  • Always load the latest valid cache, and always create a new one with the updated cache.
  • When there are no changes to the fork tests, the cache does not change but the key does, since the key is based on the commit hash.
  • When the fork tests are changed, both the cache and the key are updated.

Fuzzing

Note that if you are fuzzing in your fork tests, the RPC cache strategy above will not work unless you set a fuzz seed. You might also want to reduce your number of RPC calls by using Multicall.

Summaries

You can add the output of Forge and Cast commands to GitHub step summaries. The summaries support GitHub flavored Markdown.

For example, to add the output of forge snapshot to a summary, you would change the snapshot step to:

- name: Run snapshot
  run: NO_COLOR=1 forge snapshot >> $GITHUB_STEP_SUMMARY

See the official GitHub docs for more information.