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@ton/tolk-js

v0.6.0

Published

Tolk Language compiler (next-generation FunC)

Downloads

5,465

Readme

WASM wrapper for TON Tolk Language

Tolk is a new language for writing smart contracts in TON. Think of Tolk as the "next‑generation FunC". Tolk compiler is literally a fork of FunC compiler, introducing familiar syntax similar to TypeScript, but leaving all low-level optimizations untouched.

tolk-js is a WASM wrapper for Tolk compiler. Blueprint uses tolk-js to compile .tolk files, so if you develop contracts with blueprint, you don't have to install tolk-js directly. However, you can use tolk-js without blueprint, it has a simple and straightforward API.

tolk-js works both in Node.js and browser (does not depend on filesystem).

Installation

yarn add @ton/tolk-js
// or
npm install @ton/tolk-js

CLI mode

Its purpose is to launch a Tolk compiler from command-line, without compiling ton repo from sources, without installing apt/homebrew packages, etc. Just run

npx @ton/tolk-js --output-json out.json contract.tolk

Output JSON will contain fiftCode, codeBoc64, codeHashHex, and other fields (launch to see).

There are some flags like --cwd, --output-fift, and others (run npx @ton/tolk-js --help).

Usage example

import {runTolkCompiler, getTolkCompilerVersion} from "@ton/tolk-js"

async function compileMainTolk() {
  // for example, file `main.tolk` is saved nearby
  // fsReadCallback (below) is called for both main.tolk and all its imports
  let result = await runTolkCompiler({
    entrypointFileName: 'main.tolk',
    fsReadCallback: path => fs.readFileSync(__dirname + '/' + path, 'utf-8')
  })
  if (result.status === 'error') {
    throw result.message
  }

  console.log(result.fiftCode)
  // using result.codeBoc64, you can construct a cell
  let codeCell = Cell.fromBoc(Buffer.from(result.codeBoc64, "base64"))[0]
  // result has several (probably useful) fields, look up TolkResultSuccess
}

async function showTolkVersion() {
  let version = await getTolkCompilerVersion()
  console.log(`Tolk v${version}`)
}

The only point to pay attention to is fsReadCallback. It's called for every .tolk file, input or imported, and you should synchronously return file contents. tolk-js does not access filesystem itself, it just provides a flexible callback, so you can make it easily work if you have file contents in memory, for example:

let sources = {
  'main.tolk': 'import "utils/math.tolk"',
  'utils/math.tolk': '...',
}

runTolkCompiler({
  entrypointFileName: 'main.tolk',
  fsReadCallback: path => sources[path],
})

The function runTolkCompiler() accepts the following properties (look up TolkCompilerConfig):

  • entrypointFileName — obvious
  • fsReadCallback — explained above
  • optimizationLevel (default 2) — controls Tolk compiler stack optimizer
  • withStackComments (default false) — Fift output will contain comments, if you wish to debug its output
  • experimentalOptions (default '') — you can pass experimental compiler options here

Embedded stdlib functions

Tolk standard functions (beginCell, assertEndOfSlice, and lots of others) are available out of the box (if you worked with FunC earlier, you had to download stdlib.fc and store in your project; in Tolk, you don't need any additional files).

It works, because all stdlib files are embedded into JS, placed near wasm. If you import "@stdlib/tvm-dicts" for example, tolk-js will handle it, fsReadCallback won't be called.

Note, that folder tolk-stdlib/ and files within it exist only for IDE purposes. For example, if you use blueprint or tolk-js directly, JetBrains and VS Code plugins locate this folder and auto-complete stdlib functions.