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@tenderly/hardhat-tenderly

Hardhat plugin for integration with Tenderly.

This repo represents the hardhat-tenderly plugin. With its functionalities, you can verify contracts on the Tenderly platform. Verification represents an entry point into Tenderly's functionalities. With verified contracts, you can use various features like debugger, simulations and forks or devnets. This repo will make it possible to verify your contracts with ease, so you can focus on building your dapp.

You can read about hardhat-tenderly's verification features in detail here.

Here's a brief description. There are three modes you can configure to verify your contracts and these are called Verification Modes:

[!IMPORTANT] The Tenderly Hardhat plugin verifies contracts publicly by default, unless you configure it to use the private mode.

Also, there are three ways of how you can actually do the verification based on the mode you configured in verification modes. These ways are called Verification Approaches:

You can also verify proxy contracts supported by @openzeppelin/hardhat-upgrades plugin. For more information on that, you can check out the chapter about Proxy Contract Verification.

Installation

npm install --save-dev @tenderly/hardhat-tenderly

And add the following statement to your hardhat.config.js or hardhat.config.ts:

const tdly = require("@tenderly/hardhat-tenderly");
tdly.setup();

Or, if you are using typescript:

import * as tdly from "@tenderly/hardhat-tenderly";
tdly.setup();

Installing tenderly cli

In order to use all the plugin's functionalities, it will be necessary to have a tenderly config file. This file will be automatically created after you install tenderly cli and log in with tenderly login.

To install tenderly cli, follow the installation steps at tenderly-cli. After that, run:

tenderly login --authentication-method access-key --access-key {your_access_key} --force

Access key can be found under Settings->Authorization->Generate new access key in your Tenderly dashboard.

Verification Modes

This section explains three modes you can configure to verify your contracts.

First, you need to add the tenderly field inside the HardhatConfig structure in hardhat.config.ts:

module.exports = {
  solidity: {
      ...
  },
  networks: {
      ...
  },
  tenderly: {
    username: "tenderly", // tenderly username (or organization name)
    project: "project", // project name
    privateVerification: false // if true, contracts will be verified privately, if false, contracts will be verified publicly
  }
}

Warning : Username can be your own and the username of the organization. Which one, it depends on who is the owner of the project you are trying to verify your contracts on. If the project belongs to the organization you are part of, It should be filled with organization username, otherwise your own username. The quickest and most secure way to make sure to which party the project belongs to is to look at the url of the particular project. You will see something like: https://dashboard.tenderly.co/Tenderly/project/contracts. You can take the username and project from there. In this case the username is Tenderly and the project is project.

Private verification mode

In order to configure private verification mode, set privateVerification to true inside the tenderly field inside hardhat.config.ts. Also, the --network flag must NOT be set to tenderly or devnet when running npx hardhat run command, or fork/devnet verification mode will be configured.

Public verification mode

In order to configure public verification mode, set privateVerification to false inside the tenderly field inside hardhat.config.ts. Also, the --network flag must NOT be set to tenderly or devnet when running npx hardhat run command, or fork/devnet verification mode will be configured.

Fork verification mode

In order to configure fork verification mode, set privateVerification to false inside the tenderly field inside hardhat.config.ts. To configure the fork you want to verify the contracts on, set the tenderly network inside HardhatConfig structure in hardhat.config.ts:

module.exports = {
  solidity: {
    ...
  },
  networks: {
    ... // other networks 
    sepolia: {
      url: "https://sepolia.gateway.tenderly.co/...",
      accounts: ["0x..."],
    },
    ...,
    // -------- CONFIGURE FORK HERE -----------
    tenderly: {
      url: "https://rpc.tenderly.co/fork/...",
      accounts: ["0x..."]
    }
    // ----------------------------------------
},
  tenderly: { // as before
    username: "tenderly",
    project: "project",
    privateVerification: false
  }
}

Parameters:

Pro Tip: You can set multiple tenderly networks in the networks property, just name them differently and assign different urls. For example:

networks: {
 my_tenderly_fork: {
   url: "https://rpc.tenderly.co/fork/...",
 },
 my_tenderly_devnet: {
   url: "https://rpc.vnet.tenderly.co/devnet/...",
 }
}

Devnet verification mode

In order to configure devnet verification mode, set privateVerification to false inside the tenderly field inside hardhat.config.ts. To configure the devnet you want to verify the contracts on, set the tenderly network inside HardhatConfig structure in hardhat.config.ts:

module.exports = {
  solidity: {
    ...
  },
  networks: {
    ... // other networks 
    sepolia: {
      url: "https://sepolia.gateway.tenderly.co/...",
      accounts: ["0x..."],
    },
    ...,
    // -------- CONFIGURE DEVNET HERE -----------
    tenderly: {
      url: "https://rpc.vnet.tenderly.co/devnet/...",
      accounts: ["0x..."]
    }
    // ----------------------------------------
},
  tenderly: { // as before
    username: "tenderly",
    project: "project",
    privateVerification: false
  }
}

Parameters:

Pro Tip: You can set multiple tenderly networks in the networks property, just name them differently and assign different urls. For example:

networks: {
 my_tenderly_fork: {
   url: "https://rpc.tenderly.co/fork/...",
 },
 my_tenderly_devnet: {
   url: "https://rpc.vnet.tenderly.co/devnet/...",
 }
}

Verification Approaches

This section explains the steps you take to actually verify your contracts. You can verify your contracts Automatically, Manually or via Task.

You can check the examples/contract-verification part of the repo to get more insight into how to use these verification approaches.

For every of these three approaches, you can configure the mode of verification. Either Private, Public, Fork or Devnet verification mode. See how to configure these modes in Verification Modes section above.

Automatic verification approach (Recommended)

This approach will automatically verify the contract after deployment. Precisely, when you call the waitForDeployment() function as in:

import { ethers } from "hardhat";

const greeter = await ethers.deployContract("Greeter", ["Hello, Hardhat!"]);

await greeter.waitForDeployment();

The plugin will wait for the contract to be deployed and verify it afterwards.

If you wish to turn off automatic verification, you can do it in hardhat.config.ts:

import * as tdly from "@tenderly/hardhat-tenderly";

tdly.setup({
  automaticVerifications: false,
});

Manual verification approach

This plugin extends the HardhatRuntimeEnvironment by adding a tenderly field whose type is Tenderly.

With this approach, you can use tenderly.verify to trigger manual contract verification. The same method is called when verifying contracts automatically.

This is an example on how you can call it from your deploy script:

import { ethers, tenderly } from "hardhat";

let greeter = await ethers.deployContract("Greeter", ["Hello, Hardhat!"]);

greeter = await greeter.waitForDeployment();

await tenderly.verify({
  name: "Greeter",
  address: await greeter.getAddress(),
  libraries: {
      LibraryName1: "0x...",
      LibraryName2: "0x..."
  }
});

verify accepts contracts as variadic arguments, so you can verify multiple contracts at once:

const contracts = [
  {
    name: "Greeter",
    address: "0x...",
    libraries: { ... }
  },
  {
    name: "Greeter2",
    address: "0x...",
    libraries: { ... }
  },
];

Task verification approach

This plugin implements the concept of hardhat task to verify your contracts. The task, tenderly:verify, is invoked as:

npx hardhat tenderly:verify Greeter=0x... --network {network_name}

For more information on how to use tenderly:verify task, run npx hardhat help tenderly:verify command.

More verification approaches

You can also verify your contracts via exposed API calls. Although this is not recommended, you can fill the request and call some of the following methods:

For more information on how to use these methods, you can check out their javadocs.

Proxy contract verification

This plugin supports verification of proxy contracts, their implementation and all the related contracts. In order to successfully verify a proxy contract, please read the chapters about Verification Modes and Verification Approaches first. This will lead you to setup the configuration the right way, so you can verify your proxy contracts and their implementation on Tenderly.

After you have successfully configured hardhat.config.ts, you need to populate the configuration in the format that @nomicfoundation/hardhat-verify plugin expects, given that this plugin uses their verification beneath for verifying proxies. But luckily, we have provided a way to automatically populate the configuration for you, you just need to set the TENDERLY_AUTOMATIC_POPULATE_HARDHAT_VERIFY_CONFIG=true environment variable.

In order to see how this all plays out, you can clone our @tenderly/hardhat-tenderly repo and navigate to the examples/contract-verification directory. This directory contains all the possibilities that you can explore in order to verify your proxy contracts. Right now we support, both manual and automatic verification of the following proxy contracts:

And we support them on all type of verification modes (e.g. devnet, fork, public, private).

Troubleshooting

If you are having trouble with the plugin and want to contact support, you can run the deploy script with the following --verbose flag as so:

npx hardhat run scripts/{your_deploy_script_here.js} --network {network_name} --verbose > tenderly.log 2>&1

or you can run the task with the same --verbose flag:

npx hardhat tenderly:verify Greeter=0x... --network {network_name} --verbose > tenderly.log 2>&1

This will create a tenderly.log file that you can send to our customer support engineers for investigation.