tl;dr
- EELS is an execution layer reference implementation in Python.
- It is updated with mainnet.
- It fills assessments, and passes current ones.
- There’s an instance of an EIP applied in EELS beneath.
Introduction
After greater than a 12 months in growth, we’re happy to publicly introduce the Ethereum Execution Layer Specification (affectionately often known as EELS.) EELS is a Python reference implementation of the core elements of an Ethereum execution consumer centered on readability and readability. Supposed as a religious successor to the Yellow Paper that is extra programmer pleasant and up-to-date with post-merge forks, EELS can fill and execute state assessments, observe mainnet1, and is a good place to prototype new EIPs.
EELS offers full snapshots of the protocol at every fork—together with upcoming ones—making it a lot simpler to observe than EIPs (which solely suggest adjustments) and manufacturing purchasers (which regularly combine a number of forks in the identical codepath.)
Historical past
Starting in 2021, as a undertaking of ConsenSys’ Quilt staff and the Ethereum Basis, the eth1.0-spec (because it was identified then) was impressed by the sheer frustration of getting to decipher the cryptic notation of the Yellow Paper (Figure 1) to know the particular conduct of an EVM instruction.
Drawing on the profitable Consensus Layer Specification, we got down to create an analogous executable specification for the execution layer.
Current
In the present day, EELS is consumable as a traditional Python repository and as rendered documentation. It is nonetheless a bit tough across the edges, and would not present a lot in the way in which of annotations or English explanations for what varied items do, however these will include time.
It is simply Python
Hopefully a side-by-side comparability of the Yellow Paper and the equal code from EELS can present why EELS is a helpful complement to it:
Whereas Figure 2 could be digestible to teachers, Figure 3 is indisputably extra pure to programmers.
This is a video walk-through of adding a simple EVM instruction if that is your form of factor.
Writing Exams
It bears repeating: EELS is simply common Python. It may be examined like every other Python library! Along with your entire ethereum/tests suite, we even have a number of pytest assessments.
With just a little assist from execution-spec-tests, any assessments written for EELS can be utilized to manufacturing purchasers!2
Displaying Variations
Having snapshots at every fork is nice for a wise contract developer popping in to see the specifics of how an EVM instruction works, however is not very useful for consumer builders themselves. For them, EELS can show the variations between forks:
An Instance EIP
EIP-6780 is the primary EIP to get an EELS implementation offered by the creator, Guillaume Ballet! Let’s have a look.
First, we introduce a created_contracts variable to the EVM with transaction-level scope:
@dataclass class Atmosphere: caller: Deal with block_hashes: Listing[Hash32] origin: Deal with coinbase: Deal with quantity: Uint base_fee_per_gas: Uint gas_limit: Uint gas_price: Uint time: U256 prev_randao: Bytes32 state: State chain_id: U64 + created_contracts: Set[Address]
Second, we word which contracts have been created in every transaction:
+ evm.env.created_contracts.add(contract_address)
Lastly, we modify selfdestruct so it solely works for contracts famous in created_contracts:
- # register account for deletion - evm.accounts_to_delete.add(originator) - + # Solely proceed if the contract has been created in the identical tx + if originator in evm.env.created_contracts: + + # register account for deletion + evm.accounts_to_delete.add(originator) +
Future
We would like EELS to grow to be the default approach to specify Core EIPs, the primary place EIP authors go to prototype their proposals, and the absolute best reference for the way Ethereum works.
For those who’re taken with contributing or prototyping your EIP, be part of us on the #specifications channel or seize a problem from our repository.