A cross platform virtual machine implementation for NEF
compatible programs.
VM is provided as part of neo-go binary, so usual neo-go build instructions are applicable.
Start the virtual machine:
$ ./bin/neo-go vm
_ ____________ __________ _ ____ ___
/ | / / ____/ __ \ / ____/ __ \ | | / / |/ /
/ |/ / __/ / / / /_____/ / __/ / / /____| | / / /|_/ /
/ /| / /___/ /_/ /_____/ /_/ / /_/ /_____/ |/ / / / /
/_/ |_/_____/\____/ \____/\____/ |___/_/ /_/
NEO-GO-VM >
_ ____________ __________ _ ____ ___
/ | / / ____/ __ \ / ____/ __ \ | | / / |/ /
/ |/ / __/ / / / /_____/ / __/ / / /____| | / / /|_/ /
/ /| / /___/ /_/ /_____/ /_/ / /_/ /_____/ |/ / / / /
/_/ |_/_____/\____/ \____/\____/ |___/_/ /_/
NEO-GO-VM > help
Commands:
aslot Show arguments slot contents
break Place a breakpoint
clear clear the screen
cont Continue execution of the current loaded script
estack Show evaluation stack contents
exit Exit the VM prompt
help display help
ip Show current instruction
istack Show invocation stack contents
loadbase64 Load a base64-encoded script string into the VM
loadgo Compile and load a Go file with the manifest into the VM
loadhex Load a hex-encoded script string into the VM
loadnef Load a NEF-consistent script into the VM
lslot Show local slot contents
ops Dump opcodes of the current loaded program
parse Parse provided argument and convert it into other possible formats
run Execute the current loaded script
sslot Show static slot contents
step Step (n) instruction in the program
stepinto Stepinto instruction to take in the debugger
stepout Stepout instruction to take in the debugger
stepover Stepover instruction to take in the debugger
You can get help for each command and its parameters adding help
as a
parameter to the command:
NEO-GO-VM > step help
Usage: step [<n>]
<n> is optional parameter to specify number of instructions to run, example:
> step 10
To load an avm script in NEF format into the VM:
NEO-GO-VM > loadnef ../contract.nef
READY: loaded 36 instructions
Run the script:
NEO-GO-VM > run
[
{
"value": 1,
"type": "BigInteger"
}
]
You can also directly compile and load .go
files:
NEO-GO-VM > loadgo ../contract.go
READY: loaded 36 instructions
To make it even more complete, you can directly load hex or base64 strings into the VM:
NEO-GO-VM > loadhex 54c56b006c766b00527ac46c766b00c391640b006203005a616c756662030000616c7566
READY: loaded 36 instructions
NEO-GO-VM > run
[
{
"value": 10,
"type": "BigInteger"
}
]
You can invoke smart contracts with arguments. Take the following roll the dice smartcontract as example.
package rollthedice
import "github.com/nspcc-dev/neo-go/pkg/interop/runtime"
func RollDice(number int) {
if number == 0 {
runtime.Log("you rolled 0, better luck next time!")
}
if number == 1 {
runtime.Log("you rolled 1, still better then 0!")
}
if number == 2 {
runtime.Log("you rolled 2, coming closer..")
}
if number == 3 {
runtime.Log("Sweet you rolled 3. This dice has only 3 sides o_O")
}
}
To invoke this contract we need to specify both the method and the arguments.
The first parameter (called method or operation) is always of type
string. Notice that arguments can have different types, they can inferred
automatically (please refer to the run
command help), but in you need to
pass parameter of specific type you can specify it in run
's arguments:
NEO-GO-VM > run rollDice int:1
The method is always of type string, hence we don't need to specify the type.
To add more than 1 argument:
NEO-GO-VM > run someMethod int:1 int:2 string:foo string:bar
Currently supported types:
bool (bool:false and bool:true)
int (int:1 int:100)
string (string:foo string:this is a string)
The neo-go-vm
provides a debugger to inspect your program in-depth.
Step 4 instructions.
NEO-GO-VM > step 4
at breakpoint 3 (DUPFROMALTSTACK)
NEO-GO-VM 3 >
Using just step
will execute 1 instruction at a time.
NEO-GO-VM 3 > step
at breakpoint 4 (PUSH0)
NEO-GO-VM 4 >
To place breakpoints:
NEO-GO-VM > break 10
breakpoint added at instruction 10
NEO-GO-VM > cont
at breakpoint 10 (SETITEM)
NEO-GO-VM 10 > cont
Inspecting the evaluation stack:
NEO-GO-VM > estack
[
{
"value": [
null,
null,
null,
null,
null,
null,
null
],
"type": "Array"
},
{
"value": 4,
"type": "BigInteger"
}
]
There is one more stack that you can inspect.
istack
invocation stack
There are slots that you can inspect.
aslot
dumps arguments slot contents.lslot
dumps local slot contents.sslot
dumps static slot contents.