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Safe-eth-py (previosly known as Gnosis-py)

Github Actions CI build Coveralls Python 3.9 Django 2.2 Pypi package Documentation Status Black

Safe-eth-py includes a set of libraries to work with Ethereum and relevant Ethereum projects:
  • EthereumClient, a wrapper over Web3.py Web3 client including utilities to deal with ERC20/721 tokens and tracing.
  • Gnosis Safe classes and utilities.
  • Price oracles for Uniswap, Kyber...
  • Django serializers, models and utils.

Quick start

Just run pip install safe-eth-py or add it to your requirements.txt

If you want django ethereum utils (models, serializers, filters...) you need to run pip install safe-eth-py[django]

If you have issues building coincurve maybe you are missing some libraries

Contributing to safe-eth-py

Clone the repo, then to set it up:

python -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate
pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
pre-commit install -f

Ethereum utils

gnosis.eth

  • class EthereumClient (ethereum_node_url: str): Class to connect and do operations with a ethereum node. Uses web3 and raw rpc calls for things not supported in web3. Only http/https urls are suppored for the node url.

EthereumClient has some utils that improve a lot performance using Ethereum nodes, like the possibility of doing batch_calls (a single request making read-only calls to multiple contracts):

from gnosis.eth import EthereumClient
from gnosis.eth.contracts import get_erc721_contract
ethereum_client = EthereumClient(ETHEREUM_NODE_URL)
erc721_contract = get_erc721_contract(self.w3, token_address)
name, symbol = ethereum_client.batch_call([
                    erc721_contract.functions.name(),
                    erc721_contract.functions.symbol(),
                ])

If you want to use the underlying web3.py library:

from gnosis.eth import EthereumClient
ethereum_client = EthereumClient(ETHEREUM_NODE_URL)
ethereum_client.w3.eth.get_block(57)

gnosis.eth.constants

  • NULL_ADDRESS (0x000...0): Solidity address(0).
  • SENTINEL_ADDRESS (0x000...1): Used for Gnosis Safe's linked lists (modules, owners...).
  • Maximum an minimum values for R, S and V in ethereum signatures.

gnosis.eth.oracles

Price oracles for Uniswap, UniswapV2, Kyber, SushiSwap, Aave, Balancer, Curve, Mooniswap, Yearn... Example:

from gnosis.eth import EthereumClient
from gnosis.eth.oracles import UniswapV2Oracle
ethereum_client = EthereumClient(ETHEREUM_NODE_URL)
uniswap_oracle = UniswapV2Oracle(ethereum_client)
gno_token_mainnet_address = '0x6810e776880C02933D47DB1b9fc05908e5386b96'
weth_token_mainnet_address = '0xC02aaA39b223FE8D0A0e5C4F27eAD9083C756Cc2'
price = uniswap_oracle.get_price(gno_token_mainnet_address, uniswap_oracle.weth_address)

gnosis.eth.utils

Contains utils for ethereum operations:

  • get_eth_address_with_key() -> Tuple[str, bytes]: Returns a tuple of a valid public ethereum checksumed address with the private key.
  • mk_contract_address_2(from_: Union[str, bytes], salt: Union[str, bytes], init_code: [str, bytes]) -> str: Calculates the address of a new contract created using the new CREATE2 opcode.

Ethereum django (REST) utils

Django utils are available under gnosis.eth.django. You can find a set of helpers for working with Ethereum using Django and Django Rest framework.

It includes:

  • gnosis.eth.django.filters: EthereumAddressFilter.
  • gnosis.eth.django.models: Model fields (Ethereum address, Ethereum big integer field).
  • gnosis.eth.django.serializers: Serializer fields (Ethereum address field, hexadecimal field).
  • gnosis.eth.django.validators: Ethereum related validators.
  • gnosis.safe.serializers: Serializers for Gnosis Safe (signature, transaction...).
  • All the tests are written using Django Test suite.

Contributors

See contributors