Scalus is a platform for developing decentralized applications (DApps) on the Cardano blockchain.
The goal is to make a full-stack development experience for Cardano DApps as smooth as possible. Using the same language, tools and code for frontend, backend and smart contracts development.
- Scala is a modern functional programming language that runs on JVM, JavaScript and natively via LLVM.
- Reuse your Scala code for your validator, frontend and backend.
- Write once, run anywhere. True full-stack development.
- Scala's powerful type system helps you write correct code.
- Benefit from a huge ecosystem of libraries and tools.
- Utilize testing frameworks like ScalaTest and ScalaCheck for property-based testing.
- Enjoy comprehensive IDE support: IntelliJ IDEA, VSCode and syntax highlighting on GitHub.
- Advanced debugging support.
- Enhanced code formatting and linting, navigation, and refactoring.
Scalus compiles a subset of Scala code to Plutus Core, the language of Cardano smart contracts.
Scalus gives full control over the generated Plutus Core code. Write efficient and compact smart contracts and squeeze the most out of the Cardano blockchain.
- Scala 3 to Cardano Plutus Core compiler
- Standard library for Plutus contracts development
- Plutus V1 and V2 support
- Plutus VM Interpreter and execution budget calculation
- Property-based testing library
- Untyped Plutus Core (UPLC) data types and functions
- Flat, CBOR, JSON serialization
- UPLC parser and pretty printer
- Type safe UPLC expression builder, think of Plutarch
- Bloxbean Cardano Client Lib integration
You can use the Scalus Starter Project to get started with Scalus. Clone the repository and follow the instructions in the README.
Here is a simple validator that checks that an signer of pkh
PubKeyHash provided a preimage of a hash
in a redeemer
.
Below example is taken from PreimageValidator
def preimageValidator(datum: Data, redeemer: Data, ctxData: Data): Unit =
// deserialize from Data
val (hash, pkh) = datum.to[(ByteString, ByteString)]
val preimage = redeemer.toByteString
val ctx = ctxData.to[ScriptContext]
// get the transaction signatories
val signatories = ctx.txInfo.signatories
// check that the transaction is signed by the public key hash
List.findOrFail(signatories) { sig => sig.hash == pkh }
// check that the preimage hashes to the hash
if sha2_256(preimage) == hash then ()
else throw new RuntimeException("Wrong preimage")
// throwing an exception compiles to UPLC error
// compile to Untyped Plutus Core (UPLC)
val compiled = compile(preimageValidator).toUplc()
// create a validator script, Plutus program version 1.0.0
val validator = Program((1, 0, 0), compiled)
// HEX encoded Plutus script, ready to be used in with cardano-cli or Blockfrost
val plutusScript = validator.doubleCborHex
// Create a Cardano .plutus file for this validator
validator.writePlutusFile(path, PlutusLedgerLanguage.PlutusV2)
Look at SendTx example for a full example of how to create a transaction with this validator.
Scalus can calculate the execution budget for your validator using the Cardano Client Lib. Just provide ScalusTransactionEvaluator
to your QuickTxBuilder
:
val signedTx = quickTxBuilder
.compose(scriptTx)
.withTxEvaluator(ScalusTransactionEvaluator(protocolParams, utxoSupplier))
// build your transaction
.buildAndSign()
This will calculate the execution budget for your validator and add it to the redeemer of the transaction.
Sources: AdaStream Contract
This project is a Cardano implementation of the BitStream protocol by Robin Linus, inventor of BitVM
Original paper: BitStream: Decentralized File Hosting Incentivised via Bitcoin Payments
- Alice wants to buy a file from Bob.
- Bob encrypts the file with a random key and sends it to Alice.
- Bob creates a bond contract on Cardano with a collateral and a commitment to the key and the file.
- Alice pays Bob for the file via a HTLC (Hashed Timelock Contract), using Cardano or Bitcoin Lightning Network.
- Alice decrypts the file with the key from the HTLC or takes the money back after the timeout.
- If Bob cheats, Alice can prove it and get the collateral from the bond contract.
- Bob can withdraw the collateral by revealing the key.
The project includes a bond contract and a HTLC contract for a fair exchange of files for ADA or other Cardano Native Tokens.
It's a CLI tool and a REST API server that allows you to create a bond contract, pay for a file, and decrypt it.
It has a set of tests that check the contract logic and its execution costs.
Here is a full example of a token minting/burning validator that works on both JVM and JavaScript:
And here is a project that uses it in web frontend: Scalus Minting Example
The challenge was to create the smallest possible validator that checks a certain withdrawal exists in the transaction.
The result is 92 bytes long script
val validator = compile:
(script_withdrawal_credential: Data, datum: Data, redeemer: Data, ctx: Data) =>
def list_has(list: List[Pair[Data, Data]]): Unit =
if list.head.fst == script_withdrawal_credential then ()
else list_has(list.tail) // fails on empty list
inline def withdrawal_from_ctx =
unMapData(fieldAsData[ScriptContext](_.txInfo.withdrawals)(ctx))
list_has(withdrawal_from_ctx)
Now, Scalus takes the same approach as PlutusTx. This change makes it similar to Aiken, which will result in smaller and more efficient Plutus scripts in most cases.
Plutus V3 is coming soon. Scalus will support all new built-ins and features.
This will allow you to build and sign transactions in Scala and JavaScript using the same code.
A framework that will help you build DApps faster and easier.
You define your smart contracts, data types, and interaction endpoints in Scala. The framework will generate the frontend and backend code for you.
Yes, your REST API, WebSocket, and GraphQL endpoints for your DApp. And the JavaScript code to interact with your DApp from the browser.
PlutusTx compiles almost any Haskell program to UPLC. Cons are that you can barely understand how the UPLC is generated and how to make it smaller. PlutusTx also tends to generate a lot of boilerplate code making the final script size bigger and more expensive to run.
Aiken is a new and young programming language which is a pro and a con. Can only be used for writing on-chain smart contracts. Doesn't have macros.
Plutarch is very low-level. Use it when you need precise control over a script generation. It's a Haskell library so be prepared to write Haskell code with all its developer experience drawbacks.
Plu-ts is a TypeScript DSL for writing Plutus scripts. With Scalus you can do the same and much more but in Scala, and produce JavaScript code.
Scalus aimes to be a better version of all the above.
-
You can actually reuse Scala code for your validator, frontend and backend! The goal that PlutusTx failed to achieve.
-
You can use existing Scala libraries for testing, including ScalaCheck and ScalaTest.
-
Scala has a powerful type system that helps you write correct code. Check out Stainless – Formal Verification for Scala for formal verification.
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Scalus leverages all the development tools that Scala has, including IntelliJ Idea, VSCode, sbt, even GitHub CoPilot and ChatGPT! No need to learn new tools and languages.
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Debugger! It works!
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Scalus allows only a limited subset of Scala, that can be reasonably efficiently compiled to UPLC without bloating the code.
-
It's compiled to a fairly high-level human-readable intermediate representation, SIR.
-
The huge part of any usefull script is
ScriptContext
deserialization fromData
representation. Scalus also provides primitives to do your custom deserialization to reduce validator size.
You can ask questions on Scalus Discord: https://discord.gg/ygwtuBybsy
The project is looking for funding to make it production ready. If you are interested, please contact me at @atlanter on Twitter. Follow the official Scalus Twitter account: @Scalus3.
You can support the project by donating ADA or BTC to the following addresses:
ADA: addr1qxwg0u9fpl8dac9rkramkcgzerjsfdlqgkw0q8hy5vwk8tzk5pgcmdpe5jeh92guy4mke4zdmagv228nucldzxv95clqe35r3m
BTC: bc1qzefh9we0frls8ktm0dx428v2dx3wtp6xu4hd8k
Please, consider becoming a sponsor on GitHub.
And vote for the project on Cardano Catalyst!