EVM Gateway enables seamless interaction with EVM on Flow, mirroring the experience of engaging with any other EVM blockchain.
EVM Gateway implements the Ethereum JSON-RPC API for EVM on Flow which conforms to the Ethereum JSON-RPC specification. The EVM Gateway is tailored for integration with the EVM environment on the Flow blockchain. Rather than implementing the full geth
stack, the JSON-RPC API available in EVM Gateway is a lightweight implementation that uses Flow's underlying consensus and smart contract language, Cadence, to handle calls received by the EVM Gateway. For those interested in the underlying implementation details, please refer to the FLIP #243 (EVM Gateway) and FLIP #223 (EVM on Flow Core) improvement proposals.
EVM Gateway is compatible with the majority of standard Ethereum JSON-RPC APIs allowing seamless integration with existing Ethereum-compatible web3 tools via HTTP. EVM Gateway honors Ethereum's JSON-RPC namespace system, grouping RPC methods into categories based on their specific purpose. Each method name is constructed using the namespace, an underscore, and the specific method name in that namespace. For example, the eth_call
method is located within the eth
namespace. See below for details on methods currently supported or planned.
The basic design of the EVM Gateway consists of a couple of components:
- Event Ingestion Engine: this component listens to all Cadence events that are emitted by the EVM core, which can be identified by the special event type ID
evm.TransactionExecuted
andevm.BlockExecuted
and decodes and index the data they contain in the payloads. - Flow Requester: this component knows how to submit transactions to Flow AN to change the EVM state. What happens behind the scenes is that EVM gateway will receive an EVM transaction payload, which will get wrapped in a Cadence transaction that calls EVM contract with that payload and then the EVM core will execute the transaction and change the state.
- JSON RPC API: this is the client API component that implements all the API according to the JSON RPC API specification.
Manual Build
We recommend using Docker to run the EVM Gateway, as detailed in the subsequent section. Alternatively, if you decide to build the binary manually, you can do so by running:
# Make sure you pull the latest changes before running `make build`
git pull origin main
git fetch origin --tags
make build
To view the binary version:
./flow-evm-gateway version
To view all the available flags for running the EVM Gateway Node:
./flow-evm-gateway help run
The binary can then be run by passing the necessary flags:
./flow-evm-gateway run {flags}
To run a local version for development, with the necessary flags set:
make start-local-bin
Operating an EVM Gateway is straightforward. It can either be deployed locally alongside the Flow emulator or configured to connect with any active Flow networks supporting EVM. Given that the EVM Gateway depends solely on Access Node APIs, it is compatible with any networks offering this API access.
Start Emulator
To run the gateway locally you need to start the Flow Emulator:
flow emulator
Make sure flow.json has the emulator account configured to address and private key we will use for starting gateway bellow.
Please refer to the configuration section and read through all the configuration flags before proceeding.
Then you can start the EVM Gateway with:
make start-local
Note that the gateway will be starting from the latest emulator block, so if the emulator is run before any transactions happen in the meantime, the gateway will not fetch those historical blocks & transactions. This will be improved soon.
In the example above we set coa-address
value to the service account of the emulator, the same as coa-key
.
This account will by default be funded with Flow which is a requirement. For coinbase
we can
use whichever valid EVM address. It's not really useful when running locally besides collecting fees. We also allow for the
coa-resource-create
to auto-create resources needed on start-up on the coa
account in order to operate the gateway.
gas-price
is set at 0 so we don't have to fund EOA accounts. We can set it higher but keep in mind you will then
need funded accounts for interacting with EVM.
With Docker
Run the following commands:
cd dev
docker build -t onflow/flow-evm-gateway .
docker run -d -p 127.0.0.1:8545:8545 onflow/flow-evm-gateway
Verify To verify the service is up and running:
curl -XPOST 'localhost:8545' --header 'Content-Type: application/json' --data-raw '{"jsonrpc":"2.0","method":"eth_blockNumber","params":[],"id":1}'
it should return:
{
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"id": 1,
"result": "0x2"
}
Running against the testnet with a local build can be done by pointing the gateway to the testnet ANs and providing the correct configuration. Please refer to the configuration section and read through all the configuration flags before proceeding.
Below is an example configuration for running against testnet, with an already created testnet account.
./flow-evm-gateway run \
--access-node-grpc-host=access.devnet.nodes.onflow.org:9000 \
--access-node-spork-hosts=access-001.devnet51.nodes.onflow.org:9000 \
--flow-network-id=flow-testnet \
--init-cadence-height=211176670 \
--ws-enabled=true \
--coa-resource-create=false \
--coinbase=FACF71692421039876a5BB4F10EF7A439D8ef61E \
--coa-address=0x62631c28c9fc5a91 \
--coa-key=2892fba444f1d5787739708874e3b01160671924610411ac787ac1379d420f49 \
--gas-price=100
The --init-cadence-height
is the Flow block height to start indexing from. To index the full EVM state, from its beginning, the proper value for this flag is 211176670
. This is the height where the EVM
contract was first deployed on testnet, and this is where the EVM state starts from.
If you wish to test this out with your own Access Node, simply set --access-node-grpc-host
to the location where it is hosted.
Note: You need to make sure that your Access Node has indexed at least up to Flow block height 211176670
.
For the --gas-price
, feel free to experiment with different values.
The --coinbase
can be any EOA address.
To generate your own --coa-key
and --coa-address
, run:
# Install Flow CLI, if you do not already have it installed
sh -ci "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/onflow/flow-cli/master/install.sh)"
flow-c1 keys generate
This will output something similar to:
🔴️ Store private key safely and don't share with anyone!
Private Key 3cf8334d.....95c3c54a28e4ad1
Public Key 33a13ade6....85f1b49a197747
Mnemonic often scare peanut ... boil corn change
Derivation Path m/44'/539'/0'/0/0
Signature Algorithm ECDSA_P256
Visit https://faucet.flow.com/, and use the generated Public Key
, to create and fund your Flow account.
Make sure to use the Flow address and the Private Key
for the --coa-address
& --coa-key
flags.
Once the EVM Gateway is up and running, verify that indexing works with:
curl -s -XPOST 'localhost:8545' --header 'Content-Type: application/json' --data-raw '{"jsonrpc":"2.0","method":"eth_blockNumber","params":[],"id":1}'
Should return a response similar to:
{
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"id": 1,
"result": "0x68"
}
Running the EVM gateway for mainnet requires additional security and stability measures which are described in this document: https://flowfoundation.notion.site/EVM-Gateway-Deployment-3c41da6710af40acbaf971e22ce0a9fd?pvs=74
For mainnet, the Flow block height where the EVM state starts from is 85981134
. To index the full EVM state, use this value for the --init-cadence-height
flag.
The application can be configured using the following flags at runtime:
Flag | Default Value | Description |
---|---|---|
database-dir |
./db |
Path to the directory for the database |
rpc-host |
"" |
Host for the RPC API server |
rpc-port |
8545 |
Port for the RPC API server |
ws-enabled |
false |
Enable websocket connections |
access-node-grpc-host |
localhost:3569 |
Host to the flow access node gRPC API |
access-node-spork-hosts |
"" |
Previous spork AN hosts, defined as a comma-separated list (e.g. "host-1.com,host2.com" ) |
flow-network-id |
flow-emulator |
Flow network ID (options: flow-emulator , flow-testnet , flow-mainnet ) |
coinbase |
"" |
Coinbase address to use for fee collection |
init-cadence-height |
0 |
Cadence block height to start indexing; avoid using on a new network |
gas-price |
1 |
Static gas price for EVM transactions |
coa-address |
"" |
Flow address holding COA account for submitting transactions |
coa-key |
"" |
Private key for the COA address used for transactions |
coa-key-file |
"" |
Path to a JSON file of COA keys for key-rotation (exclusive with coa-key flag) |
coa-resource-create |
false |
Auto-create the COA resource if it doesn't exist in the Flow COA account |
coa-cloud-kms-project-id |
"" |
Project ID for KMS keys (e.g. flow-evm-gateway ) |
coa-cloud-kms-location-id |
"" |
Location ID for KMS key ring (e.g. 'global') |
coa-cloud-kms-key-ring-id |
"" |
Key ring ID for KMS keys (e.g. 'tx-signing') |
coa-cloud-kms-keys |
"" |
KMS keys and versions, comma-separated (e.g. "gw-key-6@1,gw-key-7@1" ) |
log-level |
debug |
Log verbosity level (debug , info , warn , error , fatal , panic ) |
log-writer |
stderr |
Output method for logs (stderr , console ) |
stream-limit |
10 |
Rate-limit for client events sent per second |
rate-limit |
50 |
Requests per second limit for clients over any protocol (ws/http) |
address-header |
"" |
Header for client IP when server is behind a proxy |
heartbeat-interval |
100 |
Interval for AN event subscription heartbeats |
stream-timeout |
3 |
Timeout in seconds for sending events to clients |
force-start-height |
0 |
Force-set starting Cadence height (local/testing use only) |
wallet-api-key |
"" |
ECDSA private key for wallet APIs (local/testing use only) |
filter-expiry |
5m |
Expiry time for idle filters |
traces-gcp-bucket |
"" |
GCP bucket name for transaction traces |
traces-backfill-start-height |
0 |
Start height for backfilling transaction traces |
traces-backfill-end-height |
0 |
End height for backfilling transaction traces |
index-only |
false |
Run in index-only mode, allowing state queries and indexing but no transaction sending |
profiler-enabled |
false |
Enable the pprof profiler server |
profiler-host |
localhost |
Host for the pprof profiler |
profiler-port |
6060 |
Port for the pprof profiler |
Deploying the EVM Gateway node comes with some prerequisites as well as expectations and they are best explained in the WIP document: https://flowfoundation.notion.site/EVM-Gateway-Deployment-3c41da6710af40acbaf971e22ce0a9fd
EVM Gateway has public RPC endpoints available for the following environments:
Name | Value |
---|---|
Network Name | EVM on Flow Testnet |
Description | The public RPC URL for Flow Testnet |
RPC Endpoint | https://testnet.evm.nodes.onflow.org |
Chain ID | 545 |
Currency Symbol | FLOW |
Block Explorer | https://evm-testnet.flowscan.io |
Name | Value |
---|---|
Network Name | EVM on Flow |
Description | The public RPC URL for Flow Mainnet |
RPC Endpoint | https://mainnet.evm.nodes.onflow.org |
Chain ID | 747 |
Currency Symbol | FLOW |
Block Explorer | https://evm.flowscan.io |
The EVM Gateway implements APIs according to the Ethereum specification: https://ethereum.org/en/developers/docs/apis/json-rpc/#json-rpc-methods
Additional APIs
- Tracing APIs allows you to fetch execution traces
- debug_traceTransaction
- debug_traceBlockByNumber
- debug_traceBlockByHash
Unsupported APIs
- Wallet APIs: we don't officially support wallet APIs (eth_accounts, eth_sign, eth_signTransaction, eth_sendTransaction) due to security
concerns that come with managing the keys on production environments, however, it is possible to configure the gateway to allow these
methods for local development by using a special flag
--wallet-api-key
. - Proof API: we don't support obtaining proofs yet, Flow piggy-backs on the Flow consensus, and hence the Flow proofs can be used to verify and trust the EVM environment. We intend to add access to EVM proofs in the future.
- Access Lists: we don't yet support creating access lists as they don't affect the fees we charge. We might support this in the future to optimize fees, but it currently is not part of our priorities.
The EVM Gateway supports profiling via the pprof
package. To enable profiling, add the following flags to the command line:
--profiler-enabled=true
--profiler-host=localhost
--profiler-port=6060
This will start a pprof server on the provided host
and port
. You can generate profiles using the following go tool
commands
go tool pprof -http :2000 http://localhost:6060/debug/pprof/profile
curl --output trace.out http://localhost:6060/debug/pprof/trace
go tool trace -http :2001 trace.out
We welcome contributions from the community! Please read our Contributing Guide for information on how to get involved.
EVM Gateway is released under the Apache License 2.0 license. See the LICENSE file for more details.