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Version: 0.2.3

Dump, load, restart

Dumping

To preserve your Devnet instance for future use, these are the options:

  • Dumping on exit (handles Ctrl+C, i.e. SIGINT; doesn't handle SIGKILL):
$ starknet-devnet --dump-on exit --dump-path <PATH>
  • Dumping after each block:
$ starknet-devnet --dump-on block --dump-path <PATH>
  • Dumping on request, which requires providing --dump-on request on startup. You can also dump on request if you specified any of the other --dump-on modes.

Dumping on request

You can request dumping by sending POST to /dump or via JSON-RPC. An optional file path can be provided in the request or on startup via --dump-path <FILE> (the HTTP request parameter takes precedence). If no dumping path is specified, the dump is included in the response body. This means that if you request dumping via curl, it will be printed to STDOUT, which you can then redirect to a destination of your choice.

$ starknet-devnet --dump-on <MODE> [--dump-path <FILE>]
  • No body parameters:
POST /dump
JSON-RPC
{
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"id": "1",
"method": "devnet_dump"
}
  • With a custom path:
POST /dump
{
// optional; defaults to the path specified via CLI if defined
"path": <PATH>
}
JSON-RPC
{
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"id": "1",
"method": "devnet_dump",
"params": {
// optional; defaults to the path specified via CLI if defined
"path": <PATH>
}
}

Loading

To load a preserved Devnet instance, the options are:

  • Loading on startup (note the argument name is not --load-path as it was in Devnet-py):
$ starknet-devnet --dump-path <PATH>
  • Loading on request, which replaces the current state with the one in the provided file. It can be done by sending POST to /load or via JSON-RPC:
POST /load
{ "path": <PATH> }
JSON-RPC
{
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"id": "1",
"method": "devnet_load",
"params": {
"path": <PATH>
}
}

Loading disclaimer

Currently, dumping produces a list of reproducible Devnet actions (state-changing requests and transactions). Conversely, loading is implemented as the re-execution of transactions from a dump. This means that timestamps of StarknetBlock will be different on each load. This is due to the nature of Devnet's dependencies, which prevent Devnet's state from being serialized.

Dumping and loading are not guaranteed to work across versions. I.e. if you dumped one version of Devnet, do not expect it to be loadable with a different version.

If you dumped a Devnet utilizing one class for account predeployment (e.g. --account-class cairo0), you should use the same option when loading. The same applies for dumping a Devnet in --block-generation-on demand mode.

Restarting

Devnet can be restarted by making a POST /restart request (no body required) or JSON-RPC request with method name devnet_restart. All of the deployed contracts (including predeployed), blocks and storage updates will be restarted to the original state, without the transactions and requests that may have been loaded from a dump file on startup.

Restarting and L1-L2 messaging

If you're doing L1-L2 message exchange, restarting will by default not affect Devnet's connection with L1 nor the L1->L2 message queue. The effect that L1-L2 messages may have had on Devnet before restarting shall be reverted, including any L2 contracts used for messaging. Also, calling flush will not have new messages to read until they are actually sent. If you wish to re-process the already-seen L1->L2 messages when you restart, make them accessible again by setting the restart_l1_to_l2_messaging parameter shown below. If you set this flag:

  • you will need to reload the L1-side messaging contract
  • the L1->L2 messages won't be restarted in the sense of being deleted, but access to them shall be regained via flush
  • the L2->L1 message queue is restarted regardless of the flag
JSON-RPC
{
"jsonrpc": "2.0",
"id": "1",
"method": "devnet_restart",
"params": {
// optional parameter, defaults to false
"restart_l1_to_l2_messaging": true | false
}
}

Docker

To enable dumping and loading with dockerized Devnet, you must bind the container path to the path on your host machine.

This example:

  • Relies on Docker bind mount; try Docker volume instead.
  • Assumes that /path/to/dumpdir exists. If unsure, use absolute paths.
  • Assumes you are listening on 127.0.0.1:5050.

If there is mydump inside /path/to/dumpdir, you can load it with:

docker run \
-p 127.0.0.1:5050:5050 \
--mount type=bind,source=/path/to/dumpdir,target=/path/to/dumpdir \
shardlabs/starknet-devnet-rs \
--dump-path /path/to/dumpdir/mydump

To dump to /path/to/dumpdir/mydump on Devnet shutdown, run:

docker run \
-p 127.0.0.1:5050:5050 \
--mount type=bind,source=/path/to/dumpdir,target=/path/to/dumpdir \
shardlabs/starknet-devnet-rs \
--dump-on exit --dump-path /path/to/dumpdir/mydump