When preparing a contract call via CallHandler
, the Rust SDK uses a transaction builder in the background. You can fetch this builder and customize it before submitting it to the network. After the transaction is executed successfully, you can use the corresponding CallHandler
to generate a call response . The call response can be used to decode return values and logs. Below are examples for both contract and script calls.
let call_handler = contract_instance.methods().initialize_counter(counter);
let mut tb = call_handler.transaction_builder().await?;
// customize the builder...
wallet.adjust_for_fee(&mut tb, 0).await?;
tb.add_signer(wallet.clone())?;
let tx = tb.build(provider).await?;
let tx_id = provider.send_transaction(tx).await?;
tokio::time::sleep(Duration::from_millis(500)).await;
let tx_status = provider.tx_status(&tx_id).await?;
let response = call_handler.get_response_from(tx_status)?;
assert_eq!(counter, response.value);
let script_call_handler = script_instance.main(1, 2);
let mut tb = script_call_handler.transaction_builder().await?;
// customize the builder...
wallet.adjust_for_fee(&mut tb, 0).await?;
tb.add_signer(wallet.clone())?;
let tx = tb.build(provider).await?;
let tx_id = provider.send_transaction(tx).await?;
tokio::time::sleep(Duration::from_millis(500)).await;
let tx_status = provider.tx_status(&tx_id).await?;
let response = script_call_handler.get_response_from(tx_status)?;
assert_eq!(response.value, "hello");