tatum-js
mythril
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tatum-js | mythril | |
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43 | 12 | |
334 | 3,684 | |
2.4% | 0.7% | |
9.1 | 8.2 | |
about 22 hours ago | 1 day ago | |
TypeScript | Python | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
tatum-js
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Crypto payment for a game
If you wanted to implement multiple currencies/blockchains pretty easily, you could use Tatum. We support everything you've mentioned and a ton more blockchains/tokens. Here's the full list. Using our platform would be a good workaround for your liquidity issue, and if you wanted to could use our virtual accounts to enable feeless, instant transactions parallel to the blockchain. Hope this helps!
I'm able to view all of the links, maybe them it another try? https://tatum.io
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The Tatum Development Platform Integration For Elrond Network Goes Live, Allowing 10,000+ Developers To Build At An Internet Scale
https://tatum.io
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What kind of Ethereum node/API/setup do I need for these use cases?
You should also check out https://tatum.io for ETH nodes + rapid development. Re archive - You need at least 7-8 TB disk space for the ETH archive.
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Local signing for nft/deploy on Tatum API for non-custodial wallet
You can use TatumJS on the frontend. For a non custodial wallet, its the best practice to sing it on a front end and not send private keys on the backend, even though it’s your backend. For a nft/deploy function, you can use tatumjs method deploy nft - https://github.com/tatumio/tatum-js/blob/3455f55ce42ad82288025a71c1d16231fa77746b/src/nft/index.ts#L43
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Tatum-JS / LTC transaction: TypeError, Fees and change
Now I understand what I was doing wrong! I thought I had to first call prepareLitecoinSignedTransaction, and then sendLitecoinTransaction. But actually, looking at the sendLitecoinTransaction function at https://github.com/tatumio/tatum-js/blob/master/src/transaction/litecoin.ts line 88, I see it calls prepareLitecoinSignedTransaction! So, the second parameter it passes to the function prepareLitecoinSignedTransaction should be a transferBtcBasedBlockchain (a json object), not the prepared result (a hexa string). The 'constructor of undefined' error was happening because my prepare object was a hexadecimal string.
mythril
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Fuzzing Around: Better Smart Contract Testing through the Power of Random Inputs
Fuzzing has been around for a while in traditional full-stack development, but a new class of tools is here that can apply fuzzing to smart contract testing in web3. Some of the fuzzing tools include the open source Echidna and MythX.
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Mythril an easy way to audit your smart contracts.
Mythril is part of the core tools of Consensys Mythx one of the biggest Smart Contract security services for Ethereum, which main goal is to ensure development teams avoid costly errors and make Ethereum more secure and trustworthy… or at least that is what their page says.
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How do you guarantee the security of your smart contracts?
Other than audits and testing, there's automated security checking: https://github.com/ConsenSys/mythril I'm yet to try this in one of my projects
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Launching your Ethereum dApp on Avalanche
Mythril
MythX
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A Comprehensive Guide on Web3 Programming Languages and Tools
MythX, Mythril, Manticore, and Echidna are other tools for security audits.
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Tools to verify solidity code
Smart Contract Weakness Classification and Test Cases: https://swcregistry.io/ OKO Contract Explorer: https://oko.palkeo.com/txview Slither: https://github.com/crytic/slither MythX: https://mythx.io/ Tenderly: https://tenderly.dev/ Spot check program: https://docs.google.com/document/d/16...
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Static analysis of smartcontracts?
There are some paid tools and some free ones. A few that come to mind are ConsenSys MythX (based in part on the open-source Mythril), ShiftLeft, Oyente, Octopus… maybe best to just check out ETHSecurity’s list.
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Formal Verification Methods in industry
When you say "formal verification methods", what kind of techniques are you interested in? While using interactive theorem provers will most likely not become very widespread, there are plenty of tools that use formal techniques to give more correctness guarantees. These tools might give some guarantees, but do not guarantee complete functional correctness. WireGuard (VPN tunnel) is I think a very interesting application where they verified the protocol. There are also some tools in use, e.g. Mythril and CrossHair, that focus on detecting bugs using symbolic execution. There's also INFER from Facebook/Meta which tries to verify memory safety automatically. The following GitHub repo might also interest you, it lists some companies that use formal methods: practical-fm
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What kind of Ethereum node/API/setup do I need for these use cases?
ability to run security analysis on contracts using for .e.g. https://github.com/ConsenSys/mythril
What are some alternatives?
manticore - Symbolic execution tool
bitcoinbook - Mastering Bitcoin 3rd Edition - Programming the Open Blockchain
Nethereum - Ethereum .Net cross platform integration library
truffle - :warning: The Truffle Suite is being sunset. For information on ongoing support, migration options and FAQs, visit the Consensys blog. Thank you for all the support over the years.
slither - Static Analyzer for Solidity and Vyper
smart-contract-best-practices - A guide to smart contract security best practices
pyteal - Algorand Smart Contracts in Python
solc-select - Manage and switch between Solidity compiler versions
echidna - Ethereum smart contract fuzzer
tatum-blockchain-connector
rotki - A portfolio tracking, analytics, accounting and management application that protects your privacy
infer - A static analyzer for Java, C, C++, and Objective-C