Sometimes you want to simulate a call to a contract without changing the state of the blockchain. This can be achieved by calling .simulate
instead of .call
and passing in the desired execution context:
.simulate(Execution::Realistic)
simulates the transaction in a manner that closely resembles a real call. You need a wallet with base assets to cover the transaction cost, even though no funds will be consumed. This is useful for validating that a real call would succeed if made at that moment. It allows you to debug issues with your contract without spending gas. // you would mint 100 coins if the transaction wasn't simulated
let counter = contract_methods
.mint_coins(100)
.simulate(Execution::Realistic)
.await?;
.simulate(Execution::StateReadOnly)
disables many validations, adds fake gas, extra variable outputs, blank witnesses, etc., enabling you to read state even with an account that has no funds. // you don't need any funds to read state
let balance = contract_methods
.get_balance(contract_id, AssetId::zeroed())
.simulate(Execution::StateReadOnly)
.await?
.value;