Clauses

Basic clause structure

A clause is a small building block for assembling contract verification logic, reusable and ready to test in separation. To see clauses in action go to: Writing a contract using clauses. Let’s take a look at a simplified structure of the Clause class:

abstract class Clause<in S : ContractState, C : CommandData, in K : Any> {

    /** Determine whether this clause runs or not */
    open val requiredCommands: Set<Class<out CommandData>> = emptySet()

    @Throws(IllegalStateException::class)
    abstract fun verify(tx: TransactionForContract,
                inputs: List<S>,
                outputs: List<S>,
                commands: List<AuthenticatedObject<C>>,
                groupingKey: K?): Set<C>
    ...
}

Basic clause structure contains two important components: requiredCommands and verify function. A clause is triggered when all requiredCommands are present in transaction’s command set (opposite inclusion doesn’t have to hold). Then the verify function is run, which checks if transaction meets conditions specified by this clause. Verification is no different than normal contract verification but using clauses it’s split into smaller generic code blocks with single verify method.

When writing a contract you need to override the contract’s verify function which should call verifyClause. See: Commercial paper class.

Note

A clause verify function returns the set of processed commands, at the end of verifyClause execution there is a check if all of transaction’s commands were matched. If not, then an exception is raised. This is done to enforce that spurious commands cannot be included in a transaction, ensuring that the transaction is as clear as possible. As an example imagine a transaction with two commands: Move and Issue included, with verification written using FirstOf on clauses that require single command set. Thus only one of transaction’s commands will match leaving the second unprocessed. It should raise an error - we want to ensure that commands set is minimal to simplify analysis of intent of a transaction.

An example verify from Obligation contract:

override fun verify(tx: TransactionForContract) = verifyClause<Commands>(tx, FirstOf<ContractState, Commands, Unit>(
    Clauses.Net<Commands, P>(),
    Clauses.Group<P>()
), tx.commands.select<Obligation.Commands>())

It takes transaction to be verified, and passes it along with a top-level clause and commands to the verifyClause function. As you can see above we have used FirstOf which is a special type of clause, which extends the CompositeClause abstract class (in that particular case, it ensures that either Net or Group will run - for explanation see FirstOf). It’s a type of clause that adds support for encapsulating multiple clauses and defines common behaviour for that composition. There is also a GroupClauseVerifier special clause, which specifies how to group transaction input/output states together and passes them to adequate clause for further processing.

Composition clauses

One of the most important concepts of clauses - composition clauses which extend CompositeClause abstract class, providing a range of ways of assembling clauses together. They define a logic of verification execution specifying which clauses will be run.

AllOf

Description

Composes a number of clauses, such that all of the clauses must run for verification to pass.

_images/allOfChart.png

Short description:

  • AllOf holds clauses Cl1,..,Cl5.
  • Check if all clauses that compose AllOf have associated commands in a command set - if not, verification fails.
  • After successful check runs verification logic specific for every clause Cl1,..,Cl5 from that composition.

Usage

See code in GroupClauseVerifier.

AnyOf

Description

Composes a number of clauses, such that 1 or more of the clauses can be run.

_images/anyOfChart.png

Short description:

  • Checks if one or more clauses that compose AnyOf have associated commands in a command set.
  • After success runs verification logic specific for every matched (in this case Cl2, Cl4, Cl5) clause from composition.

Usage

Example from CommercialPaper.kt:

class Group : GroupClauseVerifier<State, Commands, Issued<Terms>>(
    AnyOf(
        Redeem(),
        Move(),
        Issue())) {
    override fun groupStates(tx: TransactionForContract): List<TransactionForContract.InOutGroup<State, Issued<Terms>>>
            = tx.groupStates<State, Issued<Terms>> { it.token }
}

FirstOf

Description

Composes a number of clauses, such that the first match is run, and it errors if none is run.

_images/firstOfChart.png

Short description:

  • Takes first clause that matches and if none found throws an exception.
  • If successful runs verification on the clause that matched (in this case Cl4).

Usage

See code in GroupClauseVerifier.

Other types of clauses

There are certain types of clauses that are specialized in particular types of contracts (like AbstractIssue) or generally should be used as helpers in building parts of logic (the most important one is GroupClauseVerifier).

GroupClauseVerifier

Description

Groups input and output states according to groupStates function. Runs the top-level clause verification on each group in turn.

_images/groupClauseVerifyChart.png

Short description:

GroupClauseVerifier wraps clause Cl1. After grouping relevant states together with groupStates into three groups Gr1, Gr2, Gr3 runs Cl1.verify(Gr1), Cl1.verify(Gr2), Cl1.verify(Gr3).

For more detailed example head to Using state groups.

Usage

You need to extend GroupClauseVerifier clause and define groupStates function which takes transaction and returns grouped input and output states with a grouping key used for each group. Example from Obligation.kt contract:

class Group<P> : GroupClauseVerifier<State<P>, Commands, Issued<Terms<P>>>(
    AllOf(
        NoZeroSizedOutputs<State<P>, Commands, Terms<P>>(),
        FirstOf(
            SetLifecycle<P>(),
            AllOf(
                VerifyLifecycle<State<P>, Commands, Issued<Terms<P>>, P>(),
                FirstOf(
                    Settle<P>(),
                    Issue(),
                    ConserveAmount()
                )
            )
        )
    )
) {
    override fun groupStates(tx: TransactionForContract): List<TransactionForContract.InOutGroup<Obligation.State<P>, Issued<Terms<P>>>>
            = tx.groupStates<Obligation.State<P>, Issued<Terms<P>>> { it.amount.token }
}

Usually it’s convenient to use groupStates function defined on TransactionForContract class. Which given a type and a selector function, that returns a grouping key, associates inputs and outputs together so that they can be processed as one. The grouping key is any arbitrary object that can act as a map key (so must implement equals and hashCode).

AbstractConserveAmount

Description

Standardised clause for checking input/output balances of fungible assets. Requires that a Move command is provided, and errors if absent. Conserve amount clause can only be used on grouped states.

Usage

/**
 * Generic move/exit clause for fungible assets
 */
class ConserveAmount<P> : AbstractConserveAmount<State<P>, Commands, Terms<P>>()

See code in GroupClauseVerifier.

AbstractIssue

Description

Standard issue clause for contracts that issue fungible assets.

Usage

Example from CommercialPaper.kt:

class Issue : AbstractIssue<State, Commands, Terms>(
        { map { Amount(it.faceValue.quantity, it.token) }.sumOrThrow() },
        { token -> map { Amount(it.faceValue.quantity, it.token) }.sumOrZero(token) }) {
    override val requiredCommands: Set<Class<out CommandData>> = setOf(Commands.Issue::class.java)

    override fun verify(tx: TransactionForContract,
                        inputs: List<State>,
                        outputs: List<State>,
                        commands: List<AuthenticatedObject<Commands>>,
                        groupingKey: Issued<Terms>?): Set<Commands> {
        val consumedCommands = super.verify(tx, inputs, outputs, commands, groupingKey)
        ...

First function in constructor converts a list of states into an amount of the token. Must error if there are no states in the list. Second function converts a list of states into an amount of the token, and returns zero if there are no states in the list. Takes in an instance of the token definition for constructing the zero amount if needed.

NoZeroSizedOutputs

Description

Clause for fungible asset contracts, which enforces that no output state should have a balance of zero.

Usage

See code in GroupClauseVerifier.

FilterOn

Description

Filter the states that are passed through to the wrapped clause, to restrict them to a specific type.

FilterOn narrows the scope of the states being verified. Let’s take a transaction with multiple cash states of different currencies, we want to run a clause that focuses on only GBP cash states rather than all cash states.

Usage

FilterOn(clause, { states -> states.filter { it.amount.token == GBP} })

Takes filterStates function that limits states passed to clause verification.