NEAR CLI - Basics
After your contract is ready you can deploy it in the NEAR network for everyone to use it.
Let us guide you on how to use the NEAR CLI to deploy your contract and call its methods.
On this page, we will only cover the basics of NEAR CLI. For more information visit the NEAR CLI documentation page.
Deploying the Contract
Thanks to the NEAR CLI
deploying a contract is as simple as:
- Compiling the contract to wasm.
- Create an account and deploy the contract into it using
NEAR CLI
.
Compile the Contract
- 🌐 JavaScript
- 🦀 Rust
yarn build
cargo near build
Create an Account and Deploy
- Short
- Full
# Create a new account pre-funded by a faucet
near create-account <accountId> --useFaucet
# deploy the contract
near deploy <accountId> <route_to_wasm>
# Create a new account pre-funded by a faucet
near account create-account sponsor-by-faucet-service <my-new-dev-account>.testnet autogenerate-new-keypair save-to-keychain network-config testnet create
# deploy the contract
near contract deploy <my-new-dev-account>.testnet use-file <route_to_wasm> without-init-call network-config testnet sign-with-keychain
Deploy in an Existing Account
- Short
- Full
# login into your account
near login
# deploy the contract
near deploy <accountId> <route_to_wasm>
# login into your account
near account import-account using-web-wallet network-config testnet
# deploy the contract
near contract deploy <accountId> use-file <route_to_wasm> without-init-call network-config testnet sign-with-keychain send
You can overwrite a contract by deploying another on top of it. In this case, the account's logic will change, but the state will persist
By default near-cli
uses the testnet
network. Define NEAR_ENV=mainnet
to deploy into mainnet
.
Once the contract is deployed to the network, anyone and any other contract (i.e., any other account on NEAR) can interact with it by calling its methods. Furthermore, any transactions involving the contract will also be included in the network's data stream, which means its activity can also be visible to any who listens to particular events.
Considering this, we advise to name methods using snake_case
in all SDKs as this is compatible with the remainder of the NEAR ecosystem which is predominantly comprised of Rust contracts.
Initializing the Contract
If your contract has an initialization method you can call it to
initialize the state. This is not necessary if your contract implements default
values for the state.
- Short
- Full
# Call the initialization method (`init` in our examples)
near call <contractId> <initMethod> [<args>] --accountId <accountId>
# Call the initialization method (`init` in our examples)
near contract call-function as-transaction <contractId> <initMethod> json-args [<args>] prepaid-gas '30 TeraGas' attached-deposit '0 NEAR' sign-as <accountId> network-config testnet sign-with-keychain send
You can initialize your contract during deployment using the --initFunction
& --initArgs
arguments.
Calling the Contract
Once your contract is deployed you can interact with it right away using NEAR CLI.
View methods
View methods are those that perform read-only operations. Calling these methods is free, and do not require to specify which account is being used to make the call:
- Short
- Full
near view <contractId> <methodName>
near contract call-function as-read-only <contractId> <methodName> text-args '' network-config testnet now
View methods have by default 200 TGAS for execution
Change methods
Change methods are those that perform both read and write operations. For these methods we do need to specify the account being used to make the call, since that account will expend GAS in the call.
- Short
- Full
near call <contractId> <methodName> <jsonArgs> --accountId <yourAccount> [--deposit <amount>] [--gas <GAS>]
near contract call-function as-transaction <AccountId> <MethodName> json-args <JsonArgs> prepaid-gas <PrepaidGas> attached-deposit <AttachedDeposit> sign-as <AccountId> network-config testnet sign-with-keychain send