Integration
Learn how to integrate the callbacks middleware with IBC applications. The following document is intended for developers building on top of the Cosmos SDK and only applies for Cosmos SDK chains.
The callbacks middleware is a minimal and stateless implementation of the IBC middleware interface. It does not have a keeper, nor does it store any state. It simply routes IBC middleware messages to the appropriate callback function, which is implemented by the secondary application. Therefore, it doesn't need to be registered as a module, nor does it need to be added to the module manager. It only needs to be added to the IBC application stack.
Pre-requisite Readings
The callbacks middleware, as the name suggests, plays the role of an IBC middleware and as such must be configured by chain developers to route and handle IBC messages correctly.
For Cosmos SDK chains this setup is done via the app/app.go
file, where modules are constructed and configured in order to bootstrap the blockchain application.
Importing the callbacks middleware
The callbacks middleware has no stable releases yet. To use it, you need to import the git commit that contains the module with the compatible version of ibc-go
. To do so, run the following command with the desired git commit in your project:
go get github.com/cosmos/ibc-go/modules/apps/callbacks@17cf1260a9cdc5292512acc9bcf6336ef0d917f4
You can find the version matrix in here.
Configuring an application stack with the callbacks middleware
As mentioned in IBC middleware development an application stack may be composed of many or no middlewares that nest a base application.
These layers form the complete set of application logic that enable developers to build composable and flexible IBC application stacks.
For example, an application stack may just be a single base application like transfer
, however, the same application stack composed with 29-fee
and callbacks
will nest the transfer
base application twice by wrapping it with the Fee Middleware module and then callbacks middleware.
The callbacks middleware also requires a secondary application that will receive the callbacks to implement the ContractKeeper
. Since the wasm module does not yet support the callbacks middleware, we will use the mockContractKeeper
module in the examples below. You should replace this with a module that implements ContractKeeper
.
Transfer
See below for an example of how to create an application stack using transfer
, 29-fee
, and callbacks
. Feel free to omit the 29-fee
middleware if you do not want to use it.
The following transferStack
is configured in app/app.go
and added to the IBC Router
.
The in-line comments describe the execution flow of packets between the application stack and IBC core.
// Create Transfer Stack
// SendPacket, since it is originating from the application to core IBC:
// transferKeeper.SendPacket -> callbacks.SendPacket -> feeKeeper.SendPacket -> channel.SendPacket
// RecvPacket, message that originates from core IBC and goes down to app, the flow is the other way
// channel.RecvPacket -> fee.OnRecvPacket -> callbacks.OnRecvPacket -> transfer.OnRecvPacket
// transfer stack contains (from top to bottom):
// - IBC Fee Middleware
// - IBC Callbacks Middleware
// - Transfer
// create IBC module from bottom to top of stack
var transferStack porttypes.IBCModule
transferStack = transfer.NewIBCModule(app.TransferKeeper)
transferStack = ibccallbacks.NewIBCMiddleware(transferStack, app.IBCFeeKeeper, app.MockContractKeeper, maxCallbackGas)
transferICS4Wrapper := transferStack.(porttypes.ICS4Wrapper)
transferStack = ibcfee.NewIBCMiddleware(transferStack, app.IBCFeeKeeper)
// Since the callbacks middleware itself is an ics4wrapper, it needs to be passed to the transfer keeper
app.TransferKeeper.WithICS4Wrapper(transferICS4Wrapper)
// Add transfer stack to IBC Router
ibcRouter.AddRoute(ibctransfertypes.ModuleName, transferStack)
The usage of WithICS4Wrapper
after transferStack
's configuration is critical! It allows the callbacks middleware to do SendPacket
callbacks and asynchronous ReceivePacket
callbacks. You must do this regardless of whether you are using the 29-fee
middleware or not.
Interchain Accounts Controller
// Create Interchain Accounts Stack
// SendPacket, since it is originating from the application to core IBC:
// icaControllerKeeper.SendTx -> callbacks.SendPacket -> fee.SendPacket -> channel.SendPacket
// initialize ICA module with mock module as the authentication module on the controller side
var icaControllerStack porttypes.IBCModule
icaControllerStack = ibcmock.NewIBCModule(&mockModule, ibcmock.NewIBCApp("", scopedICAMockKeeper))
app.ICAAuthModule = icaControllerStack.(ibcmock.IBCModule)
icaControllerStack = icacontroller.NewIBCMiddleware(icaControllerStack, app.ICAControllerKeeper)
icaControllerStack = ibccallbacks.NewIBCMiddleware(icaControllerStack, app.IBCFeeKeeper, app.MockContractKeeper, maxCallbackGas)
icaICS4Wrapper := icaControllerStack.(porttypes.ICS4Wrapper)
icaControllerStack = ibcfee.NewIBCMiddleware(icaControllerStack, app.IBCFeeKeeper)
// Since the callbacks middleware itself is an ics4wrapper, it needs to be passed to the ica controller keeper
app.ICAControllerKeeper.WithICS4Wrapper(icaICS4Wrapper)
// RecvPacket, message that originates from core IBC and goes down to app, the flow is:
// channel.RecvPacket -> fee.OnRecvPacket -> icaHost.OnRecvPacket
var icaHostStack porttypes.IBCModule
icaHostStack = icahost.NewIBCModule(app.ICAHostKeeper)
icaHostStack = ibcfee.NewIBCMiddleware(icaHostStack, app.IBCFeeKeeper)
// Add ICA host and controller to IBC router ibcRouter.
AddRoute(icacontrollertypes.SubModuleName, icaControllerStack).
AddRoute(icahosttypes.SubModuleName, icaHostStack).
The usage of WithICS4Wrapper
here is also critical!