| 123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118 | import type { Addressable, NameResolver } from "../address/index.js";import type { TypedDataDomain, TypedDataField } from "../hash/index.js";import type { TransactionLike } from "../transaction/index.js";import type { ContractRunner } from "./contracts.js";import type { BlockTag, Provider, TransactionRequest, TransactionResponse } from "./provider.js";/** *  A Signer represents an account on the Ethereum Blockchain, and is most often *  backed by a private key represented by a mnemonic or residing on a Hardware Wallet. * *  The API remains abstract though, so that it can deal with more advanced exotic *  Signing entities, such as Smart Contract Wallets or Virtual Wallets (where the *  private key may not be known). */export interface Signer extends Addressable, ContractRunner, NameResolver {    /**     *  The [[Provider]] attached to this Signer (if any).     */    provider: null | Provider;    /**     *  Returns a new instance of this Signer connected to //provider// or detached     *  from any Provider if null.     */    connect(provider: null | Provider): Signer;    /**     *  Get the address of the Signer.     */    getAddress(): Promise<string>;    /**     *  Gets the next nonce required for this Signer to send a transaction.     *     *  @param blockTag - The blocktag to base the transaction count on, keep in mind     *         many nodes do not honour this value and silently ignore it [default: ``"latest"``]     */    getNonce(blockTag?: BlockTag): Promise<number>;    /**     *  Prepares a {@link TransactionRequest} for calling:     *  - resolves ``to`` and ``from`` addresses     *  - if ``from`` is specified , check that it matches this Signer     *     *  @param tx - The call to prepare     */    populateCall(tx: TransactionRequest): Promise<TransactionLike<string>>;    /**     *  Prepares a {@link TransactionRequest} for sending to the network by     *  populating any missing properties:     *  - resolves ``to`` and ``from`` addresses     *  - if ``from`` is specified , check that it matches this Signer     *  - populates ``nonce`` via ``signer.getNonce("pending")``     *  - populates ``gasLimit`` via ``signer.estimateGas(tx)``     *  - populates ``chainId`` via ``signer.provider.getNetwork()``     *  - populates ``type`` and relevant fee data for that type (``gasPrice``     *    for legacy transactions, ``maxFeePerGas`` for EIP-1559, etc)     *     *  @note Some Signer implementations may skip populating properties that     *        are populated downstream; for example JsonRpcSigner defers to the     *        node to populate the nonce and fee data.     *     *  @param tx - The call to prepare     */    populateTransaction(tx: TransactionRequest): Promise<TransactionLike<string>>;    /**     *  Estimates the required gas required to execute //tx// on the Blockchain. This     *  will be the expected amount a transaction will require as its ``gasLimit``     *  to successfully run all the necessary computations and store the needed state     *  that the transaction intends.     *     *  Keep in mind that this is **best efforts**, since the state of the Blockchain     *  is in flux, which could affect transaction gas requirements.     *     *  @throws UNPREDICTABLE_GAS_LIMIT A transaction that is believed by the node to likely     *          fail will throw an error during gas estimation. This could indicate that it     *          will actually fail or that the circumstances are simply too complex for the     *          node to take into account. In these cases, a manually determined ``gasLimit``     *          will need to be made.     */    estimateGas(tx: TransactionRequest): Promise<bigint>;    /**     *  Evaluates the //tx// by running it against the current Blockchain state. This     *  cannot change state and has no cost in ether, as it is effectively simulating     *  execution.     *     *  This can be used to have the Blockchain perform computations based on its state     *  (e.g. running a Contract's getters) or to simulate the effect of a transaction     *  before actually performing an operation.     */    call(tx: TransactionRequest): Promise<string>;    /**     *  Resolves an ENS Name to an address.     */    resolveName(name: string): Promise<null | string>;    /**     *  Signs %%tx%%, returning the fully signed transaction. This does not     *  populate any additional properties within the transaction.     */    signTransaction(tx: TransactionRequest): Promise<string>;    /**     *  Sends %%tx%% to the Network. The ``signer.populateTransaction(tx)``     *  is called first to ensure all necessary properties for the     *  transaction to be valid have been popualted first.     */    sendTransaction(tx: TransactionRequest): Promise<TransactionResponse>;    /**     *  Signs an [[link-eip-191]] prefixed personal message.     *     *  If the %%message%% is a string, it is signed as UTF-8 encoded bytes. It is **not**     *  interpretted as a [[BytesLike]]; so the string ``"0x1234"`` is signed as six     *  characters, **not** two bytes.     *     *  To sign that example as two bytes, the Uint8Array should be used     *  (i.e. ``new Uint8Array([ 0x12, 0x34 ])``).     */    signMessage(message: string | Uint8Array): Promise<string>;    /**     *  Signs the [[link-eip-712]] typed data.     */    signTypedData(domain: TypedDataDomain, types: Record<string, Array<TypedDataField>>, value: Record<string, any>): Promise<string>;}//# sourceMappingURL=signer.d.ts.map
 |