Troubleshooting¶
Error: “<X> is not authorized to commit an update”¶
This error occurs when there are multiple obligables on a contract.
A cornerstone of Daml is that you cannot create a contract that will force some other party (or parties) into an obligation. This error means that a party is trying to do something that would force another parties into an agreement without their consent.
To solve this, make sure each party is entering into the contract freely by exercising a choice. A good way of ensuring this is the “initial and accept” pattern: see the Daml patterns for more details.
Error “Argument is not of serializable type”¶
This error occurs when you’re using a function as a parameter to a template. For example, here is a contract that creates a Payout
controller by a receiver’s supervisor:
template SupervisedPayout
with
supervisor : Party -> Party
receiver : Party
giver : Party
amount : Decimal
where
signatory giver
observer (supervisor receiver)
choice SupervisedPayout_Call
: ContractId Payout
controller supervisor receiver
do create Payout with giver; receiver; amount
Hovering over the compilation error displays:
[Type checker] Argument expands to non-serializable type Party -> Party.
Modeling questions¶
How to model an agreement with another party¶
To enter into an agreement, create a contract from a template that has explicit signatory
and agreement
statements.
You’ll need to use a series of contracts that give each party the chance to consent, via a contract choice.
Because of the rules that Daml enforces, it is not possible for a single party to create an instance of a multi-party agreement. This is because such a creation would force the other parties into that agreement, without giving them a choice to enter it or not.
How to model rights¶
Use a contract choice to model a right. A party exercises that right by exercising the choice.
How to void a contract¶
To allow voiding a contract, provide a choice that does not create any new contracts. Daml contracts are archived (but not deleted) when a consuming choice is made - so exercising the choice effectively voids the contract.
However, you should bear in mind who is allowed to void a contract, especially without the re-sought consent of the other signatories.
How to represent off-ledger parties¶
You’d need to do this if you can’t set up all parties as ledger participants, because the Daml Party
type gets associated with a cryptographic key and can so only be used with parties that have been set up accordingly.
To model off-ledger parties in Daml, they must be represented on-ledger by a participant who can sign on their behalf. You could represent them with an ordinary Text
argument.
This isn’t very private, so you could use a numeric ID/an accountId to identify the off-ledger client.
How to limit a choice by time¶
Some rights have a time limit: either a time by which it must be exercised or a time before which it cannot be exercised.
You can use getTime
to get the current time, and compare your desired time to it. Use assert
to abort the choice if your time condition is not met.
How to model a mandatory action¶
If you want to ensure that a party takes some action within a given time period. Might want to incur a penalty if they don’t - because that would breach the contract.
For example: an Invoice that must be paid by a certain date, with a penalty (could be something like an added interest charge or a penalty fee). To do this, you could have a time-limited Penalty choice that can only be exercised after the time period has expired.
However, note that the penalty action can only ever create another contract on the ledger, which represents an agreement between all parties that the initial contract has been breached. Ultimately, the recourse for any breach is legal action of some kind. What Daml provides is provable violation of the agreement.
When to use Optional¶
The Optional
type, from the standard library, to indicate that a value is optional, i.e, that in some cases it may be missing.
In functional languages, Optional
is a better way of indicating a missing value than using the more familiar value “NULL”, present in imperative languages like Java.
To use Optional
, include Optional.daml
from the standard library:
import DA.Optional
Then, you can create Optional
values like this:
Some "Some text" -- Optional value exists.
None -- Optional value does not exist.
You can test for existence in various ways:
-- isSome returns True if there is a value.
if isSome m
then "Yes"
else "No"
-- The inverse is isNone.
if isNone m
then "No"
else "Yes"
If you need to extract the value, use the optional
function.
It returns a value of a defined type, and takes a Optional
value and a function that can transform the value contained in a Some
value of the Optional
to that type. If it is missing optional
also takes a value of the return type (the default value), which will be returned if the Optional
value is None
let f = \ (i : Int) -> "The number is " <> (show i)
let t = optional "No number" f someValue
If optionalValue
is Some 5
, the value of t
would be "The number is 5"
. If it was None
, t
would be "No number"
. Note that with optional
, it is possible to return a different type from that contained in the Optional
value. This makes the Optional
type very flexible.
There are many other functions in “Optional.daml” that let you perform familiar functional operations on structures that contain Optional
values – such as map
, filter
, etc. on Lists
of Optional
values.
Testing questions¶
How to test that a contract is visible to a party¶
Use queryContractId
: its first argument is a party, and the second is a ContractId
. If the contract corresponding to that ContractId
exists and is visible to the party, the result will be wrapped in Some
, otherwise the result will be None
.
Use a submit
block and a fetch
operation. The submit
block tests that the contract (as a ContractId
) is visible to that party, and the fetch
tests that it is valid, i.e., that the contract does exist.
For example, if we wanted to test for the existence and visibility of an Invoice
, visible to ‘Alice’, whose ContractId is bound to invoiceCid, we could say:
Some result <- alice `queryContractId` invoiceCid
Note that we pattern match on the Some
constructor. If the contract doesn’t exist or is not visible to ‘Alice’, the test will fail with a pattern match error.
Now that the contract is bound to a variable, we can check whether it has some expected values:
result === Invoice with
payee = alice
payer = acme
amount = 130.0
service = "A job well done"
timeLimit = datetime 1970 Feb 20 0 0 0
How to test that an update action cannot be committed¶
Use the submitMustFail
function. This is similar in form to the submit
function, but is an assertion that an update will fail if attempted by some Party.