cosmos-sdk/docs/building-modules/msg-services.md

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Msg Services

A Protobuf Msg service processes messages. Protobuf Msg services are specific to the module in which they are defined, and only process messages defined within the said module. They are called from BaseApp during DeliverTx. {synopsis}

Pre-requisite Readings

Implementation of a module Msg service

Each module should define a Protobuf Msg service, which will be responsible for processing requests (implementing sdk.Msg) and returning responses.

As further described in ADR 031, this approach has the advantage of clearly specifying return types and generating server and client code.

Protobuf generates a MsgServer interface based on a definition of Msg service. It is the role of the module developer to implement this interface, by implementing the state transition logic that should happen upon receival of each sdk.Msg. As an example, here is the generated MsgServer interface for x/bank, which exposes two sdk.Msgs:

+++ https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/v0.40.0-rc3/x/bank/types/tx.pb.go#L285-L291

When possible, the existing module's Keeper should implement MsgServer, otherwise a msgServer struct that embeds the Keeper can be created, typically in ./keeper/msg_server.go:

+++ https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/v0.40.0-rc1/x/bank/keeper/msg_server.go#L14-L16

msgServer methods can retrieve the sdk.Context from the context.Context parameter method using the sdk.UnwrapSDKContext:

+++ https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/v0.40.0-rc1/x/bank/keeper/msg_server.go#L27-L28

sdk.Msg processing usually follows these 2 steps:

  • First, they perform stateful checks to make sure the message is valid. At this stage, the message's ValidateBasic() method has already been called, meaning stateless checks on the message (like making sure parameters are correctly formatted) have already been performed. Checks performed in the msgServer method can be more expensive and require access to the state. For example, a msgServer method for a transfer message might check that the sending account has enough funds to actually perform the transfer. To access the state, the msgServer method needs to call the keeper's getter functions.
  • Then, if the checks are successful, the msgServer method calls the keeper's setter functions to actually perform the state transition.

Before returning, msgServer methods generally emit one or more events via the EventManager held in the ctx:

ctx.EventManager().EmitEvent(
		sdk.NewEvent(
			eventType,  // e.g. sdk.EventTypeMessage for a message, types.CustomEventType for a custom event defined in the module
			sdk.NewAttribute(attributeKey, attributeValue),
		),
    )

These events are relayed back to the underlying consensus engine and can be used by service providers to implement services around the application. Click here to learn more about events.

The invoked msgServer method returns a proto.Message response and an error. These return values are then wrapped into an *sdk.Result or an error using sdk.WrapServiceResult(ctx sdk.Context, res proto.Message, err error):

+++ https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/v0.40.0-rc2/baseapp/msg_service_router.go#L104-L104

This method takes care of marshaling the res parameter to protobuf and attaching any events on the ctx.EventManager() to the sdk.Result.

+++ d55c1a2665/proto/cosmos/base/abci/v1beta1/abci.proto (L81-L95)

This diagram shows a typical structure of a Protobuf Msg service, and how the message propagates through the module.

Transaction flow

Amino LegacyMsgs

handler type

The handler type defined in the Cosmos SDK will be deprecated in favor of Msg Services.

Here is the typical structure of a handler function:

+++ https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/v0.40.0-rc2/types/handler.go#L4-L4

Let us break it down:

  • The LegacyMsg is the actual object being processed.
  • The Context contains all the necessary information needed to process the msg, as well as a branch of the latest state. If the msg is successfully processed, the branched version of the state contained in the ctx will be written to the main state (branch).
  • The *Result returned to BaseApp contains (among other things) information on the execution of the handler and events.

Module handlers are typically implemented in a ./handler.go file inside the module's folder. The module manager is used to add the module's handlers to the application's router via the Route() method. Typically, the manager's Route() method simply constructs a Route that calls a NewHandler() method defined in handler.go.

+++ 228728cce2/x/gov/module.go (L143-L146)

Implementation

NewHandler function dispatches a LegacyMsg to appropriate handler function, usually by using a switch statement:

+++ d55c1a2665/x/bank/handler.go (L13-L29)

First, NewHandler function sets a new EventManager to the context to isolate events per msg. Then, a simple switch calls the appropriate handler based on the LegacyMsg type.

In this regard, handlers functions need to be implemented for each module LegacyMsg. This will also involve manual handler registration of LegacyMsg types. handlers functions should return a *Result and an error.

Telemetry

New telemetry metrics can be created from msgServer methods when handling messages.

This is an example from the x/auth/vesting module:

+++ https://github.com/cosmos/cosmos-sdk/blob/v0.40.0-rc1/x/auth/vesting/msg_server.go#L73-L85

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