Learn how to use SecretPath to vote confidentially on the EVM
SecretPath enables EVM developers to use Secret Network as a Confidential Computation Layer (CCL) for all EVM-compatible chains.
In this developer tutorial, you will learn how to use SecretPath to enable confidential voting on the EVM.
See a fullstack cross-chain voting demo here.
At a high level, you can think of SecretPath as a confidential bridge that passes encrypted data from your EVM chain to a Secret Network smart contract where the data remains encrypted.
To work with SecretPath, you must first create a Secret smart contract that stores the encrypted data that you want to send from the EVM. For our purposes, we have created a Secret smart contract with 2 functionalities:
Create proposals
Vote on existing proposals
You create and vote on proposals from the EVM, and then that data is sent to your Secret smart contract via SecretPath where it remains encrypted . Pretty cool, right!? 😎 Let's start by examining our Secret voting contract, and then we will breakdown how to send messages to it from the EVM with SecretPath.
To get started, clone the examples repo:
cd into secretpath-tutorials/secretpath-voting/voting-contract:
Open contract.rs and examine the match
statement at line 67:
This handle msg
is where you define the functionality of your SecretPath contract. For our purposes, we have written the functions create_proposal
and create_vote
. You can examine those functions in more detail if you'd like and make adjustments as you see fit 🤓.
Update the env
file with your Secret Network wallet mnemonic, and rename it ".env" instead of ".env.example"
Compile the contract
cd
into voting-contract/node:
Install the node dependencies
Set SecretPath parameters:
Open upload.js and configure the SecretPath gatewayAddress
, gatewayHash
, and gatewayPublicKey:
gatewayAddress, gatewayHash
, and gatewayPublicKey
are needed for instantiating contracts that utilize SecretPath and can be found in the docs here. You will always use these same 3 parameters for instantiating a SecretPath-compatible contract on testnet.
Upload and instantiate the contract:
Upon successful upload and instantiation, add the contract codeHash
and address
to your env
.
Now that you have instantiated your confidential voting contract on Secret Network, it's time to pass your encrypted data from the EVM to Secret Network. Remember the create_proposal
and create_vote
functions from the Secret contract? Now you will execute those functions and send encrypted data to the voting contract! 🤯
Let's create and vote on your first proposal with SecretPath!
cd
into secretpath-voting/frontend
:
Install the dependencies
Configure env
Configure the env
with your confidential voting contractAddress
and codeHash.
Run the application
You should see the following React application running locally in the browser:
Now, create and vote on a proposal to understand the frontend functionality. Then, let's look at the underlying code to understand how we are passing encrypted data from the EVM to Secret Network 🙂
Passing Encrypted Data with SecretPath
As stated above, we have two functions we are executing with SecretPath: create_proposal
and create_vote
. In our React application, there are two corresponding components which execute these functions: CreateProposal and VoteonProposal.
Create a Voting Proposal
Open CreateProposal.js and navigate to the handleSubmit function, which contains all of our SecretPath logic.
The majority of the handleSubmit
function is boilerplate code used for SecretPath verification, signing, and converting contract inputs into correctly formatted packets and vice versa.
For our purposes, we only need to examine 2 lines of code, data
on line 88 and handle
on line 218.
data
is the encrypted data that we are passing from the EVM to the Secret Network voting contract. It takes a user input of name
, description,
and end_time
. This corresponds with the ProposalStoreMsg
in the Secret contract.
handle
is the function that is actually being called in the Secret contract that you deployed. You are passing the create_proposal
handle, which executes the create_proposal
function in your Secret voting contract.
Now that you have all of your SecretPath code configured, execute the frontend to send your voting proposal to the Secret contract!
Upon successful execution, your SecretPath transaction hash will be logged in the console.
Vote on a Proposal
Open VoteonProposal.js and navigate to the handleSubmit
function, which, again, contains all of our SecretPath logic.
data
is the encrypted data that we are passing from the EVM to the Secret Network voting contract. It takes a user input of vote
, ("yes" or "no"), wallet_address
(the wallet address of the voter), and index.
This corresponds with the VoteStoreMsg
in the Secret contract.
The voting contract is designed so that each proposal has an ascending index starting with 1. The first proposal you create is index 1, the second is index 2, etc. So when you vote, the React application passes the corresponding index of the proposal that is to be voted on 🙂
handle:
You are passing the create_vote
handle, which executes the create_vote
function in your Secret voting contract.
Execute the frontend to vote on an existing proposal and send the encrypted vote to the Secret contract!
Upon successful execution, your SecretPath transaction hash will be logged in the console.
Secret Queries - retrieving proposals and votes from Secret contract storage
Perhaps you are wondering how the React frontend queries the Secret voting contract to display the data that we pass from the EVM. This is possible with secret.js, the javascript SDK for Secret Network.
We have 2 query functions defined in our Secret voting contract, RetrieveProposals
and RetrieveVotes.
Once you have created proposals with votes, you can use execute these query functions with secret.js to:
These queried proposals and their associated votes are then displayed in our React frontend.
Congrats! You deployed your very own confidential voting contract on Secret Network and used SecretPath to send cross-chain encrypted votes on an EVM chain. See the fullstack demo here. You now have all of the tools you need to start building your own cross-chain SecretPath contracts on the EVM 🎉
Note: the end user of the application is not exposed to Secret Network and is only working directly in the EVM environment. However, the data is fully protected and cannot be viewed by anyone because it is stored in encrypted Secret contracts 😮💨
If you have any questions or run into any issues, post them on the Secret Developer Discord and somebody will assist you shortly.
Confidential voting on Secret Network enables developers to create and manage voting systems where proposals and votes remain encrypted and secure. This ensures confidentiality and integrity in voting processes across EVM-compatible chains. There are 2 cross-chain voting solutions on Secret Network, the first uses SecretPath, and the other ECDH cryptography.
Overview: Introduction to using SecretPath as a Confidential Computation Layer for EVM chains, allowing encrypted data transfer and storage on Secret Network. Description of how SecretPath functions as a bridge for encrypted data, facilitating the creation and voting on proposals within a Secret smart contract.
Setup and Deployment: Step-by-step guide on setting up the development environment, compiling and uploading the Secret contract, and configuring the frontend to interact with the SecretPath-enabled voting system.
Passing Encrypted Data: Detailed explanation of how to pass encrypted proposals and votes from the EVM to the Secret Network using SecretPath.
Introduction: Guide to encrypting and decrypting votes using Secret Network smart contracts, aimed at building confidential voting on any EVM chain.
Setup and Configuration: Instructions for setting up the developer environment, configuring environment variables, and generating cryptographic keys for encryption. Steps to upload and instantiate the Secret Network and Polygon smart contracts, enabling creation and voting on proposals.
Executing Contracts: Processes for creating proposals, voting, and decrypting votes using the deployed smart contracts on the Polygon testnet and Secret Network.