A hardhat-circom template to generate zero-knowledge circuits, proofs, and solidity verifiers
Compile the Multiplier2() circuit and verify it against a smart contract verifier
pragma circom 2.0.0;
/*This circuit template checks that c is the multiplication of a and b.*/
template Multiplier2 () {
// Declaration of signals.
signal input a;
signal input b;
signal output c;
// Constraints.
c <== a * b;
}
component main = Multiplier2();
npm i
npx hardhat compile
This will generate the out file with circuit intermediaries and geneate the MultiplierVerifier.sol contract
npx hardhat run scripts/deploy.ts
This script does 4 things
- Deploys the MultiplierVerifier.sol contract
- Generates a proof from circuit intermediaries with
generateProof()
- Generates calldata with
generateCallData()
- Calls
verifyProof()
on the verifier contract with calldata
With two commands you can compile a ZKP, generate a proof, deploy a verifier, and verify the proof 🎉
circuits
├── multiplier
│ ├── circuit.circom
│ ├── input.json
│ └── out
│ ├── circuit.wasm
│ ├── multiplier.r1cs
│ ├── multiplier.vkey
│ └── multiplier.zkey
├── new-circuit
└── powersOfTau28_hez_final_12.ptau
Each new circuit lives in it's own directory. At the top level of each circuit directory lives the circom circuit and input to the circuit. The out directory will be autogenerated and store the compiled outputs, keys, and proofs. The Powers of Tau file comes from the Polygon Hermez ceremony, which saves time by not needing a new ceremony.
contracts
contracts
└── MultiplierVerifier.sol
Verifier contracts are autogenerated and prefixed by the circuit name, in this example Multiplier
circom: {
// (optional) Base path for input files, defaults to `./circuits/`
inputBasePath: "./circuits",
// (required) The final ptau file, relative to inputBasePath, from a Phase 1 ceremony
ptau: "powersOfTau28_hez_final_12.ptau",
// (required) Each object in this array refers to a separate circuit
circuits: JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(circuits))
},
circuits configuation is separated from hardhat.config.ts for autogenerated purposes (see next section)
[
{
"name": "multiplier",
"protocol": "groth16",
"circuit": "multiplier/circuit.circom",
"input": "multiplier/input.json",
"wasm": "multiplier/out/circuit.wasm",
"zkey": "multiplier/out/multiplier.zkey",
"vkey": "multiplier/out/multiplier.vkey",
"r1cs": "multiplier/out/multiplier.r1cs",
"beacon": "0102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f101112131415161718191a1b1c1d1e1f"
}
]
adding circuits
To add a new circuit, you can run the newcircuit
hardhat task to autogenerate configuration and directories i.e
npx hardhat newcircuit --name newcircuit
determinism
When you recompile the same circuit using the groth16 protocol, even with no changes, this plugin will apply a new final beacon, changing all the zkey output files. This also causes your Verifier contracts to be updated. For development builds of groth16 circuits, we provide the --deterministic flag in order to use a NON-RANDOM and UNSECURE hardcoded entropy (0x000000 by default) which will allow you to more easily inspect and catch changes in your circuits. You can adjust this default beacon by setting the beacon property on a circuit's config in your hardhat.config.js file.