Struct solana_program::pubkey::Pubkey[][src]

#[repr(transparent)]
pub struct Pubkey(_);

Implementations

👎 Deprecated since 1.3.9:

Please use ‘Pubkey::new_unique’ instead

unique Pubkey for tests and benchmarks.

Create a program address

Program addresses are account keys that only the program has the authority to sign. The address is of the same form as a Solana Pubkey, except they are ensured to not be on the ed25519 curve and thus have no associated private key. When performing cross-program invocations the program can “sign” for the key by calling invoke_signed and passing the same seeds used to generate the address. The runtime will check that indeed the program associated with this address is the caller and thus authorized to be the signer.

Because the program address cannot lie on the ed25519 curve there may be seed and program id combinations that are invalid. In these cases an extra seed (bump seed) can be calculated that results in a point off the curve. Use find_program_address to calculate that bump seed.

Warning: Because of the way the seeds are hashed there is a potential for program address collisions for the same program id. The seeds are hashed sequentially which means that seeds {“abcdef”}, {“abc”, “def”}, and {“ab”, “cd”, “ef”} will all result in the same program address given the same program id. Since the change of collision is local to a given program id the developer of that program must take care to choose seeds that do not collide with themselves.

Find a valid program address and its corresponding bump seed which must be passed as an additional seed when calling invoke_signed.

Panics in the very unlikely event that the additional seed could not be found.

The processes of finding a valid program address is by trial and error, and even though it is deterministic given a set of inputs it can take a variable amount of time to succeed across different inputs. This means that when called from an on-chain program it may incur a variable amount of the program’s compute budget. Programs that are meant to be very performant may not want to use this function because it could take a considerable amount of time. Also, programs that area already at risk of exceeding their compute budget should also call this with care since there is a chance that the program’s budget may be occasionally exceeded.

Find a valid program address and its corresponding bump seed which must be passed as an additional seed when calling invoke_signed.

The processes of finding a valid program address is by trial and error, and even though it is deterministic given a set of inputs it can take a variable amount of time to succeed across different inputs. This means that when called from an on-chain program it may incur a variable amount of the program’s compute budget. Programs that are meant to be very performant may not want to use this function because it could take a considerable amount of time. Also, programs that area already at risk of exceeding their compute budget should also call this with care since there is a chance that the program’s budget may be occasionally exceeded.

Log a Pubkey from a program

Trait Implementations

Performs the conversion.

Deserializes this instance from a given slice of bytes. Updates the buffer to point at the remaining bytes. Read more

Deserialize this instance from a slice of bytes.

Whether Self is u8. NOTE: Vec<u8> is the most common use-case for serialization and deserialization, it’s worth handling it as a special case to improve performance. It’s a workaround for specific Vec<u8> implementation versus generic Vec<T> implementation. See https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/1210 for details. Read more

Get the name of the type without brackets.

Recursively, using DFS, add type definitions required for this type. For primitive types this is an empty map. Type definition explains how to serialize/deserialize a type. Read more

Helper method to add a single type definition to the map.

Serialize this instance into a vector of bytes.

Whether Self is u8. NOTE: Vec<u8> is the most common use-case for serialization and deserialization, it’s worth handling it as a special case to improve performance. It’s a workaround for specific Vec<u8> implementation versus generic Vec<T> implementation. See https://github.com/rust-lang/rfcs/pull/1210 for details. Read more

Returns a copy of the value. Read more

Performs copy-assignment from source. Read more

Formats the value using the given formatter. Read more

Returns the “default value” for a type. Read more

Deserialize this value from the given Serde deserializer. Read more

Formats the value using the given formatter. Read more

The associated error which can be returned from parsing.

Parses a string s to return a value of this type. Read more

Feeds this value into the given Hasher. Read more

Feeds a slice of this type into the given Hasher. Read more

This method returns an Ordering between self and other. Read more

Compares and returns the maximum of two values. Read more

Compares and returns the minimum of two values. Read more

Restrict a value to a certain interval. Read more

This method tests for self and other values to be equal, and is used by ==. Read more

This method tests for !=.

This method returns an ordering between self and other values if one exists. Read more

This method tests less than (for self and other) and is used by the < operator. Read more

This method tests less than or equal to (for self and other) and is used by the <= operator. Read more

This method tests greater than (for self and other) and is used by the > operator. Read more

This method tests greater than or equal to (for self and other) and is used by the >= operator. Read more

Serialize this value into the given Serde serializer. Read more

The type returned in the event of a conversion error.

Performs the conversion.

Auto Trait Implementations

Blanket Implementations

Gets the TypeId of self. Read more

Immutably borrows from an owned value. Read more

Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more

Performs the conversion.

Performs the conversion.

Should always be Self

Encode the hex strict representing self into the result. Lower case letters are used (e.g. f9b4ca) Read more

Encode the hex strict representing self into the result. Upper case letters are used (e.g. F9B4CA) Read more

The resulting type after obtaining ownership.

Creates owned data from borrowed data, usually by cloning. Read more

🔬 This is a nightly-only experimental API. (toowned_clone_into)

recently added

Uses borrowed data to replace owned data, usually by cloning. Read more

Converts the given value to a String. Read more

The type returned in the event of a conversion error.

Performs the conversion.

The type returned in the event of a conversion error.

Performs the conversion.