eth_newFilter | Avalanche

Avalanche API method that generates a filter object based on the filter parameters. It returns a filter ID, which can be used to retrieve the results of the filter using the eth_getFilterChanges method. By creating a filter for specific events, developers can receive notifications when those events occur and use them to trigger actions in their applications.

👍

Get you own node endpoint today

Start for free and get your app to production levels immediately. No credit card required.

You can sign up with your GitHub, X, Google, or Microsoft account.

Parameters

  • object — the filter parameters:
    • fromBlock — (optional, default: latest) integer that specifies the starting block number from which the logs should be fetched.
    • toBlock — (optional, default: latest) integer that specifies the ending block number until which the logs should be fetched.
    • address — (optional) the contract address from which the logs should be fetched. It can be a single address or an array of addresses.
    • topics — (optional) an array of DATA topics. The event topics for which the logs should be fetched. It can be a single topic or an array of topics.
    • blockhash — (optional) the hash of the specific block. Limits logs to a specific block with a 32-byte hash value. It takes precedence over fromBlock and toBlock.

📘

Possible tags for fromBlock and toBlock

  • latest — the most recent block in the blockchain and the current state of the blockchain at the most recent block
  • earliest — the earliest available or genesis block
  • pending — the pending state and transactions block. The current state of transactions that have been broadcast to the network but have not yet been included in a block.

See the default block parameter.

Response

  • result — a hexadecimal string representing the ID of the newly created filter

🚧

The filters created are stored on the blockchain client instance. The filter is automatically deleted if not polled within a certain time (5 minutes by default).

Use the following methods with the filter ID:

eth_newFilter code examples

📘

Note that the web3.eth.filter methods have been deprecated and replaced with the web3.eth.subscribe in web3.js. See web3.js subscriptions.

const ethers = require('ethers');
const NODE_URL = "CHAINSTACK_NODE_URL";
const provider = new ethers.JsonRpcProvider(NODE_URL);

const filter = {
  toBlock: 'latest',
  address: '0x0d500B1d8E8eF31E21C99d1Db9A6444d3ADf1270',
  topics: ['0xddf252ad1be2c89b69c2b068fc378daa952ba7f163c4a11628f55a4df523b3ef']
};

const createFilter = async () => {
  try {
    const filterId = await provider.send('eth_newFilter', [filter]);
    console.log(filterId); // the filter ID returned by eth_newFilter
    return filterId
  } catch (error) {
    console.log(error);
  }
};

createFilter();
from web3 import Web3  
node_url = "CHAINSTACK_NODE_URL" 
web3 = Web3(Web3.HTTPProvider(node_url))

filter = {
    'toBlock': 'latest',
    'address': '0x0d500B1d8E8eF31E21C99d1Db9A6444d3ADf1270',
    'topics': ['0xddf252ad1be2c89b69c2b068fc378daa952ba7f163c4a11628f55a4df523b3ef']
}

def create_logs_filter(filter_object):
    try:
        logs_filter = web3.eth.filter(filter_object)
        return logs_filter
    except Exception as e:
        print(e)

logs_filter = create_logs_filter(filter)
filter_id = logs_filter.filter_id
print(f'New filter ID: {filter_id}')

Use case

You can use eth_newFilter to create a filter for a specific action on a smart contract, for example, to monitor the transfer transactions from the Wrapped ETH token.

The idea is to create a filter using the eth_newFilter method to monitor an ERC-20 smart contract, WETH in this case.

The following filter parameters are selected:

const filter = {
  // Poll the latest block available
  toBlock: 'latest',	
  
  // WETH smart contract address
  address: '0x49D5c2BdFfac6CE2BFdB6640F4F80f226bc10bAB',
  
  // Signature of the Transfer event.
  topics: ['0xddf252ad1be2c89b69c2b068fc378daa952ba7f163c4a11628f55a4df523b3ef'], 
};

The program is then polling the filter every 2 seconds to check for any new changes using the eth_getFilterChanges method.

Here is the implementation using ethers.js:

const ethers = require('ethers');
const NODE_URL = "CHAINSTACK_NODE_URL";
const provider = new ethers.JsonRpcProvider(NODE_URL);

const filter = {
  toBlock: 'latest',
  address: '0x49D5c2BdFfac6CE2BFdB6640F4F80f226bc10bAB',
  topics: ['0xddf252ad1be2c89b69c2b068fc378daa952ba7f163c4a11628f55a4df523b3ef'],
};

const createAndPollFilter = async () => {
  try {
    const filterId = await provider.send('eth_newFilter', [filter]);
    console.log(`The filter ID is: ${filterId}`); // the filter ID returned by eth_newFilter

    // Poll the filter every 30 seconds
    setInterval(async () => {
      const filterChanges = await provider.send('eth_getFilterChanges', [filterId]);

      if (filterChanges.length === 0) {
        console.log('No new logs since the last poll.');
      } else {
        console.log(filterChanges); // the filter changes returned by eth_getFilterChanges
      }
    }, 2000); // 2 seconds in milliseconds

    return filterId;
  } catch (error) {
    console.log(error);
  }
};

createAndPollFilter();

Here's a breakdown of how the code works:

The createAndPollFilter function is an asynchronous function that creates and polls a filter for the WETH smart contract on Avalanche.

The eth_newFilter method creates a new filter with the specified parameters. In this case, it passes in the filter object as the filter parameter. The method returns the ID of the newly created filter, which is then logged into the console.

The setInterval method is used to poll the filter every 2 seconds. It takes a function as the first argument and an interval in milliseconds as the second argument. The function passed to setInterval is an asynchronous function that calls eth_getFilterChanges with the filter ID returned by eth_newFilter. This method returns an array of all the changes to the filter since the last time it was polled. If there are no changes, it logs "No new logs since the last poll." to the console. If there are changes, it logs the filter changes to the console.

The createAndPollFilter function returns the filter ID, and if there are any errors thrown while creating or polling the filter, the catch block logs the error to the console.

Try the eth_newFilter RPC method yourself

Language
Click Try It! to start a request and see the response here!